V^A'JV"^ ff^ffl^.
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
larlow
t-'tfV .'
f
lift
It thi s
lluclans begin put-
interpretations &i
ions, otte conclusion
a second one seems
t ,
uWican Defeat.
Ilheii? dissatis-
Ican control of
'the House and
te over to the
final Senate re-
kn,owti uhlil after
narrowness
pretty good
6f voters
disturbed by the
as
a whole
•—
or in distress
"expresed
thefr
._£ ganger' by giving th-j
ats pati, overwhelming vie-
"fcHMge'the direction. This
?,i6,tner hand) if they had
' enthusiastic about
jfcrfbrmarce of tho
mm fit seems reason-
teV4 they would have
]& GOP control of Con-
.'• did the reverse.
even' division of
.„„ ..fas best reflected
races where, In Ore-
id/ New Jersey, only
votes separated the
^although
i roughly
five
*otes'( were cast in the
'•S, '
'Democrats achieved pp
^majority in1 capturing
tjthe House over Presi
?veijhqWer's
last-minute
f i
' the Bepubicans in
the little booths and moved close.
Rupert left the bar and swerved
toward the booth where Greg was
Sitting with the girl.
The girl gave him a melting
glance. "Are you going to dance
With me"
"No," Rupert said. "Never do
that. Never take away my friend's
girl."
She laughed with
mechanical
brightness. "Say, you're
good.
Want to order some champagne."
I'm crazy about champagyne."
"No,"
Rupert said again. "No
wine—no kick in it."
The girl answered this with an
obliging scream of laughter. ''No
Wine. No women. How do you feel
about song"
"Song" Rupert echoed in his
rasping voice. Abruptly he buried
his face in his arms on the table.
He was crying, hard, tearing sobbs
that shook his thi nbody.
The uneasy silence was broken
by a man's embarrassed laughter.
"What a crying jag."
Greg paid the bill, waited unti'
Rupert was quiet, and then said,
"Let's go." .
NEXT TIME HE'LL REALLY GET SERVICE-Mrs. Lucille
Gregory shows the grand tip she received for services in a Dallas,
Tex., restaurant She served a well-dressed man in his fifties
a $1.50 sirloin steak and when She returned to pick up the dishes
she found a $100, $50 and $1 bill on the table.
T4351 Bouse seatsi the Dem
?n 2Si2 to the Republicans
by 'gaining 17
^epublicaiis are trying too
[themselves by recalling that
la "ce'ntury
with one ex
JJ934', the party in con-
'pngiess has lost some
vihe \inid-term. l election's
T^may argue that their
'seats'this year was far
*,Jhe f-ecc-nt average of
•picked by, the
party
the, mid-term bal-
fijct. remains the yotfi s
can, when they
mid-term tiadi-
the grip on Con-
r in power. They
finp'3834' to show their eh-
ifwjthe NeW Deal begun
ifideht .Roosevelt two years
WHILE MOM'S AWAY—Seven piglets feed from a bottle rack
under the watchful eye of Carl Teska, of Albany, Ni Y. His
brother, Richard, rigged up the device alter the piglets' mother
had disowned>them.
He got Rupert outside and they
began to walk away from the road
house. Rupert staggered but he
pulled the key from his packet as
though it were a talisman
and
tossed it from hand to hand.
At length
Greg said
quietly
"What happened to yen?"
"One of Mussolini's boys." Ru
pert said. ' I wa.s singing at La
Scala and this fellow was annoyed
because I refused to sirg for n
Fascist gathering. He was persu
asive. Fir&t he hung me by a stvar
and played a little tattoo on m>
back." For once there
was
IT
drama, no overstatement in hi
voice.
He
sounded unspeakabl;
tired. "Then" the pause length
ened until Greg thought lie wouTc
not speak
any more that nigh
"they operaetd on my tin oat."
Greg leaned against the gate anc
lighted ja cigaret. There was noth
ing to ^say.
"So much has hap
pened since then," Rupert v/en
on, "but that was the thing tha
mattered most. My family is gone
my hcme, rny country, my profe;
sion. I am practically an author
ity on concentration camps, on cs
capes, on crossing frontiers with
out a passport. It
is a itrang
thing to belong
nowhere, Greg
Even the' ticking of a clock is lik
a voice saying, 'Move on. Move on
Move on.',"
He clung to the top post of th
gate, turning the key over an
ever in his hand. "That is the ke;
to the house my family moved int
after the Fascists got me.
M
mother
was killed arid my tw
young sisters." He slipped the ke
back into his pocket. "Not by Fas
cists or Nazis. It was an America
bomb. War is like that. No onn
you see, is
to blame. Or all o
us."
yfithe'laBt timrf in Roose-
"^""ilj.that happened. In
__-^elections of 3P3& and
j.\j3emocrats lost ground but
*—<l> of/House or Senate.
x^anje token the voters
ffitt"they
had felt over-
B enthusiasm for the Re-
^''/'could have added
to
WjXk' 1n, both houses. They
^Vto< •
|»bssible that
Eisenhower's
* '
efforts for the Repub-
them from a worse
thevoters may have
p*' their minds before he
|gj;'*tneek-deep into the cam-
,o, special situations such
,,,jiloyjment in Michigan and
pvanja
the, voters made
bejirigs. known by unseating
SJS.tet Republican (Michigan)
^'a.cing, a Republican with
5' as governor .Pennsyl-
09,01 the main Democratic
that
farmers were
t tbs Eisenhower ad-
$ tflejuble price sup-
THE
STORY:
Greg Seaver, a
young man who wants to °o some
thing on his owri, leaves the rela-
tive secur'ty of working .for his
stepfather to become a chauffeur
for a wealthy Invalid, Wade Da'g-
gelt, who is also tired of staying
In one place.. Tr^velng in
Dag-
gett's car and trailer they rescue
a displaced alien, Ruper1 Uandus-
ky, from a probably death by ex-
posure. Somehow they haven't the
Water, water everywhere might sum up the story
of Southeast Arkansas. From this fact has grown a
rice industry which is third largest in the nation.
Rice mills (1) and paddies mark hundreds of square
miles of land in Southeast Arkansas and where the
rice leaves off the ducks seem to take over. Duck
hunting (2) attracts thousands of sportsmen from
every state in the union to the marshes of Southeast
Arkansas each year and when the marshes begin to
thin out toward the most deeply southern part of the
state, the Loblolly pine forests dominate the land-
scape. Where the forests and the rice marshes meet
is Mattox Bay, one of the cut-off lakes of the White
River. Here occurs one of the most unusual sports
in America—bow h u n t i n g for gar (3). Archery
affacianados of Arkansas look forward all year long
to the big August gar hunt vyhcn all members of the
Arkansas Bow Hunters Association gather here to
try their skills for prizes against the most vicious
fish in fresh water. The first white settlement west
of the Mississippi, and now a State Park, Arkansas
Post (4), allows for a glance at Arkansas misty past
in the Small mementoes and historic artifacts on dis-
play there. Lake Chicot and Grand Lake provide the
top-notch' fishing of the deepest part of Southeast
Arkansas, while the numerous lumber towns and mills
give the tourist a chance to see the tree-to-paper-sack
progress of the wood which dominates the economy
of the area. The verdict on roads here is better-than-
average.
Arkansas Publicity and Information Department
\, November 8,
—
—
Doctors Must
Hove Faith,
AMATold
*
By FRANK CAREY
AP Science Reporter
ST LOUIS — Dr.
Elmer Hess,
president-elect of the American
Medical Association,
said today
any
doctor "who lacks faith m
the Supreme Being" has nc right
to practice -medicine.
"A physician who walks .into a
sick room is not alore," said th?
Erie, Pa., doctor who is a special
ist in urology. "He can only nun- %
ister to the ailing person v.ith tho
material tools of scientific medi-
cine his father in a higher pow-
er does the reft.
"Shew me the doctor who der-ca
the existence of the Supreme Bo-
ing and I will say that hn has no
right to practice the healing art.
Hess made the statements in a
prepared digest of extemporane-
ous remarks he planned for the
opening of ihe 43th annual meet,-
ing of the Southern Medical .Asso- I/
fiat ion.
The SMA, with a total
membership of lO.OOC, doctors, ranks
second only to the A'MA as the
largest general medical organiza-
tion in the country.
"Our medical schools are doing
a magnificent job of teaching the
fundamentals of scientific medi-
cine," declared Hess.
"However,
I'm afraid that the concentration
on basic science is so great the
teaching of spiritual values is al-^
most neglected."
*
At another point he asserted:
"Any man whe enters the med-
ical profession with financial gain
as his sold objective is 'a discredit
to
his colleagues.
The market
place is where you
<JO to
make
money, not the sick room. Doctors
lake care of sick folks-period."
The AMA official declared
that
organization has launched a long-
range program designed to solve
the "medical care problems of thej|
indigent and the chronically ill.™
"Special attention must be giv-
en," he said, "to the problems o£
those who are Unable to pay for
their own medical care, or buy
insurance to protect
themselves
against such costs. Wc are urging
state and county medicr.l socie-
ties to make this a major project."
Continued from Page One
five lamous American
historical
monuments. He'd probably name
monuments several thousand more
pubs. The British lean to the theo-
ry
that -any post
where a man
shakes his thirst' has a place in
history.
Americans are loathe to
make
monuments of their saloons, even
though some of modern society's
the Statue of Liberty, the Washing- bluest blod has been shed in them
. ,.
.
.,
T • „_•,„
or.j
ton Monument
the Lincoln
and in recent years, and despite the
'
Deer Season Is
ten in Arkansas
LITTLE ROCK (/P) —Deer hunt-
ing season opens in Arkansas to-
day with the promise of fair skies
and cool weather. The first period
of the split season closes Friday.
The school period is Dec. 13-18.
The limit is one buck each per-
fect
Washlngton
hig
Jefferson memorials. Then he d be iarevfeii address to his officers in
nowhere. For the first cov.plel In thjs mattei. of keeping
thi
urs, Greg had been vaguely
avor Qf lhe past aliv6j wc nav,
heart to turn
him in, for he is
illegally in the country, but Rupert
is afraid. When he sees a police-
man n a New England town, he
flees In fear,
XII
port
program
,was
not .born
out by the results.
On the contrary. In the normaly
Republican
farm sttate of Iowa
Sen, Gillette, a personally popular
Democrat seeking his third term,
was defeated.
APPLES
„„., - '
Wholesale or Retail
pa 'ARKANSAS BLACKS
• ROME BEAUTY
• GOLDEN
'f|jf UPIOU8 • RED DELICIOUS • STAYMEN WINESAP
C A G E E G G S
USSELl/S CURB MARKET
901 West 3rd
Phone 7-9933
ITEEL CONSTRUCTION
iv §>Jieds, Farm Butjdings and Industrial Buildings
!|-lpQ<if according to specifications. Can pe con-
aTftructed at low cost,
SALL,., PR7-4(583
for complete information,
UCKETT STEEL &
EQUIPMENT CO.
He was in the third bar Greg
entered, a glass in his hand, his
dollar bill on; the counter before
him. He caught sight of Greg and
finished his drink in a hurry.
Greg stood beside him .trying to
hold in his smoldering a n g e r .
"What are you drinking"
"Brandy. It works faster."
Greg ordered another brandy for
Rupert and beer for himself. "Why
did you run away"
"I thought this might be my last
drink,"
"Why
did you think I'd turn you
in" In his outrage at this betrayal
Greg forgot entirely th at he had
sponsored the idea only a few days
earlier.
"It has happened to me before."
"Nothing is going to happen to
you here. Just relax."
Greg pushed Rupert's dollar bill
toward him and paid the check.
XIII
The traffic seemed- to spring u
from
of hours
aware that there were more cars
on the road than usual, but now
there was a steady line of trafic
and he slowed down.
"What have you got into?" Dag-
gett demanded impatiently.
"I don't know. According to the
map there is nothing special ahead.
We may run out tit this soon."
"AUs-ays in. a hurry to move on,"
Rupert commented. "And to think
that you like it. Sometimes I be-
lieve you art; the youngest of us."
"Don't say that,"' Daggett pro-
tested. "It makes me feel so old
to have people tell me how youns
am. It's
the last step before
senility. .Dawdling makes me ner-
vous, that's all. And especially on
a
road like this where there is
nothing to see."
"You hold your horses," Greg
called over his shoulder. Then his
eyes were caught by a roadside
s-ign and he begun to laugh. "Oh.
ttumped
unless you let him in-
clude Mae West or Sophie Tucker.
the
a moment's hesitation the
crept over Rupert's cheek
After
color
bones and his hand moved forward
slowly. He pocketed the money.
That day
Daggett insisted • on
driving longer than usual. It was
not until they passed a roadhouse
that he consented to stop for the
night a( a nearby trailer park.
After he was settled in bed, with
a book and cigarets within reach,
he suggested, "Why don't you two
go up for a 'drink."
There were a do/en or more
cars parked in front of the road
house but it seemed nearly empty.
It Vvas a barn of a place, dim^y
lighted. Through the gloom, Greg
could make out couples sitting at
Forrestvillc., Of course. I should
have remembered. They always
have big doings in April. Wc am
on our way to a local celebration
An annual affair that has gene on
beyond the memory of m:iD."
"But why at this senson?
hardy idiots like ourselves visit
Maine for pleasure in April. I
won't thaw out here for anothev
small tables, factory girls
their escorts,
professional
" Anniversary of the founder'
l.irth,"
Greg
explained. "The}
have horse racing and parachut
drops during the day and a ear
niv-il at night."
"How
do you know all this?
Daggett asked.
"I was born in Maine."
"I didn't know that."
"Wi.Ol,"'
Greg pointed
out rea
sonably, "after all, I had to b
born somewhere.'
Greg, forced down to 20 mile
an hour, had leisure to look uroun
him.
The small boy he had bee
careened clo\vn the road ahead of
him on the bicycle his father haJ
got him for Christmas. C;iret'roe
childhood
ihat was supposed to'
with ke the time of times, the pinnacle
ourins.
Nobcdy
can tear down
ieir traditional haunts in the rid-
culous name of progress.
The British not only preserve
Vestminster Abbey and their ca-
iedral. The government also pro-
ects against charge or deslruc-
ion SjOOO pubs, including one in
;hich the first Queen Elizabeth
ruaffed nutbrown ale and another
n which Henry V took a farewell
before hopping the channel
eriy to France and the battle at
igincourt.
The government, explaining that
the events that occurred in these
nns vould make a history o'f Eng-
and," plans to list as historical
a tavern. But, after all these year.-;,
doesn't the distillery that fueled
Gen. U. S. Granted perhaps de-
serve a memorial marker?
Any
Southerner will confirm, that it was
only
bottle
courage that
gave
Grant the nerve to take on the
peerless Robert E. Lee.
How about the bar off Gramercy
Park, New York, where lonely
O. Henry dreamed up his stories?
Isn't
that
a kind of monument
worth keeping?
There are many interesting po-
litical sites- worth preserving as
historic monuments
such as the
smoke-filled room where Warren
iod.The Game and Fish Commission
says the Monroe-Roc Roe Refuge
in Montoe County will be open to
deer hunters fod the first time
since it became a state refuge 20
years ago'.
Act Fat? When Cough From (|;
Common Cold Hangs On
Chronic bronchitis may develop if
your cough, chest cold, or acute bron-
chitis is not treated and you cannot
afford to take a chance with any medi-
cine less potent than Creomulsion. It
goes into the bronchial system to help
loosen and expel germ laden phlegm
and aid nature to soothe and heal raw,
tender.inflamcdbronchialmembrancs.
For children you can now get
milder, t»stier Creomulsion for Chil-
dren in a pink and blue package.
M,
Gel a large bottle of Creomulsion at «<
your drug store. Use it all as directed.
Creomulsion is guaranteed to please
you or druggist refunds money. Adv.
Harding wa.s picked as a
dential candidate, and the
conquered life but because he
iccepted it on its own terms.
At
a park on the outskirts of
own, Greg unhooked the trailer
and (ho three men drove slowly
nto Forrestville.
Forrestville was neither a pic-
iuresque village nor a thriving fac-
tory town. It was old, its houses
weatherbeaten and unpainted, with
an air of hard wo'rk and dogged
survival about them.
Daggett was having the time of
his life and to Greg's surprise he
suggested, "There's a hotel of
sorts. Let's lunch there for a
change."
presi-
exact
spot where Calvin Collidge put on
his first Indian headdress. These
would please Democrats greatly.
Republicans might equally enjoy
making a federal museum of Tarn-
many Hall, or erecting a granite
tower commemorating the "Tru-
man dollar."
Everybody, of course, would 'be
glad to contribute toward a na-
tional monument for the first man
in America who finds a free place
to
park his
car legally. But no
such fund will ever be raised. No
guy lucky enough to find a park-
ing space would give away his sa-
cret
fame.
for so empty a reward as
The hotel lobby was uninviting,
with linoleum on the floor and a
pot-bellied
stove in
the middle
of the room.
Greg led the way
to
a corner table 5n the dining
girls,
ANNOUNCES A NEW POLICY!
No» yewcon have yswr Hsme Rewired
KKAll
12 Easy Payments
sprinkling of older couples. Oddly
enough, it was the latter who made
the most noise.
Rupert made his way to the bar
like a homing' pigeon and Greg
followed him,
Some of the girls weren't bad at
all. In a few minutes one of them
came up to him.
She smiled tentatively.
"Hello,
Goodlooking. Want to dance"
"Why not" Greg led her out
on the floor. He .was not a good
dancer but the girl was expert and
she made him feel better than he
wag. it was pleasant to have a
wpman in his arms and this one
was not demanding. He bought her
a drink and they danced again.
"Who
is your handsome friend"
She sighed. *'What a girl would
gjve for those eyes and lashes.
Wasted on a man,"
"Want to meet him"
pbviously stye did, but business
of happiness. But I can't, Greg ru-
minated,
remember
being con-
scious of happiness; I was always
:oo busy, tco inleruslud, too ab-
sorbed in whatever I was doing.
The bicycle and roller- skates
ond a sled. Somehow he hud them,
however small the earnings from
his father's pharmacy. Small, Greg
remembered,
because his father
not collect .from U-.e needy.
came
pjensure, "You
did
How exasperated his mother had
been!
Prosperity had mellowed
her, relaxed her, brought out an
unexpected sweetness in her .na-
ture, made licr lively to look at.
But his father
Greg tried to sue
him through adult eyes. It .was,
he thought, very difficult to sue
cue's parents as people. For the
first time it ot-curied to him that
his father's! quietness had
beenH
neither patience nor muinalibn;
it had been the deep-rooted seren-
ity of fulfillment. IK hud adored
liis \yifc we' likul Ins work.
room where Daggett could sit with
his back to the room. Not until they
were seated did he notice with
foreboding the three rowdies at the
next table who were annoying the
waitress, a raw-boned girl with a
plain face flushed from exertion
and suopressed anger, trying to
rerve them and at the same time
to avoid their impertinent hands.
Rupert
innocently
precipitated
the trouble. When the waitress
came to take their order he re-
marked, "A nice girl should not
to pestered by hoodlums."
She shook her head warningly.
'What'll you have to start! clam
chowder or vegetable soup?" She
lowered her voice. "One of them
is the boss' nepliew."
The three at' the next table were
sdlent and the waitress scurried
off. When she returned with their
order, Rupert smiled at her. From
tho
next
table came a snicker.
"That guy's making time with
your girl, Sam."
Qreg •• recovnized Sam's type, the
Ten Persons Die
in Accidents
NEW YORK UP) Ten persons, in-
cluding six children, were killed
yesterday by fumes from a faulty
gas
water
heater ir. a crowded
tenement apartment.
The tragedy brought city
offi-
cials to the scene. They opened a
thorough investigation and
t h c
health commissioner advised a city
wide drive to avoid similar deaths
in the future.
Found
dead
orirly
yesterday
were a -family of eight ard two
guests who had come for a bap-
kind
who seems to be perman-
tp
ently conditioned by his Comman-
do training. Whatever force might
have slanted
back his brow, it
was the army that had taught him
all the secrets of fighting; he was
spoiling to make use of his knowl-
edge, He looked irom Rupert to
Greg and then his eyes rested on
Raggett's twisted face.
tismal celebration the
The. . ... victims were
noxt day.
Ed ubirgcs
.
Gonza'les, 33; his wife Victoria, 29;
their
s.jx children; Domingo Mo-
tos, 3}, and his wife, 27.
The youngest Gonzales child, a
4-mohths-old girl, was to be bap-
tized yesterday, neighbors said.
End was taken dead from her bed
already
dressed her
pink bap-
tismal gown.
The Motos had fpent the night
in the Gonzales home after a pve-
baptism party. Orphaned by the
tragedy were their own three sons.
aged 4 to 8 who had stayed else-
where with relatives.
Two windows in the three room
apartment were open but
there
was not enough ventilation to re-
move the gases. One city official
said 'enough carbon monoxide had
teen formed to "kill oft en entire
squadron of men in half an hour."
It's impossible hot tc
fee! a healthy, mellow c
as cares and worries, <
pains melt away.Expert attendants^
are maintained in the Majestic'$
own bath department to restore
your vim, vigor and vitality.
And remember, our Bath House
is operated in accordance with
regulations prescribed by the
National Park Service of the
US Government's Department of the Inferior.
HOT SPRINGS
luul found
Wry. preg *>covpml wtyrl a,
rich auet g«od. Uv>C
w
w
'•Now
I've
seen
evenything,
3^eg Ml 14s stomach
The U, S. Office o fEducation es-
timates that
between 10 and 12
million dollars worth pf building is
*QJ? cleiasrc^rni, in /. g,
NATIONAL PARK, ARKANSAS
Here at the MAJESTIC HOTEL you'll find
rest and relaxation, fine food and fun to
suit your mood and your budget, Write today
for further information!
MAJESTIC
Horn
HAPARTMINT5
IP PATHS
t COTTAGiSy
M'$f^&..lt$laJ$'&»i$ik
-: -"q^T -f -^pri-Jip
'r-;^-. • V^\f_f
*
-
"^«
To City Subscribers:
If you fail to get your Stdf
please telephone 7*3431 by
6 p. m. and a special carrier
will deliver your paper.
Star
Bi
ihd
.
24hours eridihf at % S, rft.; '
4ft . \
^'
Stdr of Mejf 1899, Press 1927
56TH YEAR: VOL. 56 — NO. 23
consolidated Jan. is, 1929
HOPE AftKANSAS, tUlSOAY, NOViMBtR 9 19S4
M*mber: the Attattated PHtJ* & Audit Bureau «f Clfedtatlai.!
Av. Net Paid Circl. 6 Me*. Cndtrig Sept. 30, 1954 —
Selection of
Harlan Brings
Democrat Praise
By TED LEWIS, JR.
WASHINGTON (UP)
T wo
Democratic members of the Sen-
i/fte judiciary
committee
today
praised President Eisenhower's
nomination of a jurist
Appelate
Judge John Marshall Harlan
to
the Supreme Court.
Schedule of
Fire Inspection
12:40 p. m. - Stage Show - High
School.
1:00 p. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
1:45 p. m. - Stage Show - Junior
High School.
2:00 p. m. - Movies - Brookwood
School.
3:00 p. m. - Movies - Garland
School.
•
I
WASH1NGTO N
Wi
Russia has
Wednesday November 10
'countered
an
American
protest
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR .over the latest cold war aerial in-
Moscow Claims
'Innocence' in
Downing Plane
By WARREN
ROGERS JR,
The White Houre was expected School.
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
9:30 a. m. - Movies - Oglesby
T
to send the nomination of Harlen,
55-year-old New York federal cir-
cuit court judge and a Republi-
can, to the Senate during the day.
But it was not certain whether the
upper chamber would act on it
during the 'current session oh cen-
^iring Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy.
Sens. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn)
fnd Thomas C. Hcnnings. Jr (D-
Mo;, members of the judiciary
committee which must approve the
appointment, praised the selection
of a judge to succeed Justice Rob-
ert H. Jackson who died of a heart
attack last month. Kefauver said
he saw no "difficulties" in the way
of Marian's confirmation.
The Tennessee Democrat said he
/J,as a "very high opinion" of Har
Jan and -aid he was glad Mr. Ei-
senhower had
selected Someone
"has come up through the courts."
Hennings agreed.
"By and large, it contributes to
the
strength of the court to ap-
point, other things being equal, a
eminent
judge
whose
decisions
have to commended him to the
country, as have Judge Harlan's, '
Hennings declared.
If confirmed, Harlan will be the
4»iird Bepublican on the high court
and the "second justice to be ap-
pointed by Mr. Eisenhower. A for-
mer counsel to the New York state
crime commission,. Harlan is the
granduon and namesake of a fa-
mous justice who served 34 years
on the court.
The White House was also ex-
pected to send to the Senate the
nomination of Atomic Enprgy Com-
missioner
Joseph Campbell
as
omptroller general. Mr. Eisenhow-
announcd both appo i n tin ents
yesterday.
' • • , _ •
10 a. m. - Stage Show - Yerger
School.
with a declaration of abso-
lute innocence, but U. S. officials
indicate the Soviets haven't heard
the last of the matter.
Cigarette Controvefey Seems
tc ^ Flaming Hotter and the
Public Wants to Know Truth
Hubbard /s Elected
Head of Arkansas
Guidance Group
Horace Hubbard, Vocational Gui-
dance Director of Hope High Scho-
ol, has been elected President
of
the Vocational Guidance section of
the Arkansas Education Associat-
For
the eighth time since the ion
cold war began, the United States
yesterday demanded an
apology
11 a. m. - Movies - Paisley Scho-jand reparations from Russia
fir
pi.
violence done American aircraft by
12 noon - Combined Luncheon -
Lions, Rotary, Kiwanis
(Barlow
Hotel).
1:00 p. m. • Movies - Hopewell
School.
4:00 p. m. - Parade
4:30 p. m. - Fire Department De-
monstration (First National 'Bank
Building).
Thursday, November 11
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
Fire Department.
Says Crippling
TVA Aim of
Power Proposal
WASHiNGTON UP) The
general
manager of the American.
Public
Power Association asserted today
that
the porposed
Dixon-Yates
power contract :'s "the
opening
wedge in crippling the Tennessee
Valley Authority (TVA)"
Alex Radin, who said his
organ
ization represents more than 700
local publicly-owned electric util-
ities, was in the witness chair as
the Senate-House Committee
on
Soviet planes.
Moscow countered \yith a claim
that its planes were in the right.
But the original U.S. note
had
promised thst the Kremlin would
head more from Washington after
investigation established all
the
facts "regarding human life and
material losses."
The latest incident occurred Sun-
day over Japan's northern Hokkai-
do Island. Ten members of a U.S.
Air . Force
photo-reconnaissance
plane parachuted to safety.
Tha
llth go't snagged in ,his parachute
and drowned.
The United States fired a stiff
protest to Moscow, saying it ex-
pects the Kremlin "To make
all
such moral and material repara-
tions as lies within its power."
The Guidance section is compos-
ed of 60 full time and part time
Counselors in the state of Arkan-
sas.
As President of this organization,
Mr. Hubbard will preside at both
the annual meeting of Counselors
on Petit Jean mountain in Septem-
ber and the Sectional meeting at
the AEA convention next Fall.
The Guidance program at Hope
High School is seven years old this
year. Mr. Hubbard has been the
director since July 1948.
(Editor's Note
Few
re-
search
problems
of modern
times have captured the public
interest more than the current
search for an answer to this
question: Is cigarette smoking
a
substantial
h a z a r d
to
health? The interest is
justi-
fied, for the stakes are high.
Here is a concise summary of
what fe involved.)
By AtljON U. BLAKESLEE
AP Science Reporter
NEW ,YOR K
,The great cig-
arette cbntroversy is flaming hot-
ter.
'
.
'
It has millions
of
Americans
uzzled i or
confused, and many
rightencd. Are cigarettes
really
Knowland Is
Shocked at
Bohlen Deed
WASHINGTON (UP)
Republic a n
Leader William F.
Knowland (Calif;) said today
he
was "deeply shocked" that U. S.
Senate
American GI
Goes Over
to Russians
By RICHARD O'REGAN
VIENNA, Austria (/P) The Soviet
information service announced to-
day that and American Army ser
geant has asked the Russians ir
Aut'tiia for political asylum anc
has been granted it.
The
Red
information
identified the soldier as. Sgt. Wil-
liam Clayton Turner, ?2. and -ifaid
until Oct. 15 he had becVi'in •Cbm-
rany B of the 124th ArtiUery'Sup
ply. Battalion and in the military
police of the U. S. 7th Army's 2nd
Armored Division in Germany.
IT. S. Army authorities in Aus
tria said they were checking Avitt
Atomic Energy resumed its study I Ambassador Charles E.
Bohlen the Army in Germany On ; the;' re
of the controversial contract
to
feed private power into the TVA
lines.
Radin said the contract
affect
"all'the people of the nation," Tf
*is destroyed, he said, "the
attended an official party in Mos-
cow a few hours
after
Russian
plants shot down an American B-29
<jver':'Northern Japan,-
The' State Department paid yes- fg<jnc>' £uotCJd ,p: .letter
,
>-'lcl =
__*•..
,
. '
. bad written which eav
port.
The Soviet agency said
had jsked fori
- anc] becrj gTjBntoc
liv«t 4wi'Russia;1 iTlier
Firemen to
iVA'is destroyed.. Jie saio, "the terday and confirmed again last
people of the nation will have lost r.ioh/in --cnnnsP to new i'nnuiries.
Fire Fighting
^ As a part of Hope's three-day
"town inspection" campaign, the
Hope Fire Department will offer a
fire fighting demonstration Wednes-
day afternoon at 4:30 p. iri. at the
1st National Bank Building. In ma-
king this announcement, Chief A.
S. Willis said "This fire
fighting
demonstration staged by the mem-
bers of the Hope Fire Department
will be well worth seeing by every
citizen in Hope.
'jffe
1 The Fire Department will dem-
onstrate ' the
use of its various
equipment, including its splendid
junior arial, the 45 foot Bangor lad-
der in a spectacular hotel rescue
raise, life-net work, and countless
other educational and entertaining
features.
School children and the general
public are invited to witness the
demonstration Chief Willis said.
The
demonstration
will be pre-
..ceeded by a parade through the
Business district by the fire depart-
ment, school children 'and the visit-
ing members of the State Fire Pre-
vention Association, including "Stu-
pid Carelessness, the Fire Clown."
New Method Aids
Mental Treatment
ST. LOUIS W Development
of
afet
''electric shock" treatment
one o ftheir most effective allies
in bringing lower electric mies
and greater consumption of elect-
ric rates and greater consumption
of electricity to all
the homes,
farms and industries of the nat-
ion."
The proposed Dixon-Yates con-
tract, backed by the administra-
tion, provides for private
> power
interests to construct a 107 million
dollar power plant at West Mem-
phis,
Ark.,
to supply power to
TVA.
Mrs. C. E. Baker
Succumbs in
Local Hospital
Mrs. Exa Lera Baker, aged 57,
wife of Hope Police Chief Clarence
E. Baker, died early today in a
local hospital. She has been ill
only a short time. Mrs. Baker hjs
lived in Hempstead all her life.
Besides her husband she is sur-
vived by her mother, Mrs. Rosa
Parker of Spring Hill, two daugh-
r,ight in response to new inquiries,
that Bohlen did not know about
the plane incident when be and
other foreign diplomats attended a
dinner given by Soviet Premier
Georgi Malenkov Sunday night
to
celebrate the 37th anniversary of
the Communist revolution.
Knowland, in
a
brief
Senate
cpeoch, indicated that he was not
aware of the State Department's
ct&temcnt on this point. He
ac-
knowledged that there might have
been ''extenuating circumstances'1
in Bohlen's attendance at the Mos-
cow party, and said he had asked
the State Department for a
full
report.
Knowland said news of the plane
shooting -incident was broadcast by
Moscow radio at 6 p. m. Moscow
time Sunday
about two hours
before Bohlen went to the party.
State Department officials
said,
however, that Bohlen first learned
of the incident through an official
message Washington that was do.
it said he
had written which gave this ac
count of his defection from the
West:
While serving in Germany, h
became convinced, that the rebirt!
of an "aggressive German army'
would lead to war. He became cer
tain that
the U. S.
go'vernmen
was -preparing new aggression i
collaboration with Facist clement
n West Germany.
He said he crossed from Ger
nany to Austria Oct. 15 "with th
dea ol seeking political asylum i:
he Soviet Union."
"I have decided to go wher
here is real freedom for a. sun
ile man, arid I therefore ask fo
ie possibility to live and work i
tie Soviet Union," he was quotec
The letter
said
Turner
w
rafted in J942, took part in th
Normandy
landings
and serve
vith the 29th Division. From 194
o 1952, 'after his discharge froi
he ciimy, he was mostly out of
vork. In 1952 he was drafted again
and sent to West Germany.
U.S. Embassy in
3 a. m. Moscow
ters, Miss Ruth Baker and Mrs.;did Monday.
Eunice Dale Witt of Texarkana;
two sisters, Mrs. Sid Sinyard and^l
Mrs. Elmer Nations of Spring Hill
and two brothers, Arlin and Elgin
of Hope,
two grandchildren, Billy
and Clarence Kennedy.
Funeral services will be held
at
Herndon-Cornelius
Funeral
Home Chapel at 2:30 p. m. Wed-
livered to the
Moscow about
time Sunday right, after the par-
ty. It was this message that
in-
structed Bohlen to file a protest
note with the Kremlin, which lie
GIRL TALK
NEWTON, Mass., (UP)
Bos
ton College Football Captain Joe
Mattaliano was dined last night
by Boston University grid co-capt-
nesday by the Rev. Wesley Thoma- iano.
s Joe Terras! ard Frank Guil-
„
.
.
uuliSUIJ,
UUL;
uw*i^-«»
j.v**-"
—~ — >•
•
^^"S'J,a"L,°fu!±rm:'?"8C« Frank Douglas, Ray Turner and
drugs" have made
possible" to give beneficial shock
treatments to mentally-ill oldsters
onqe deemed too"fragils" for the
procedure.
This was reported today to tho
Southern Medical Association's 48th
annual meeting by Dr. James Ward
and Dr. James A.' Bectcr, of Hill
Crest
Sanitarium,
Birmingham,
Ala.
DON'T FORGET
FrfomU in $trvi«t
•\yri.te often. The USD knows there's
14e a letter at
» Miow frel swell.
U<
f
ce
Back at the BC campus, team-
mates eagerly asked Mattsliano iJ
he
talked with his hosts-, about
satin-day's BC-BU game, the first
^Ul.s'"w, -•«,
.
-
,in in 12 years.
'
nug.i Garner. Honorary, members
"We tallied about blondes, brun-
of City Police force, city and Coun- ettes and redheads," Muttaliano
,y officials.
'
son, assisted by the Rev. Carlton
Roberts.
Active pallbearers; Thomas An-
derson. Joe Jones. Faris Downs.
said.
Maybe You Are a Lucky Young
Girl Who Can Go to Movies on
Sunday Without Any Fuss
By ALVN STEINKOPF
(For Hal Boyle)
LONDON I*1 Ju st imagine you
are a lively- 24-year-old girl liv-
ing in London.
It's'a dank and dreary Sunday.
You have to turn on the light in
the middle of thw afternoon.
If'you were just any 24 year-old
girl,: earning your living typing in
an office, you could give that pony-
tail haircut a swipe with a comb,
slip c-n a mackintosh and go to
the movies.
Tens of thousands of young girls
do just that, and manage to sur-
vive a gloomy afternoon. There are
thick, moist end noisy masses .of
them in Oxford St
Put you had better do nothin
c| the kind if you arc
Margaret. She yenture4
Piincess
Margaret, it
seems
broke a royal tradition. Conspirina
with her in this act of lashnes.
were her lady-in-waiting,
Miss
Irish Peakc, and two unidentified
young men.
Members
of the royal
familj
may engage in a lot of .sprightly
activities, such as shooting quail
drinking champagne for
lunch
playing polo any old day,
an-:
betting on the races. But member
of the roval family do not go t.
the movies on Sunday.
The Princess went to see sonic
thing
rather
new in London
method, of projection known
a
Cinerama. She and her ccmpan
ions went 5nto the Casino The.a
ter and occupied seats, which cos
$2 IP anicee. Then they went hem
the gloom.
ta ne.wsiyjpjers, %$ SKfUe^ ft
. tot sM $$$$$' 'fifitesft
Fighter Escorts
May Be Used,
Dulles Warns
WASHINGTON W
The United
States is considering giving fight-
er escorts
to American aircraft
which fly near
Communist terri-
tory, Secretary of State Dulles dis
closed, today.
Dulles told a news conference Lena Newton,
studied by the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
He noted that the pilol of the
RB27 photographic plane shot down
by Soviet fighters over Japanese
waters last Sunday has authority
to ?hoot back, but did not do so.
Dulles said this was one of those
hairline decisions on which people
might make different judgement.1
afterwards. That was the case also
with ambassador Charles E. Boh-
len and his decision to attend a
It finds'Hho house of science and Soviet Party in Moscow .Sunday
night- following the plane incident,
Judgments Are
Awarded in
Circuit Court
A wreck near Emmet In which
three Negro workers were killed
resulted in a law suit in Hempstaad
Circuit court yesterday with a jury
awarding judgements totaling $i,-
002. Two cases were combinedt with
a total of eight persons suing John
W. Kizer Jr., driver of one of the
cars involved.
' Ben Hill was awarded $200 by
a
jury, Grover Rankin $1, Warren
Powell $1, Rachel Lee Slay, $200|
angeroUs?
moking!?
Should
YOU
stop
and her child-
Jr-
Nell, a total of
Court will reconvene this after-
noon.
'By Alvtn'SpN
WASHINGTON
Senate source*
friends of Sen.
the n
medicine divided. Some authorities
rankly call cigarettes a major fac-
or in causing human cancer, es-
ecially'lung cancer, and say they
re bad for your heart. But others,
qually -prominent, say the . case
gainst cigarettes is by no means
woved. .
.
-
:
'
'
•
'
•
It finds' many hundreds of thou-
ands of dollars being poured into
eseareh to find the answer,
or
•nswers. That fact could produce
;reat
boons
for all
on
the
eseareh will dig deep
into some
biological m y s t e r i e s , What is
earned could turn up vita), links
about the cause, control or treat-
nent of cancer, heart disease or
jossibly other health m a t t e r s ,
quite aside from its effect in the
cigarette controversy.
The controversy finds;• unknown
thousands of .men
and women
jiving lip- cigarettes, or trying to,
6r3thinking they should. ;
• . • . ' .
Humaiij healthy is one stake in
;he controversy: Are
cigarettes
.armleshs, bad, or scmewhere
in
jotweeri!?- Human enjoyment is an-
other: ityfost smokers enjoy their
smoking,,
..
The tobacco industry 'the '.big
arid sm&ll growers and manufac-
turers ind processors, •middlemen,
Ji-'1'1-r'-' .ers, retailers, vending nrui-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ^Vferaiors and many oth.Si.-s.
owes
its livelihood
to tobacco.
Governments derive much revenue
from tobacco taxes.
"
Science ar.d medicine have
a
stake. Should a reputable sciel?.-
tist disclose his findings which lead
him to suspect hazards in smok-
ing, or anything else? Or should
he wait until he has definite proof?
If he is proved wrong after his
early announcement, will
people
accuse him of scare mongering,
or
lose faith in scientific 're-
search? If he is proved right after
deciding not to warn the public
would people accuse him of hav-
ing shirked his responsibility?
The cigarette controversy,
like
Continued on Page Three
.
Dulles said.
Dulles said Bohlen had,to make
a ouick judgment without instruc-
tions from Washington on the basis
of incomplete information which
reached him less than an hour be-
fore lie left for the party.
The ambassador's attendance at
the party had- been criticized by
Sens. Knowland
(R-Calif)
and
Bridges (R-NH) .just before Dulles'
meeting with newsmen.
Urine Test
May Detect
a Cancer
; By FRANK
CAREY
AP 'Science
Reporter
; ST. LOUIS
Possible discov-
ery of a new and highly accurate
test for cancer, omplpying urine
instead of blood
was announced
to'day to the Southern Medical As-
sociation.
';:
i
«""
Doctors T.; C. Terrell and H.H.
Beard of Fort -Worth, Tex.,1 said
the..
Duke Disclaims
Knowledge of
German Writer
By KINGSBURY SMITH
PARIS (INS )
The British gov-
ernment today published German
Vorld War Two records in which
he
Duke of Windsor was quoted
as the source of information on
Allied milita-.-y plane's.
The 'former King Edward' VIII.
vho now is in London, telephoned
o this correspondent a statement
saying he "never met or had any
connection" with the
Ge/rman
A'hose statements were quoted by
the London government.
A German, spy organizer, Count
Julius Von Zech-Burkersrpda,
at
:he time minister to The Nether-
ands, claimed in a message to his
aome government that he "might
'lave- the opportunity to establish
Certain lines leading to the DuXe
cf Windsor."
The two loiters that the German
envoy wrote to his superiors in the
Berlin foreign ministry mentioned
the duke several times. They were
cjuoted in the latest collection of
"documents on German
.Foreign
Policy" published by the British
government.
The documents cover the period
from immediately after the British
and French declaration of
war
Sept. 3, 1939 up to the eve of
tfce
Hitler-Mussolini meeting at
the
Brenner Pass March IS, 1940. This
was the so-called
"phony
war'
ftage before
the Germans
'' tin. arnount of a (p«e hor-
mone,,-called •. "chroionic gonadtro-
phin" found in urine collected over
a 24-hour period.
They told.the SMA's 48th annual
meeting that this hormone ; occurs
in only small amounts ir. normal
individuals but that it showed up
at substantial levels in 94 per cent
of 51 proved cases of cancer.
And the researchers described
chemical technique for separat-
ing the hormone from other sub-
stances in the urine. This allows
a quantitative measurement of the
hormone, depending upon intensity
cf v. blue-green color.
. The doctors said this ability to
detect varying quantities of the
suggested
possbilitle?
Evangelist
SaysReligion
Greatest Need
In the opening Revival :. service-
in the City Hall Auditorium last ni-
ght Evangelist G. P. Comer told
the audience that America's great-
est need and of the world is a "Re-
vival Of Religion."
He said,
"In
America we art-
spending 18 billion dollars a year
for crime, 12 billion dollars a year
for gambling 9 bullion for
liquor
which makes a total of 39 billion
dollars while we are spending ono
billion by the protestants, Jews and
Catholics. 50 thousand high school
girls become mothers of illegiti-
mate children, God have mercy on
us as a nation" he declared.
The music is an outstanding fea-
ture of these services with Mrs.
Nan Frazier, presiding at the organ
console and Mrs. Spencer at the
piano, and the Rev. Spencer lead-
ing the song service and singing
special numbers with their boys,
Henry and Bobby.
A daily broadcast is heard-'each
afternoon over KXAR direct from
the auditorium from 4:30 to 5 p. m.
The services 'are held dally at
7:30 p. m. Evangelist Coiner has
held revivals in 28 states of th«
nation but he says this is^his first
revival in Arkansas but he
a
his party have been greatly
pressed by the hospitality of
the
people of Hope.
.
:;;
substance
cf:
•• 1. Detecting cancer before symp-
toms become apparent.
2. Testing for the presence or
absence of any signs of "spread-
ing'' of a cancer following surgical
or other treatment of the original
malignancy.
3,'Differentiation between "be-
nign" and malignant tumors.
Dr. Beard told a repoiter that,
aside from studies of cells or tis-
sues, most tests for cancer in th3
past have employed blood
sam-
ples. But he said these "have the
drawback- that they
produce
a
large number of 'fal»e positives'
due .to
the
complexity of sub-
stances in blood,"
"Falfe positives" are. also possl
ble with the new technique but to
a far lesser degree, the doctors
declared.
AEC Head May
Have Time in
Getting Nod
By John A.-Goldsmith
-
WASHINGTON (UP) Atomic
Energy
Commissioner
Joseph
Campbell today faced a possible
Senate -fight for confirmation as
comptroller general because of his
support of the Dixon-Yates con*
tract.
' Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-TemO,
an outspoken foe of the contro-
versial power contract, said Camp-
bell's supoort of it as a member
of the AEC was a "substantial
made of dlsqualifiiation for
the
office of comptroller general. Ke-
fauver called for an investigation
of Campbell's record.
The White House announced yes-
terday that President Eisenhower
Would nominate Campbell for the
GOA post today. The appointment
must be confirmed by the Senate
where' maty Democratic tempers
have been roused by the proposed
Dixon-Yates p'ower deal. Although
his appointment may go to the
Senate today," action will not be
forthcoming for some time."<^ ,;v
' As comptroller general, Camp-
bell, a Republican, wotild head the"
General
Accounting' Office'
<in-
vestgating "armX of *'Congress. He
would serve ' a 15-year term with
a salary"of $17,500-annually.,,t' i.
Peterson Is
i
Accused of
V
Copying Codes
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (LT?)
, Th^
gov,enment today iharged Jhat Jo-
seph S. Peters-en, Jr., former gov.
eminent employe indicted on es-
pionage charges, illegally copied
secret documents which,, shp.wed
that the United .States had 'brok-
en n Dutch government code,
A bill of particulars filed by sfov-
err»ment prosecutors in Jttexandria,
federal court also charged that
of the
newsmen tha,t*a'
is being workedy
thy supporters w
1. The drafting-
tion to ,tone ' dd
censmre' mollo'ri
fered tomorroy
mittee headed
Watldns ; ,
2..TlS?
if t- mafo
Under a
gust,
until
«. By JAG*
sisted
McCarthy •'(
talk to ^de&jL4 „ „
ing his^cerisure)^
at? opens. " "
did
two influ
who as)t
they had
jnay.be :
yesterday i'dfe'sj i
i .That' was0"^
in'1! an f,>d;
agreed i
nien,tarfan« ,s|
byf thu|. *-"--il-
r'csplvvtioi
83rd'Con
.
dieted
- -f *-*r T •*-—'-ty. j-~j- 7]E,
censuring M£'
leged
heads,/,
tersen, now free on $10,000 • bond
pending trial Jan. 4, improperly
removed secret government docu-
ments dealing vlth Red China s
cnde and with the "routing of
North Korean politi9al security
traffic."
' '
The nature of these documents
was not explained. '
Petersen was dismissed from ms
$7,700-a-y3ar job as a research an-
alyst with the hush-hush National
Security Agency on Oct.-1. He was,
lalei indicted on three counts deal-
in? with improper removal of su-
per-secret agency documents.
H\?
was charged with using the infor-
mation "in a manner
prejudicial
to the safety and nterest of the
United States."
gaticnsC Bu.bc<,j.nini1
«,.fA-f
»«(!.•<.'• ,_,A"
. ••'!» Pr.W*-il^W
of rape and *i
Judge, Mi"
of James J
ed in lolk
tion
Rock.«
'. THICK SIV10KE
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, (IF>
Smoke, pouring from a burning tav-
ern was so Ihick firemen could not
see a fire hydiant on the corner,
Thty finally lound the hydrant 1>Y
nrobing through the heavy smoke
varied France,
End Belgium.
m-
The
Netherlands,
Arkansas Weather
For Nov. 9-14 :
Arkansas
Temperatu r es
degiees above
normal.
Mrs, J.R.Lester
Son at Lewisville
»•
Mrs. J, R. Lester, aged 93, wife
of the late J. T. Lester
of Mars
Hill
in
Lafayette County, died
at ih,e home of a son in LewisviUe
last night.
survived by four sons, Ed
Arrest Follows
*
Altercation
City Police arrested Robert Lee
Jones on an assault with intent ,tt>
kill charge following an altercation
in which Bobby Lee Rogers was
badly slashed on the side of th»
face and apross his lips. He was ta-
ken to a hospital for treatment. The
incident occurred on the P^tmoa
)Ro«.<J,
• All Around the Town
•y Thf War
ttuff
' .
Arkansas' great football team
stiU is ranked 4th in tile nation ac-
cording to the AP poll of sporte-
\ydters . . • its ironic to §ee strate
. . •
gy employed by Midwest and
West writers who like tq build up
their teams for the Rose Bowl fitt-
rne which has dropped in prestige
considerably
for instance just
who h;ave the West Coast teams
played?
vi'hich has
take
met
Southern, Cal
only
of their own area with one excep.-.
tion and that
TCV<
were smeared SO tc, 7' in, th
back yard amj UCL4 has
,1
T
11
...n«l>
nnriut
rt
m,eet
(
,
t
of Coushatta. La., C. D. Lester of (thanks to votes of the
_ _
"Stp^.Bir T
«
T^~
_ • I •»-, .
1-1 r _. _i
.....J£A.in
Jo
4-7
Normal m .njma 3,6-ifJ. Nonn^l max*
ima gjMfi, §}
Wto.'fiii
' .rtrt/iaic
Hope, John F. and 0. B. Lester of
Lewisvyie, two daughters, Mrs. ft.
L, Rpyd of Texarkana, and Mrs.
Ifenry 8hea of Mflrs JftU communi-
•
Far West writers, is back
flrst
ten while TOV "'*"
ttnem handily is >w,t Jn
J . . UCLA "»«'* •<"> *
Rose Bowl look good , , • you 8,n4
I know what would happen, if, jioy
W*§t Coast ieam p}ayed_a sc,hf
like Arkansas" has . .*. tpp hag
have more votes than th,r—
Hope Athletic Deparfw
$7.84 on the Magnolia gp^
week ,
with an
t. .
one mw$ hqroe 'geroe
n^ent, ,is .W^y to gQ^
this year
'W|.h
o.|l?ns
20-20
of $34044
Bagging
bycks
m$
V^A'JV"^ ff^ffl^.
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
larlow
t-'tfV .'
f
lift
It thi s
lluclans begin put-
interpretations &i
ions, otte conclusion
a second one seems
t ,
uWican Defeat.
Ilheii? dissatis-
Ican control of
'the House and
te over to the
final Senate re-
kn,owti uhlil after
narrowness
pretty good
6f voters
disturbed by the
as
a whole
•—
or in distress
"expresed
thefr
._£ ganger' by giving th-j
ats pati, overwhelming vie-
"fcHMge'the direction. This
?,i6,tner hand) if they had
' enthusiastic about
jfcrfbrmarce of tho
mm fit seems reason-
teV4 they would have
]& GOP control of Con-
.'• did the reverse.
even' division of
.„„ ..fas best reflected
races where, In Ore-
id/ New Jersey, only
votes separated the
^although
i roughly
five
*otes'( were cast in the
'•S, '
'Democrats achieved pp
^majority in1 capturing
tjthe House over Presi
?veijhqWer's
last-minute
f i
' the Bepubicans in
the little booths and moved close.
Rupert left the bar and swerved
toward the booth where Greg was
Sitting with the girl.
The girl gave him a melting
glance. "Are you going to dance
With me"
"No," Rupert said. "Never do
that. Never take away my friend's
girl."
She laughed with
mechanical
brightness. "Say, you're
good.
Want to order some champagne."
I'm crazy about champagyne."
"No,"
Rupert said again. "No
wine—no kick in it."
The girl answered this with an
obliging scream of laughter. ''No
Wine. No women. How do you feel
about song"
"Song" Rupert echoed in his
rasping voice. Abruptly he buried
his face in his arms on the table.
He was crying, hard, tearing sobbs
that shook his thi nbody.
The uneasy silence was broken
by a man's embarrassed laughter.
"What a crying jag."
Greg paid the bill, waited unti'
Rupert was quiet, and then said,
"Let's go." .
NEXT TIME HE'LL REALLY GET SERVICE-Mrs. Lucille
Gregory shows the grand tip she received for services in a Dallas,
Tex., restaurant She served a well-dressed man in his fifties
a $1.50 sirloin steak and when She returned to pick up the dishes
she found a $100, $50 and $1 bill on the table.
T4351 Bouse seatsi the Dem
?n 2Si2 to the Republicans
by 'gaining 17
^epublicaiis are trying too
[themselves by recalling that
la "ce'ntury
with one ex
JJ934', the party in con-
'pngiess has lost some
vihe \inid-term. l election's
T^may argue that their
'seats'this year was far
*,Jhe f-ecc-nt average of
•picked by, the
party
the, mid-term bal-
fijct. remains the yotfi s
can, when they
mid-term tiadi-
the grip on Con-
r in power. They
finp'3834' to show their eh-
ifwjthe NeW Deal begun
ifideht .Roosevelt two years
WHILE MOM'S AWAY—Seven piglets feed from a bottle rack
under the watchful eye of Carl Teska, of Albany, Ni Y. His
brother, Richard, rigged up the device alter the piglets' mother
had disowned>them.
He got Rupert outside and they
began to walk away from the road
house. Rupert staggered but he
pulled the key from his packet as
though it were a talisman
and
tossed it from hand to hand.
At length
Greg said
quietly
"What happened to yen?"
"One of Mussolini's boys." Ru
pert said. ' I wa.s singing at La
Scala and this fellow was annoyed
because I refused to sirg for n
Fascist gathering. He was persu
asive. Fir&t he hung me by a stvar
and played a little tattoo on m>
back." For once there
was
IT
drama, no overstatement in hi
voice.
He
sounded unspeakabl;
tired. "Then" the pause length
ened until Greg thought lie wouTc
not speak
any more that nigh
"they operaetd on my tin oat."
Greg leaned against the gate anc
lighted ja cigaret. There was noth
ing to ^say.
"So much has hap
pened since then," Rupert v/en
on, "but that was the thing tha
mattered most. My family is gone
my hcme, rny country, my profe;
sion. I am practically an author
ity on concentration camps, on cs
capes, on crossing frontiers with
out a passport. It
is a itrang
thing to belong
nowhere, Greg
Even the' ticking of a clock is lik
a voice saying, 'Move on. Move on
Move on.',"
He clung to the top post of th
gate, turning the key over an
ever in his hand. "That is the ke;
to the house my family moved int
after the Fascists got me.
M
mother
was killed arid my tw
young sisters." He slipped the ke
back into his pocket. "Not by Fas
cists or Nazis. It was an America
bomb. War is like that. No onn
you see, is
to blame. Or all o
us."
yfithe'laBt timrf in Roose-
"^""ilj.that happened. In
__-^elections of 3P3& and
j.\j3emocrats lost ground but
*—<l> of/House or Senate.
x^anje token the voters
ffitt"they
had felt over-
B enthusiasm for the Re-
^''/'could have added
to
WjXk' 1n, both houses. They
^Vto< •
|»bssible that
Eisenhower's
* '
efforts for the Repub-
them from a worse
thevoters may have
p*' their minds before he
|gj;'*tneek-deep into the cam-
,o, special situations such
,,,jiloyjment in Michigan and
pvanja
the, voters made
bejirigs. known by unseating
SJS.tet Republican (Michigan)
^'a.cing, a Republican with
5' as governor .Pennsyl-
09,01 the main Democratic
that
farmers were
t tbs Eisenhower ad-
$ tflejuble price sup-
THE
STORY:
Greg Seaver, a
young man who wants to °o some
thing on his owri, leaves the rela-
tive secur'ty of working .for his
stepfather to become a chauffeur
for a wealthy Invalid, Wade Da'g-
gelt, who is also tired of staying
In one place.. Tr^velng in
Dag-
gett's car and trailer they rescue
a displaced alien, Ruper1 Uandus-
ky, from a probably death by ex-
posure. Somehow they haven't the
Water, water everywhere might sum up the story
of Southeast Arkansas. From this fact has grown a
rice industry which is third largest in the nation.
Rice mills (1) and paddies mark hundreds of square
miles of land in Southeast Arkansas and where the
rice leaves off the ducks seem to take over. Duck
hunting (2) attracts thousands of sportsmen from
every state in the union to the marshes of Southeast
Arkansas each year and when the marshes begin to
thin out toward the most deeply southern part of the
state, the Loblolly pine forests dominate the land-
scape. Where the forests and the rice marshes meet
is Mattox Bay, one of the cut-off lakes of the White
River. Here occurs one of the most unusual sports
in America—bow h u n t i n g for gar (3). Archery
affacianados of Arkansas look forward all year long
to the big August gar hunt vyhcn all members of the
Arkansas Bow Hunters Association gather here to
try their skills for prizes against the most vicious
fish in fresh water. The first white settlement west
of the Mississippi, and now a State Park, Arkansas
Post (4), allows for a glance at Arkansas misty past
in the Small mementoes and historic artifacts on dis-
play there. Lake Chicot and Grand Lake provide the
top-notch' fishing of the deepest part of Southeast
Arkansas, while the numerous lumber towns and mills
give the tourist a chance to see the tree-to-paper-sack
progress of the wood which dominates the economy
of the area. The verdict on roads here is better-than-
average.
Arkansas Publicity and Information Department
\, November 8,
—
—
Doctors Must
Hove Faith,
AMATold
*
By FRANK CAREY
AP Science Reporter
ST LOUIS — Dr.
Elmer Hess,
president-elect of the American
Medical Association,
said today
any
doctor "who lacks faith m
the Supreme Being" has nc right
to practice -medicine.
"A physician who walks .into a
sick room is not alore," said th?
Erie, Pa., doctor who is a special
ist in urology. "He can only nun- %
ister to the ailing person v.ith tho
material tools of scientific medi-
cine his father in a higher pow-
er does the reft.
"Shew me the doctor who der-ca
the existence of the Supreme Bo-
ing and I will say that hn has no
right to practice the healing art.
Hess made the statements in a
prepared digest of extemporane-
ous remarks he planned for the
opening of ihe 43th annual meet,-
ing of the Southern Medical .Asso- I/
fiat ion.
The SMA, with a total
membership of lO.OOC, doctors, ranks
second only to the A'MA as the
largest general medical organiza-
tion in the country.
"Our medical schools are doing
a magnificent job of teaching the
fundamentals of scientific medi-
cine," declared Hess.
"However,
I'm afraid that the concentration
on basic science is so great the
teaching of spiritual values is al-^
most neglected."
*
At another point he asserted:
"Any man whe enters the med-
ical profession with financial gain
as his sold objective is 'a discredit
to
his colleagues.
The market
place is where you
<JO to
make
money, not the sick room. Doctors
lake care of sick folks-period."
The AMA official declared
that
organization has launched a long-
range program designed to solve
the "medical care problems of thej|
indigent and the chronically ill.™
"Special attention must be giv-
en," he said, "to the problems o£
those who are Unable to pay for
their own medical care, or buy
insurance to protect
themselves
against such costs. Wc are urging
state and county medicr.l socie-
ties to make this a major project."
Continued from Page One
five lamous American
historical
monuments. He'd probably name
monuments several thousand more
pubs. The British lean to the theo-
ry
that -any post
where a man
shakes his thirst' has a place in
history.
Americans are loathe to
make
monuments of their saloons, even
though some of modern society's
the Statue of Liberty, the Washing- bluest blod has been shed in them
. ,.
.
.,
T • „_•,„
or.j
ton Monument
the Lincoln
and in recent years, and despite the
'
Deer Season Is
ten in Arkansas
LITTLE ROCK (/P) —Deer hunt-
ing season opens in Arkansas to-
day with the promise of fair skies
and cool weather. The first period
of the split season closes Friday.
The school period is Dec. 13-18.
The limit is one buck each per-
fect
Washlngton
hig
Jefferson memorials. Then he d be iarevfeii address to his officers in
nowhere. For the first cov.plel In thjs mattei. of keeping
thi
urs, Greg had been vaguely
avor Qf lhe past aliv6j wc nav,
heart to turn
him in, for he is
illegally in the country, but Rupert
is afraid. When he sees a police-
man n a New England town, he
flees In fear,
XII
port
program
,was
not .born
out by the results.
On the contrary. In the normaly
Republican
farm sttate of Iowa
Sen, Gillette, a personally popular
Democrat seeking his third term,
was defeated.
APPLES
„„., - '
Wholesale or Retail
pa 'ARKANSAS BLACKS
• ROME BEAUTY
• GOLDEN
'f|jf UPIOU8 • RED DELICIOUS • STAYMEN WINESAP
C A G E E G G S
USSELl/S CURB MARKET
901 West 3rd
Phone 7-9933
ITEEL CONSTRUCTION
iv §>Jieds, Farm Butjdings and Industrial Buildings
!|-lpQ<if according to specifications. Can pe con-
aTftructed at low cost,
SALL,., PR7-4(583
for complete information,
UCKETT STEEL &
EQUIPMENT CO.
He was in the third bar Greg
entered, a glass in his hand, his
dollar bill on; the counter before
him. He caught sight of Greg and
finished his drink in a hurry.
Greg stood beside him .trying to
hold in his smoldering a n g e r .
"What are you drinking"
"Brandy. It works faster."
Greg ordered another brandy for
Rupert and beer for himself. "Why
did you run away"
"I thought this might be my last
drink,"
"Why
did you think I'd turn you
in" In his outrage at this betrayal
Greg forgot entirely th at he had
sponsored the idea only a few days
earlier.
"It has happened to me before."
"Nothing is going to happen to
you here. Just relax."
Greg pushed Rupert's dollar bill
toward him and paid the check.
XIII
The traffic seemed- to spring u
from
of hours
aware that there were more cars
on the road than usual, but now
there was a steady line of trafic
and he slowed down.
"What have you got into?" Dag-
gett demanded impatiently.
"I don't know. According to the
map there is nothing special ahead.
We may run out tit this soon."
"AUs-ays in. a hurry to move on,"
Rupert commented. "And to think
that you like it. Sometimes I be-
lieve you art; the youngest of us."
"Don't say that,"' Daggett pro-
tested. "It makes me feel so old
to have people tell me how youns
am. It's
the last step before
senility. .Dawdling makes me ner-
vous, that's all. And especially on
a
road like this where there is
nothing to see."
"You hold your horses," Greg
called over his shoulder. Then his
eyes were caught by a roadside
s-ign and he begun to laugh. "Oh.
ttumped
unless you let him in-
clude Mae West or Sophie Tucker.
the
a moment's hesitation the
crept over Rupert's cheek
After
color
bones and his hand moved forward
slowly. He pocketed the money.
That day
Daggett insisted • on
driving longer than usual. It was
not until they passed a roadhouse
that he consented to stop for the
night a( a nearby trailer park.
After he was settled in bed, with
a book and cigarets within reach,
he suggested, "Why don't you two
go up for a 'drink."
There were a do/en or more
cars parked in front of the road
house but it seemed nearly empty.
It Vvas a barn of a place, dim^y
lighted. Through the gloom, Greg
could make out couples sitting at
Forrestvillc., Of course. I should
have remembered. They always
have big doings in April. Wc am
on our way to a local celebration
An annual affair that has gene on
beyond the memory of m:iD."
"But why at this senson?
hardy idiots like ourselves visit
Maine for pleasure in April. I
won't thaw out here for anothev
small tables, factory girls
their escorts,
professional
" Anniversary of the founder'
l.irth,"
Greg
explained. "The}
have horse racing and parachut
drops during the day and a ear
niv-il at night."
"How
do you know all this?
Daggett asked.
"I was born in Maine."
"I didn't know that."
"Wi.Ol,"'
Greg pointed
out rea
sonably, "after all, I had to b
born somewhere.'
Greg, forced down to 20 mile
an hour, had leisure to look uroun
him.
The small boy he had bee
careened clo\vn the road ahead of
him on the bicycle his father haJ
got him for Christmas. C;iret'roe
childhood
ihat was supposed to'
with ke the time of times, the pinnacle
ourins.
Nobcdy
can tear down
ieir traditional haunts in the rid-
culous name of progress.
The British not only preserve
Vestminster Abbey and their ca-
iedral. The government also pro-
ects against charge or deslruc-
ion SjOOO pubs, including one in
;hich the first Queen Elizabeth
ruaffed nutbrown ale and another
n which Henry V took a farewell
before hopping the channel
eriy to France and the battle at
igincourt.
The government, explaining that
the events that occurred in these
nns vould make a history o'f Eng-
and," plans to list as historical
a tavern. But, after all these year.-;,
doesn't the distillery that fueled
Gen. U. S. Granted perhaps de-
serve a memorial marker?
Any
Southerner will confirm, that it was
only
bottle
courage that
gave
Grant the nerve to take on the
peerless Robert E. Lee.
How about the bar off Gramercy
Park, New York, where lonely
O. Henry dreamed up his stories?
Isn't
that
a kind of monument
worth keeping?
There are many interesting po-
litical sites- worth preserving as
historic monuments
such as the
smoke-filled room where Warren
iod.The Game and Fish Commission
says the Monroe-Roc Roe Refuge
in Montoe County will be open to
deer hunters fod the first time
since it became a state refuge 20
years ago'.
Act Fat? When Cough From (|;
Common Cold Hangs On
Chronic bronchitis may develop if
your cough, chest cold, or acute bron-
chitis is not treated and you cannot
afford to take a chance with any medi-
cine less potent than Creomulsion. It
goes into the bronchial system to help
loosen and expel germ laden phlegm
and aid nature to soothe and heal raw,
tender.inflamcdbronchialmembrancs.
For children you can now get
milder, t»stier Creomulsion for Chil-
dren in a pink and blue package.
M,
Gel a large bottle of Creomulsion at «<
your drug store. Use it all as directed.
Creomulsion is guaranteed to please
you or druggist refunds money. Adv.
Harding wa.s picked as a
dential candidate, and the
conquered life but because he
iccepted it on its own terms.
At
a park on the outskirts of
own, Greg unhooked the trailer
and (ho three men drove slowly
nto Forrestville.
Forrestville was neither a pic-
iuresque village nor a thriving fac-
tory town. It was old, its houses
weatherbeaten and unpainted, with
an air of hard wo'rk and dogged
survival about them.
Daggett was having the time of
his life and to Greg's surprise he
suggested, "There's a hotel of
sorts. Let's lunch there for a
change."
presi-
exact
spot where Calvin Collidge put on
his first Indian headdress. These
would please Democrats greatly.
Republicans might equally enjoy
making a federal museum of Tarn-
many Hall, or erecting a granite
tower commemorating the "Tru-
man dollar."
Everybody, of course, would 'be
glad to contribute toward a na-
tional monument for the first man
in America who finds a free place
to
park his
car legally. But no
such fund will ever be raised. No
guy lucky enough to find a park-
ing space would give away his sa-
cret
fame.
for so empty a reward as
The hotel lobby was uninviting,
with linoleum on the floor and a
pot-bellied
stove in
the middle
of the room.
Greg led the way
to
a corner table 5n the dining
girls,
ANNOUNCES A NEW POLICY!
No» yewcon have yswr Hsme Rewired
KKAll
12 Easy Payments
sprinkling of older couples. Oddly
enough, it was the latter who made
the most noise.
Rupert made his way to the bar
like a homing' pigeon and Greg
followed him,
Some of the girls weren't bad at
all. In a few minutes one of them
came up to him.
She smiled tentatively.
"Hello,
Goodlooking. Want to dance"
"Why not" Greg led her out
on the floor. He .was not a good
dancer but the girl was expert and
she made him feel better than he
wag. it was pleasant to have a
wpman in his arms and this one
was not demanding. He bought her
a drink and they danced again.
"Who
is your handsome friend"
She sighed. *'What a girl would
gjve for those eyes and lashes.
Wasted on a man,"
"Want to meet him"
pbviously stye did, but business
of happiness. But I can't, Greg ru-
minated,
remember
being con-
scious of happiness; I was always
:oo busy, tco inleruslud, too ab-
sorbed in whatever I was doing.
The bicycle and roller- skates
ond a sled. Somehow he hud them,
however small the earnings from
his father's pharmacy. Small, Greg
remembered,
because his father
not collect .from U-.e needy.
came
pjensure, "You
did
How exasperated his mother had
been!
Prosperity had mellowed
her, relaxed her, brought out an
unexpected sweetness in her .na-
ture, made licr lively to look at.
But his father
Greg tried to sue
him through adult eyes. It .was,
he thought, very difficult to sue
cue's parents as people. For the
first time it ot-curied to him that
his father's! quietness had
beenH
neither patience nor muinalibn;
it had been the deep-rooted seren-
ity of fulfillment. IK hud adored
liis \yifc we' likul Ins work.
room where Daggett could sit with
his back to the room. Not until they
were seated did he notice with
foreboding the three rowdies at the
next table who were annoying the
waitress, a raw-boned girl with a
plain face flushed from exertion
and suopressed anger, trying to
rerve them and at the same time
to avoid their impertinent hands.
Rupert
innocently
precipitated
the trouble. When the waitress
came to take their order he re-
marked, "A nice girl should not
to pestered by hoodlums."
She shook her head warningly.
'What'll you have to start! clam
chowder or vegetable soup?" She
lowered her voice. "One of them
is the boss' nepliew."
The three at' the next table were
sdlent and the waitress scurried
off. When she returned with their
order, Rupert smiled at her. From
tho
next
table came a snicker.
"That guy's making time with
your girl, Sam."
Qreg •• recovnized Sam's type, the
Ten Persons Die
in Accidents
NEW YORK UP) Ten persons, in-
cluding six children, were killed
yesterday by fumes from a faulty
gas
water
heater ir. a crowded
tenement apartment.
The tragedy brought city
offi-
cials to the scene. They opened a
thorough investigation and
t h c
health commissioner advised a city
wide drive to avoid similar deaths
in the future.
Found
dead
orirly
yesterday
were a -family of eight ard two
guests who had come for a bap-
kind
who seems to be perman-
tp
ently conditioned by his Comman-
do training. Whatever force might
have slanted
back his brow, it
was the army that had taught him
all the secrets of fighting; he was
spoiling to make use of his knowl-
edge, He looked irom Rupert to
Greg and then his eyes rested on
Raggett's twisted face.
tismal celebration the
The. . ... victims were
noxt day.
Ed ubirgcs
.
Gonza'les, 33; his wife Victoria, 29;
their
s.jx children; Domingo Mo-
tos, 3}, and his wife, 27.
The youngest Gonzales child, a
4-mohths-old girl, was to be bap-
tized yesterday, neighbors said.
End was taken dead from her bed
already
dressed her
pink bap-
tismal gown.
The Motos had fpent the night
in the Gonzales home after a pve-
baptism party. Orphaned by the
tragedy were their own three sons.
aged 4 to 8 who had stayed else-
where with relatives.
Two windows in the three room
apartment were open but
there
was not enough ventilation to re-
move the gases. One city official
said 'enough carbon monoxide had
teen formed to "kill oft en entire
squadron of men in half an hour."
It's impossible hot tc
fee! a healthy, mellow c
as cares and worries, <
pains melt away.Expert attendants^
are maintained in the Majestic'$
own bath department to restore
your vim, vigor and vitality.
And remember, our Bath House
is operated in accordance with
regulations prescribed by the
National Park Service of the
US Government's Department of the Inferior.
HOT SPRINGS
luul found
Wry. preg *>covpml wtyrl a,
rich auet g«od. Uv>C
w
w
'•Now
I've
seen
evenything,
3^eg Ml 14s stomach
The U, S. Office o fEducation es-
timates that
between 10 and 12
million dollars worth pf building is
*QJ? cleiasrc^rni, in /. g,
NATIONAL PARK, ARKANSAS
Here at the MAJESTIC HOTEL you'll find
rest and relaxation, fine food and fun to
suit your mood and your budget, Write today
for further information!
MAJESTIC
Horn
HAPARTMINT5
IP PATHS
t COTTAGiSy
M'$f^&..lt$laJ$'&»i$ik
-: -"q^T -f -^pri-Jip
'r-;^-. • V^\f_f
*
-
"^«
To City Subscribers:
If you fail to get your Stdf
please telephone 7*3431 by
6 p. m. and a special carrier
will deliver your paper.
Star
Bi
ihd
.
24hours eridihf at % S, rft.; '
4ft . \
^'
Stdr of Mejf 1899, Press 1927
56TH YEAR: VOL. 56 — NO. 23
consolidated Jan. is, 1929
HOPE AftKANSAS, tUlSOAY, NOViMBtR 9 19S4
M*mber: the Attattated PHtJ* & Audit Bureau «f Clfedtatlai.!
Av. Net Paid Circl. 6 Me*. Cndtrig Sept. 30, 1954 —
Selection of
Harlan Brings
Democrat Praise
By TED LEWIS, JR.
WASHINGTON (UP)
T wo
Democratic members of the Sen-
i/fte judiciary
committee
today
praised President Eisenhower's
nomination of a jurist
Appelate
Judge John Marshall Harlan
to
the Supreme Court.
Schedule of
Fire Inspection
12:40 p. m. - Stage Show - High
School.
1:00 p. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
1:45 p. m. - Stage Show - Junior
High School.
2:00 p. m. - Movies - Brookwood
School.
3:00 p. m. - Movies - Garland
School.
•
I
WASH1NGTO N
Wi
Russia has
Wednesday November 10
'countered
an
American
protest
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR .over the latest cold war aerial in-
Moscow Claims
'Innocence' in
Downing Plane
By WARREN
ROGERS JR,
The White Houre was expected School.
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
9:30 a. m. - Movies - Oglesby
T
to send the nomination of Harlen,
55-year-old New York federal cir-
cuit court judge and a Republi-
can, to the Senate during the day.
But it was not certain whether the
upper chamber would act on it
during the 'current session oh cen-
^iring Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy.
Sens. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn)
fnd Thomas C. Hcnnings. Jr (D-
Mo;, members of the judiciary
committee which must approve the
appointment, praised the selection
of a judge to succeed Justice Rob-
ert H. Jackson who died of a heart
attack last month. Kefauver said
he saw no "difficulties" in the way
of Marian's confirmation.
The Tennessee Democrat said he
/J,as a "very high opinion" of Har
Jan and -aid he was glad Mr. Ei-
senhower had
selected Someone
"has come up through the courts."
Hennings agreed.
"By and large, it contributes to
the
strength of the court to ap-
point, other things being equal, a
eminent
judge
whose
decisions
have to commended him to the
country, as have Judge Harlan's, '
Hennings declared.
If confirmed, Harlan will be the
4»iird Bepublican on the high court
and the "second justice to be ap-
pointed by Mr. Eisenhower. A for-
mer counsel to the New York state
crime commission,. Harlan is the
granduon and namesake of a fa-
mous justice who served 34 years
on the court.
The White House was also ex-
pected to send to the Senate the
nomination of Atomic Enprgy Com-
missioner
Joseph Campbell
as
omptroller general. Mr. Eisenhow-
announcd both appo i n tin ents
yesterday.
' • • , _ •
10 a. m. - Stage Show - Yerger
School.
with a declaration of abso-
lute innocence, but U. S. officials
indicate the Soviets haven't heard
the last of the matter.
Cigarette Controvefey Seems
tc ^ Flaming Hotter and the
Public Wants to Know Truth
Hubbard /s Elected
Head of Arkansas
Guidance Group
Horace Hubbard, Vocational Gui-
dance Director of Hope High Scho-
ol, has been elected President
of
the Vocational Guidance section of
the Arkansas Education Associat-
For
the eighth time since the ion
cold war began, the United States
yesterday demanded an
apology
11 a. m. - Movies - Paisley Scho-jand reparations from Russia
fir
pi.
violence done American aircraft by
12 noon - Combined Luncheon -
Lions, Rotary, Kiwanis
(Barlow
Hotel).
1:00 p. m. • Movies - Hopewell
School.
4:00 p. m. - Parade
4:30 p. m. - Fire Department De-
monstration (First National 'Bank
Building).
Thursday, November 11
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
Fire Department.
Says Crippling
TVA Aim of
Power Proposal
WASHiNGTON UP) The
general
manager of the American.
Public
Power Association asserted today
that
the porposed
Dixon-Yates
power contract :'s "the
opening
wedge in crippling the Tennessee
Valley Authority (TVA)"
Alex Radin, who said his
organ
ization represents more than 700
local publicly-owned electric util-
ities, was in the witness chair as
the Senate-House Committee
on
Soviet planes.
Moscow countered \yith a claim
that its planes were in the right.
But the original U.S. note
had
promised thst the Kremlin would
head more from Washington after
investigation established all
the
facts "regarding human life and
material losses."
The latest incident occurred Sun-
day over Japan's northern Hokkai-
do Island. Ten members of a U.S.
Air . Force
photo-reconnaissance
plane parachuted to safety.
Tha
llth go't snagged in ,his parachute
and drowned.
The United States fired a stiff
protest to Moscow, saying it ex-
pects the Kremlin "To make
all
such moral and material repara-
tions as lies within its power."
The Guidance section is compos-
ed of 60 full time and part time
Counselors in the state of Arkan-
sas.
As President of this organization,
Mr. Hubbard will preside at both
the annual meeting of Counselors
on Petit Jean mountain in Septem-
ber and the Sectional meeting at
the AEA convention next Fall.
The Guidance program at Hope
High School is seven years old this
year. Mr. Hubbard has been the
director since July 1948.
(Editor's Note
Few
re-
search
problems
of modern
times have captured the public
interest more than the current
search for an answer to this
question: Is cigarette smoking
a
substantial
h a z a r d
to
health? The interest is
justi-
fied, for the stakes are high.
Here is a concise summary of
what fe involved.)
By AtljON U. BLAKESLEE
AP Science Reporter
NEW ,YOR K
,The great cig-
arette cbntroversy is flaming hot-
ter.
'
.
'
It has millions
of
Americans
uzzled i or
confused, and many
rightencd. Are cigarettes
really
Knowland Is
Shocked at
Bohlen Deed
WASHINGTON (UP)
Republic a n
Leader William F.
Knowland (Calif;) said today
he
was "deeply shocked" that U. S.
Senate
American GI
Goes Over
to Russians
By RICHARD O'REGAN
VIENNA, Austria (/P) The Soviet
information service announced to-
day that and American Army ser
geant has asked the Russians ir
Aut'tiia for political asylum anc
has been granted it.
The
Red
information
identified the soldier as. Sgt. Wil-
liam Clayton Turner, ?2. and -ifaid
until Oct. 15 he had becVi'in •Cbm-
rany B of the 124th ArtiUery'Sup
ply. Battalion and in the military
police of the U. S. 7th Army's 2nd
Armored Division in Germany.
IT. S. Army authorities in Aus
tria said they were checking Avitt
Atomic Energy resumed its study I Ambassador Charles E.
Bohlen the Army in Germany On ; the;' re
of the controversial contract
to
feed private power into the TVA
lines.
Radin said the contract
affect
"all'the people of the nation," Tf
*is destroyed, he said, "the
attended an official party in Mos-
cow a few hours
after
Russian
plants shot down an American B-29
<jver':'Northern Japan,-
The' State Department paid yes- fg<jnc>' £uotCJd ,p: .letter
,
>-'lcl =
__*•..
,
. '
. bad written which eav
port.
The Soviet agency said
had jsked fori
- anc] becrj gTjBntoc
liv«t 4wi'Russia;1 iTlier
Firemen to
iVA'is destroyed.. Jie saio, "the terday and confirmed again last
people of the nation will have lost r.ioh/in --cnnnsP to new i'nnuiries.
Fire Fighting
^ As a part of Hope's three-day
"town inspection" campaign, the
Hope Fire Department will offer a
fire fighting demonstration Wednes-
day afternoon at 4:30 p. iri. at the
1st National Bank Building. In ma-
king this announcement, Chief A.
S. Willis said "This fire
fighting
demonstration staged by the mem-
bers of the Hope Fire Department
will be well worth seeing by every
citizen in Hope.
'jffe
1 The Fire Department will dem-
onstrate ' the
use of its various
equipment, including its splendid
junior arial, the 45 foot Bangor lad-
der in a spectacular hotel rescue
raise, life-net work, and countless
other educational and entertaining
features.
School children and the general
public are invited to witness the
demonstration Chief Willis said.
The
demonstration
will be pre-
..ceeded by a parade through the
Business district by the fire depart-
ment, school children 'and the visit-
ing members of the State Fire Pre-
vention Association, including "Stu-
pid Carelessness, the Fire Clown."
New Method Aids
Mental Treatment
ST. LOUIS W Development
of
afet
''electric shock" treatment
one o ftheir most effective allies
in bringing lower electric mies
and greater consumption of elect-
ric rates and greater consumption
of electricity to all
the homes,
farms and industries of the nat-
ion."
The proposed Dixon-Yates con-
tract, backed by the administra-
tion, provides for private
> power
interests to construct a 107 million
dollar power plant at West Mem-
phis,
Ark.,
to supply power to
TVA.
Mrs. C. E. Baker
Succumbs in
Local Hospital
Mrs. Exa Lera Baker, aged 57,
wife of Hope Police Chief Clarence
E. Baker, died early today in a
local hospital. She has been ill
only a short time. Mrs. Baker hjs
lived in Hempstead all her life.
Besides her husband she is sur-
vived by her mother, Mrs. Rosa
Parker of Spring Hill, two daugh-
r,ight in response to new inquiries,
that Bohlen did not know about
the plane incident when be and
other foreign diplomats attended a
dinner given by Soviet Premier
Georgi Malenkov Sunday night
to
celebrate the 37th anniversary of
the Communist revolution.
Knowland, in
a
brief
Senate
cpeoch, indicated that he was not
aware of the State Department's
ct&temcnt on this point. He
ac-
knowledged that there might have
been ''extenuating circumstances'1
in Bohlen's attendance at the Mos-
cow party, and said he had asked
the State Department for a
full
report.
Knowland said news of the plane
shooting -incident was broadcast by
Moscow radio at 6 p. m. Moscow
time Sunday
about two hours
before Bohlen went to the party.
State Department officials
said,
however, that Bohlen first learned
of the incident through an official
message Washington that was do.
it said he
had written which gave this ac
count of his defection from the
West:
While serving in Germany, h
became convinced, that the rebirt!
of an "aggressive German army'
would lead to war. He became cer
tain that
the U. S.
go'vernmen
was -preparing new aggression i
collaboration with Facist clement
n West Germany.
He said he crossed from Ger
nany to Austria Oct. 15 "with th
dea ol seeking political asylum i:
he Soviet Union."
"I have decided to go wher
here is real freedom for a. sun
ile man, arid I therefore ask fo
ie possibility to live and work i
tie Soviet Union," he was quotec
The letter
said
Turner
w
rafted in J942, took part in th
Normandy
landings
and serve
vith the 29th Division. From 194
o 1952, 'after his discharge froi
he ciimy, he was mostly out of
vork. In 1952 he was drafted again
and sent to West Germany.
U.S. Embassy in
3 a. m. Moscow
ters, Miss Ruth Baker and Mrs.;did Monday.
Eunice Dale Witt of Texarkana;
two sisters, Mrs. Sid Sinyard and^l
Mrs. Elmer Nations of Spring Hill
and two brothers, Arlin and Elgin
of Hope,
two grandchildren, Billy
and Clarence Kennedy.
Funeral services will be held
at
Herndon-Cornelius
Funeral
Home Chapel at 2:30 p. m. Wed-
livered to the
Moscow about
time Sunday right, after the par-
ty. It was this message that
in-
structed Bohlen to file a protest
note with the Kremlin, which lie
GIRL TALK
NEWTON, Mass., (UP)
Bos
ton College Football Captain Joe
Mattaliano was dined last night
by Boston University grid co-capt-
nesday by the Rev. Wesley Thoma- iano.
s Joe Terras! ard Frank Guil-
„
.
.
uuliSUIJ,
UUL;
uw*i^-«»
j.v**-"
—~ — >•
•
^^"S'J,a"L,°fu!±rm:'?"8C« Frank Douglas, Ray Turner and
drugs" have made
possible" to give beneficial shock
treatments to mentally-ill oldsters
onqe deemed too"fragils" for the
procedure.
This was reported today to tho
Southern Medical Association's 48th
annual meeting by Dr. James Ward
and Dr. James A.' Bectcr, of Hill
Crest
Sanitarium,
Birmingham,
Ala.
DON'T FORGET
FrfomU in $trvi«t
•\yri.te often. The USD knows there's
14e a letter at
» Miow frel swell.
U<
f
ce
Back at the BC campus, team-
mates eagerly asked Mattsliano iJ
he
talked with his hosts-, about
satin-day's BC-BU game, the first
^Ul.s'"w, -•«,
.
-
,in in 12 years.
'
nug.i Garner. Honorary, members
"We tallied about blondes, brun-
of City Police force, city and Coun- ettes and redheads," Muttaliano
,y officials.
'
son, assisted by the Rev. Carlton
Roberts.
Active pallbearers; Thomas An-
derson. Joe Jones. Faris Downs.
said.
Maybe You Are a Lucky Young
Girl Who Can Go to Movies on
Sunday Without Any Fuss
By ALVN STEINKOPF
(For Hal Boyle)
LONDON I*1 Ju st imagine you
are a lively- 24-year-old girl liv-
ing in London.
It's'a dank and dreary Sunday.
You have to turn on the light in
the middle of thw afternoon.
If'you were just any 24 year-old
girl,: earning your living typing in
an office, you could give that pony-
tail haircut a swipe with a comb,
slip c-n a mackintosh and go to
the movies.
Tens of thousands of young girls
do just that, and manage to sur-
vive a gloomy afternoon. There are
thick, moist end noisy masses .of
them in Oxford St
Put you had better do nothin
c| the kind if you arc
Margaret. She yenture4
Piincess
Margaret, it
seems
broke a royal tradition. Conspirina
with her in this act of lashnes.
were her lady-in-waiting,
Miss
Irish Peakc, and two unidentified
young men.
Members
of the royal
familj
may engage in a lot of .sprightly
activities, such as shooting quail
drinking champagne for
lunch
playing polo any old day,
an-:
betting on the races. But member
of the roval family do not go t.
the movies on Sunday.
The Princess went to see sonic
thing
rather
new in London
method, of projection known
a
Cinerama. She and her ccmpan
ions went 5nto the Casino The.a
ter and occupied seats, which cos
$2 IP anicee. Then they went hem
the gloom.
ta ne.wsiyjpjers, %$ SKfUe^ ft
. tot sM $$$$$' 'fifitesft
Fighter Escorts
May Be Used,
Dulles Warns
WASHINGTON W
The United
States is considering giving fight-
er escorts
to American aircraft
which fly near
Communist terri-
tory, Secretary of State Dulles dis
closed, today.
Dulles told a news conference Lena Newton,
studied by the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
He noted that the pilol of the
RB27 photographic plane shot down
by Soviet fighters over Japanese
waters last Sunday has authority
to ?hoot back, but did not do so.
Dulles said this was one of those
hairline decisions on which people
might make different judgement.1
afterwards. That was the case also
with ambassador Charles E. Boh-
len and his decision to attend a
It finds'Hho house of science and Soviet Party in Moscow .Sunday
night- following the plane incident,
Judgments Are
Awarded in
Circuit Court
A wreck near Emmet In which
three Negro workers were killed
resulted in a law suit in Hempstaad
Circuit court yesterday with a jury
awarding judgements totaling $i,-
002. Two cases were combinedt with
a total of eight persons suing John
W. Kizer Jr., driver of one of the
cars involved.
' Ben Hill was awarded $200 by
a
jury, Grover Rankin $1, Warren
Powell $1, Rachel Lee Slay, $200|
angeroUs?
moking!?
Should
YOU
stop
and her child-
Jr-
Nell, a total of
Court will reconvene this after-
noon.
'By Alvtn'SpN
WASHINGTON
Senate source*
friends of Sen.
the n
medicine divided. Some authorities
rankly call cigarettes a major fac-
or in causing human cancer, es-
ecially'lung cancer, and say they
re bad for your heart. But others,
qually -prominent, say the . case
gainst cigarettes is by no means
woved. .
.
-
:
'
'
•
'
•
It finds' many hundreds of thou-
ands of dollars being poured into
eseareh to find the answer,
or
•nswers. That fact could produce
;reat
boons
for all
on
the
eseareh will dig deep
into some
biological m y s t e r i e s , What is
earned could turn up vita), links
about the cause, control or treat-
nent of cancer, heart disease or
jossibly other health m a t t e r s ,
quite aside from its effect in the
cigarette controversy.
The controversy finds;• unknown
thousands of .men
and women
jiving lip- cigarettes, or trying to,
6r3thinking they should. ;
• . • . ' .
Humaiij healthy is one stake in
;he controversy: Are
cigarettes
.armleshs, bad, or scmewhere
in
jotweeri!?- Human enjoyment is an-
other: ityfost smokers enjoy their
smoking,,
..
The tobacco industry 'the '.big
arid sm&ll growers and manufac-
turers ind processors, •middlemen,
Ji-'1'1-r'-' .ers, retailers, vending nrui-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ^Vferaiors and many oth.Si.-s.
owes
its livelihood
to tobacco.
Governments derive much revenue
from tobacco taxes.
"
Science ar.d medicine have
a
stake. Should a reputable sciel?.-
tist disclose his findings which lead
him to suspect hazards in smok-
ing, or anything else? Or should
he wait until he has definite proof?
If he is proved wrong after his
early announcement, will
people
accuse him of scare mongering,
or
lose faith in scientific 're-
search? If he is proved right after
deciding not to warn the public
would people accuse him of hav-
ing shirked his responsibility?
The cigarette controversy,
like
Continued on Page Three
.
Dulles said.
Dulles said Bohlen had,to make
a ouick judgment without instruc-
tions from Washington on the basis
of incomplete information which
reached him less than an hour be-
fore lie left for the party.
The ambassador's attendance at
the party had- been criticized by
Sens. Knowland
(R-Calif)
and
Bridges (R-NH) .just before Dulles'
meeting with newsmen.
Urine Test
May Detect
a Cancer
; By FRANK
CAREY
AP 'Science
Reporter
; ST. LOUIS
Possible discov-
ery of a new and highly accurate
test for cancer, omplpying urine
instead of blood
was announced
to'day to the Southern Medical As-
sociation.
';:
i
«""
Doctors T.; C. Terrell and H.H.
Beard of Fort -Worth, Tex.,1 said
the..
Duke Disclaims
Knowledge of
German Writer
By KINGSBURY SMITH
PARIS (INS )
The British gov-
ernment today published German
Vorld War Two records in which
he
Duke of Windsor was quoted
as the source of information on
Allied milita-.-y plane's.
The 'former King Edward' VIII.
vho now is in London, telephoned
o this correspondent a statement
saying he "never met or had any
connection" with the
Ge/rman
A'hose statements were quoted by
the London government.
A German, spy organizer, Count
Julius Von Zech-Burkersrpda,
at
:he time minister to The Nether-
ands, claimed in a message to his
aome government that he "might
'lave- the opportunity to establish
Certain lines leading to the DuXe
cf Windsor."
The two loiters that the German
envoy wrote to his superiors in the
Berlin foreign ministry mentioned
the duke several times. They were
cjuoted in the latest collection of
"documents on German
.Foreign
Policy" published by the British
government.
The documents cover the period
from immediately after the British
and French declaration of
war
Sept. 3, 1939 up to the eve of
tfce
Hitler-Mussolini meeting at
the
Brenner Pass March IS, 1940. This
was the so-called
"phony
war'
ftage before
the Germans
'' tin. arnount of a (p«e hor-
mone,,-called •. "chroionic gonadtro-
phin" found in urine collected over
a 24-hour period.
They told.the SMA's 48th annual
meeting that this hormone ; occurs
in only small amounts ir. normal
individuals but that it showed up
at substantial levels in 94 per cent
of 51 proved cases of cancer.
And the researchers described
chemical technique for separat-
ing the hormone from other sub-
stances in the urine. This allows
a quantitative measurement of the
hormone, depending upon intensity
cf v. blue-green color.
. The doctors said this ability to
detect varying quantities of the
suggested
possbilitle?
Evangelist
SaysReligion
Greatest Need
In the opening Revival :. service-
in the City Hall Auditorium last ni-
ght Evangelist G. P. Comer told
the audience that America's great-
est need and of the world is a "Re-
vival Of Religion."
He said,
"In
America we art-
spending 18 billion dollars a year
for crime, 12 billion dollars a year
for gambling 9 bullion for
liquor
which makes a total of 39 billion
dollars while we are spending ono
billion by the protestants, Jews and
Catholics. 50 thousand high school
girls become mothers of illegiti-
mate children, God have mercy on
us as a nation" he declared.
The music is an outstanding fea-
ture of these services with Mrs.
Nan Frazier, presiding at the organ
console and Mrs. Spencer at the
piano, and the Rev. Spencer lead-
ing the song service and singing
special numbers with their boys,
Henry and Bobby.
A daily broadcast is heard-'each
afternoon over KXAR direct from
the auditorium from 4:30 to 5 p. m.
The services 'are held dally at
7:30 p. m. Evangelist Coiner has
held revivals in 28 states of th«
nation but he says this is^his first
revival in Arkansas but he
a
his party have been greatly
pressed by the hospitality of
the
people of Hope.
.
:;;
substance
cf:
•• 1. Detecting cancer before symp-
toms become apparent.
2. Testing for the presence or
absence of any signs of "spread-
ing'' of a cancer following surgical
or other treatment of the original
malignancy.
3,'Differentiation between "be-
nign" and malignant tumors.
Dr. Beard told a repoiter that,
aside from studies of cells or tis-
sues, most tests for cancer in th3
past have employed blood
sam-
ples. But he said these "have the
drawback- that they
produce
a
large number of 'fal»e positives'
due .to
the
complexity of sub-
stances in blood,"
"Falfe positives" are. also possl
ble with the new technique but to
a far lesser degree, the doctors
declared.
AEC Head May
Have Time in
Getting Nod
By John A.-Goldsmith
-
WASHINGTON (UP) Atomic
Energy
Commissioner
Joseph
Campbell today faced a possible
Senate -fight for confirmation as
comptroller general because of his
support of the Dixon-Yates con*
tract.
' Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-TemO,
an outspoken foe of the contro-
versial power contract, said Camp-
bell's supoort of it as a member
of the AEC was a "substantial
made of dlsqualifiiation for
the
office of comptroller general. Ke-
fauver called for an investigation
of Campbell's record.
The White House announced yes-
terday that President Eisenhower
Would nominate Campbell for the
GOA post today. The appointment
must be confirmed by the Senate
where' maty Democratic tempers
have been roused by the proposed
Dixon-Yates p'ower deal. Although
his appointment may go to the
Senate today," action will not be
forthcoming for some time."<^ ,;v
' As comptroller general, Camp-
bell, a Republican, wotild head the"
General
Accounting' Office'
<in-
vestgating "armX of *'Congress. He
would serve ' a 15-year term with
a salary"of $17,500-annually.,,t' i.
Peterson Is
i
Accused of
V
Copying Codes
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (LT?)
, Th^
gov,enment today iharged Jhat Jo-
seph S. Peters-en, Jr., former gov.
eminent employe indicted on es-
pionage charges, illegally copied
secret documents which,, shp.wed
that the United .States had 'brok-
en n Dutch government code,
A bill of particulars filed by sfov-
err»ment prosecutors in Jttexandria,
federal court also charged that
of the
newsmen tha,t*a'
is being workedy
thy supporters w
1. The drafting-
tion to ,tone ' dd
censmre' mollo'ri
fered tomorroy
mittee headed
Watldns ; ,
2..TlS?
if t- mafo
Under a
gust,
until
«. By JAG*
sisted
McCarthy •'(
talk to ^de&jL4 „ „
ing his^cerisure)^
at? opens. " "
did
two influ
who as)t
they had
jnay.be :
yesterday i'dfe'sj i
i .That' was0"^
in'1! an f,>d;
agreed i
nien,tarfan« ,s|
byf thu|. *-"--il-
r'csplvvtioi
83rd'Con
.
dieted
- -f *-*r T •*-—'-ty. j-~j- 7]E,
censuring M£'
leged
heads,/,
tersen, now free on $10,000 • bond
pending trial Jan. 4, improperly
removed secret government docu-
ments dealing vlth Red China s
cnde and with the "routing of
North Korean politi9al security
traffic."
' '
The nature of these documents
was not explained. '
Petersen was dismissed from ms
$7,700-a-y3ar job as a research an-
alyst with the hush-hush National
Security Agency on Oct.-1. He was,
lalei indicted on three counts deal-
in? with improper removal of su-
per-secret agency documents.
H\?
was charged with using the infor-
mation "in a manner
prejudicial
to the safety and nterest of the
United States."
gaticnsC Bu.bc<,j.nini1
«,.fA-f
»«(!.•<.'• ,_,A"
. ••'!» Pr.W*-il^W
of rape and *i
Judge, Mi"
of James J
ed in lolk
tion
Rock.«
'. THICK SIV10KE
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, (IF>
Smoke, pouring from a burning tav-
ern was so Ihick firemen could not
see a fire hydiant on the corner,
Thty finally lound the hydrant 1>Y
nrobing through the heavy smoke
varied France,
End Belgium.
m-
The
Netherlands,
Arkansas Weather
For Nov. 9-14 :
Arkansas
Temperatu r es
degiees above
normal.
Mrs, J.R.Lester
Son at Lewisville
»•
Mrs. J, R. Lester, aged 93, wife
of the late J. T. Lester
of Mars
Hill
in
Lafayette County, died
at ih,e home of a son in LewisviUe
last night.
survived by four sons, Ed
Arrest Follows
*
Altercation
City Police arrested Robert Lee
Jones on an assault with intent ,tt>
kill charge following an altercation
in which Bobby Lee Rogers was
badly slashed on the side of th»
face and apross his lips. He was ta-
ken to a hospital for treatment. The
incident occurred on the P^tmoa
)Ro«.<J,
• All Around the Town
•y Thf War
ttuff
' .
Arkansas' great football team
stiU is ranked 4th in tile nation ac-
cording to the AP poll of sporte-
\ydters . . • its ironic to §ee strate
. . •
gy employed by Midwest and
West writers who like tq build up
their teams for the Rose Bowl fitt-
rne which has dropped in prestige
considerably
for instance just
who h;ave the West Coast teams
played?
vi'hich has
take
met
Southern, Cal
only
of their own area with one excep.-.
tion and that
TCV<
were smeared SO tc, 7' in, th
back yard amj UCL4 has
,1
T
11
...n«l>
nnriut
rt
m,eet
(
,
t
of Coushatta. La., C. D. Lester of (thanks to votes of the
_ _
"Stp^.Bir T
«
T^~
_ • I •»-, .
1-1 r _. _i
.....J£A.in
Jo
4-7
Normal m .njma 3,6-ifJ. Nonn^l max*
ima gjMfi, §}
Wto.'fiii
' .rtrt/iaic
Hope, John F. and 0. B. Lester of
Lewisvyie, two daughters, Mrs. ft.
L, Rpyd of Texarkana, and Mrs.
Ifenry 8hea of Mflrs JftU communi-
•
Far West writers, is back
flrst
ten while TOV "'*"
ttnem handily is >w,t Jn
J . . UCLA "»«'* •<"> *
Rose Bowl look good , , • you 8,n4
I know what would happen, if, jioy
W*§t Coast ieam p}ayed_a sc,hf
like Arkansas" has . .*. tpp hag
have more votes than th,r—
Hope Athletic Deparfw
$7.84 on the Magnolia gp^
week ,
with an
t. .
one mw$ hqroe 'geroe
n^ent, ,is .W^y to gQ^
this year
'W|.h
o.|l?ns
20-20
of $34044
Bagging
bycks
m$
V^A'JV"^ ff^ffl^.
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
larlow
t-'tfV .'
f
lift
It thi s
lluclans begin put-
interpretations &i
ions, otte conclusion
a second one seems
t ,
uWican Defeat.
Ilheii? dissatis-
Ican control of
'the House and
te over to the
final Senate re-
kn,owti uhlil after
narrowness
pretty good
6f voters
disturbed by the
as
a whole
•—
or in distress
"expresed
thefr
._£ ganger' by giving th-j
ats pati, overwhelming vie-
"fcHMge'the direction. This
?,i6,tner hand) if they had
' enthusiastic about
jfcrfbrmarce of tho
mm fit seems reason-
teV4 they would have
]& GOP control of Con-
.'• did the reverse.
even' division of
.„„ ..fas best reflected
races where, In Ore-
id/ New Jersey, only
votes separated the
^although
i roughly
five
*otes'( were cast in the
'•S, '
'Democrats achieved pp
^majority in1 capturing
tjthe House over Presi
?veijhqWer's
last-minute
f i
' the Bepubicans in
the little booths and moved close.
Rupert left the bar and swerved
toward the booth where Greg was
Sitting with the girl.
The girl gave him a melting
glance. "Are you going to dance
With me"
"No," Rupert said. "Never do
that. Never take away my friend's
girl."
She laughed with
mechanical
brightness. "Say, you're
good.
Want to order some champagne."
I'm crazy about champagyne."
"No,"
Rupert said again. "No
wine—no kick in it."
The girl answered this with an
obliging scream of laughter. ''No
Wine. No women. How do you feel
about song"
"Song" Rupert echoed in his
rasping voice. Abruptly he buried
his face in his arms on the table.
He was crying, hard, tearing sobbs
that shook his thi nbody.
The uneasy silence was broken
by a man's embarrassed laughter.
"What a crying jag."
Greg paid the bill, waited unti'
Rupert was quiet, and then said,
"Let's go." .
NEXT TIME HE'LL REALLY GET SERVICE-Mrs. Lucille
Gregory shows the grand tip she received for services in a Dallas,
Tex., restaurant She served a well-dressed man in his fifties
a $1.50 sirloin steak and when She returned to pick up the dishes
she found a $100, $50 and $1 bill on the table.
T4351 Bouse seatsi the Dem
?n 2Si2 to the Republicans
by 'gaining 17
^epublicaiis are trying too
[themselves by recalling that
la "ce'ntury
with one ex
JJ934', the party in con-
'pngiess has lost some
vihe \inid-term. l election's
T^may argue that their
'seats'this year was far
*,Jhe f-ecc-nt average of
•picked by, the
party
the, mid-term bal-
fijct. remains the yotfi s
can, when they
mid-term tiadi-
the grip on Con-
r in power. They
finp'3834' to show their eh-
ifwjthe NeW Deal begun
ifideht .Roosevelt two years
WHILE MOM'S AWAY—Seven piglets feed from a bottle rack
under the watchful eye of Carl Teska, of Albany, Ni Y. His
brother, Richard, rigged up the device alter the piglets' mother
had disowned>them.
He got Rupert outside and they
began to walk away from the road
house. Rupert staggered but he
pulled the key from his packet as
though it were a talisman
and
tossed it from hand to hand.
At length
Greg said
quietly
"What happened to yen?"
"One of Mussolini's boys." Ru
pert said. ' I wa.s singing at La
Scala and this fellow was annoyed
because I refused to sirg for n
Fascist gathering. He was persu
asive. Fir&t he hung me by a stvar
and played a little tattoo on m>
back." For once there
was
IT
drama, no overstatement in hi
voice.
He
sounded unspeakabl;
tired. "Then" the pause length
ened until Greg thought lie wouTc
not speak
any more that nigh
"they operaetd on my tin oat."
Greg leaned against the gate anc
lighted ja cigaret. There was noth
ing to ^say.
"So much has hap
pened since then," Rupert v/en
on, "but that was the thing tha
mattered most. My family is gone
my hcme, rny country, my profe;
sion. I am practically an author
ity on concentration camps, on cs
capes, on crossing frontiers with
out a passport. It
is a itrang
thing to belong
nowhere, Greg
Even the' ticking of a clock is lik
a voice saying, 'Move on. Move on
Move on.',"
He clung to the top post of th
gate, turning the key over an
ever in his hand. "That is the ke;
to the house my family moved int
after the Fascists got me.
M
mother
was killed arid my tw
young sisters." He slipped the ke
back into his pocket. "Not by Fas
cists or Nazis. It was an America
bomb. War is like that. No onn
you see, is
to blame. Or all o
us."
yfithe'laBt timrf in Roose-
"^""ilj.that happened. In
__-^elections of 3P3& and
j.\j3emocrats lost ground but
*—<l> of/House or Senate.
x^anje token the voters
ffitt"they
had felt over-
B enthusiasm for the Re-
^''/'could have added
to
WjXk' 1n, both houses. They
^Vto< •
|»bssible that
Eisenhower's
* '
efforts for the Repub-
them from a worse
thevoters may have
p*' their minds before he
|gj;'*tneek-deep into the cam-
,o, special situations such
,,,jiloyjment in Michigan and
pvanja
the, voters made
bejirigs. known by unseating
SJS.tet Republican (Michigan)
^'a.cing, a Republican with
5' as governor .Pennsyl-
09,01 the main Democratic
that
farmers were
t tbs Eisenhower ad-
$ tflejuble price sup-
THE
STORY:
Greg Seaver, a
young man who wants to °o some
thing on his owri, leaves the rela-
tive secur'ty of working .for his
stepfather to become a chauffeur
for a wealthy Invalid, Wade Da'g-
gelt, who is also tired of staying
In one place.. Tr^velng in
Dag-
gett's car and trailer they rescue
a displaced alien, Ruper1 Uandus-
ky, from a probably death by ex-
posure. Somehow they haven't the
Water, water everywhere might sum up the story
of Southeast Arkansas. From this fact has grown a
rice industry which is third largest in the nation.
Rice mills (1) and paddies mark hundreds of square
miles of land in Southeast Arkansas and where the
rice leaves off the ducks seem to take over. Duck
hunting (2) attracts thousands of sportsmen from
every state in the union to the marshes of Southeast
Arkansas each year and when the marshes begin to
thin out toward the most deeply southern part of the
state, the Loblolly pine forests dominate the land-
scape. Where the forests and the rice marshes meet
is Mattox Bay, one of the cut-off lakes of the White
River. Here occurs one of the most unusual sports
in America—bow h u n t i n g for gar (3). Archery
affacianados of Arkansas look forward all year long
to the big August gar hunt vyhcn all members of the
Arkansas Bow Hunters Association gather here to
try their skills for prizes against the most vicious
fish in fresh water. The first white settlement west
of the Mississippi, and now a State Park, Arkansas
Post (4), allows for a glance at Arkansas misty past
in the Small mementoes and historic artifacts on dis-
play there. Lake Chicot and Grand Lake provide the
top-notch' fishing of the deepest part of Southeast
Arkansas, while the numerous lumber towns and mills
give the tourist a chance to see the tree-to-paper-sack
progress of the wood which dominates the economy
of the area. The verdict on roads here is better-than-
average.
Arkansas Publicity and Information Department
\, November 8,
—
—
Doctors Must
Hove Faith,
AMATold
*
By FRANK CAREY
AP Science Reporter
ST LOUIS — Dr.
Elmer Hess,
president-elect of the American
Medical Association,
said today
any
doctor "who lacks faith m
the Supreme Being" has nc right
to practice -medicine.
"A physician who walks .into a
sick room is not alore," said th?
Erie, Pa., doctor who is a special
ist in urology. "He can only nun- %
ister to the ailing person v.ith tho
material tools of scientific medi-
cine his father in a higher pow-
er does the reft.
"Shew me the doctor who der-ca
the existence of the Supreme Bo-
ing and I will say that hn has no
right to practice the healing art.
Hess made the statements in a
prepared digest of extemporane-
ous remarks he planned for the
opening of ihe 43th annual meet,-
ing of the Southern Medical .Asso- I/
fiat ion.
The SMA, with a total
membership of lO.OOC, doctors, ranks
second only to the A'MA as the
largest general medical organiza-
tion in the country.
"Our medical schools are doing
a magnificent job of teaching the
fundamentals of scientific medi-
cine," declared Hess.
"However,
I'm afraid that the concentration
on basic science is so great the
teaching of spiritual values is al-^
most neglected."
*
At another point he asserted:
"Any man whe enters the med-
ical profession with financial gain
as his sold objective is 'a discredit
to
his colleagues.
The market
place is where you
<JO to
make
money, not the sick room. Doctors
lake care of sick folks-period."
The AMA official declared
that
organization has launched a long-
range program designed to solve
the "medical care problems of thej|
indigent and the chronically ill.™
"Special attention must be giv-
en," he said, "to the problems o£
those who are Unable to pay for
their own medical care, or buy
insurance to protect
themselves
against such costs. Wc are urging
state and county medicr.l socie-
ties to make this a major project."
Continued from Page One
five lamous American
historical
monuments. He'd probably name
monuments several thousand more
pubs. The British lean to the theo-
ry
that -any post
where a man
shakes his thirst' has a place in
history.
Americans are loathe to
make
monuments of their saloons, even
though some of modern society's
the Statue of Liberty, the Washing- bluest blod has been shed in them
. ,.
.
.,
T • „_•,„
or.j
ton Monument
the Lincoln
and in recent years, and despite the
'
Deer Season Is
ten in Arkansas
LITTLE ROCK (/P) —Deer hunt-
ing season opens in Arkansas to-
day with the promise of fair skies
and cool weather. The first period
of the split season closes Friday.
The school period is Dec. 13-18.
The limit is one buck each per-
fect
Washlngton
hig
Jefferson memorials. Then he d be iarevfeii address to his officers in
nowhere. For the first cov.plel In thjs mattei. of keeping
thi
urs, Greg had been vaguely
avor Qf lhe past aliv6j wc nav,
heart to turn
him in, for he is
illegally in the country, but Rupert
is afraid. When he sees a police-
man n a New England town, he
flees In fear,
XII
port
program
,was
not .born
out by the results.
On the contrary. In the normaly
Republican
farm sttate of Iowa
Sen, Gillette, a personally popular
Democrat seeking his third term,
was defeated.
APPLES
„„., - '
Wholesale or Retail
pa 'ARKANSAS BLACKS
• ROME BEAUTY
• GOLDEN
'f|jf UPIOU8 • RED DELICIOUS • STAYMEN WINESAP
C A G E E G G S
USSELl/S CURB MARKET
901 West 3rd
Phone 7-9933
ITEEL CONSTRUCTION
iv §>Jieds, Farm Butjdings and Industrial Buildings
!|-lpQ<if according to specifications. Can pe con-
aTftructed at low cost,
SALL,., PR7-4(583
for complete information,
UCKETT STEEL &
EQUIPMENT CO.
He was in the third bar Greg
entered, a glass in his hand, his
dollar bill on; the counter before
him. He caught sight of Greg and
finished his drink in a hurry.
Greg stood beside him .trying to
hold in his smoldering a n g e r .
"What are you drinking"
"Brandy. It works faster."
Greg ordered another brandy for
Rupert and beer for himself. "Why
did you run away"
"I thought this might be my last
drink,"
"Why
did you think I'd turn you
in" In his outrage at this betrayal
Greg forgot entirely th at he had
sponsored the idea only a few days
earlier.
"It has happened to me before."
"Nothing is going to happen to
you here. Just relax."
Greg pushed Rupert's dollar bill
toward him and paid the check.
XIII
The traffic seemed- to spring u
from
of hours
aware that there were more cars
on the road than usual, but now
there was a steady line of trafic
and he slowed down.
"What have you got into?" Dag-
gett demanded impatiently.
"I don't know. According to the
map there is nothing special ahead.
We may run out tit this soon."
"AUs-ays in. a hurry to move on,"
Rupert commented. "And to think
that you like it. Sometimes I be-
lieve you art; the youngest of us."
"Don't say that,"' Daggett pro-
tested. "It makes me feel so old
to have people tell me how youns
am. It's
the last step before
senility. .Dawdling makes me ner-
vous, that's all. And especially on
a
road like this where there is
nothing to see."
"You hold your horses," Greg
called over his shoulder. Then his
eyes were caught by a roadside
s-ign and he begun to laugh. "Oh.
ttumped
unless you let him in-
clude Mae West or Sophie Tucker.
the
a moment's hesitation the
crept over Rupert's cheek
After
color
bones and his hand moved forward
slowly. He pocketed the money.
That day
Daggett insisted • on
driving longer than usual. It was
not until they passed a roadhouse
that he consented to stop for the
night a( a nearby trailer park.
After he was settled in bed, with
a book and cigarets within reach,
he suggested, "Why don't you two
go up for a 'drink."
There were a do/en or more
cars parked in front of the road
house but it seemed nearly empty.
It Vvas a barn of a place, dim^y
lighted. Through the gloom, Greg
could make out couples sitting at
Forrestvillc., Of course. I should
have remembered. They always
have big doings in April. Wc am
on our way to a local celebration
An annual affair that has gene on
beyond the memory of m:iD."
"But why at this senson?
hardy idiots like ourselves visit
Maine for pleasure in April. I
won't thaw out here for anothev
small tables, factory girls
their escorts,
professional
" Anniversary of the founder'
l.irth,"
Greg
explained. "The}
have horse racing and parachut
drops during the day and a ear
niv-il at night."
"How
do you know all this?
Daggett asked.
"I was born in Maine."
"I didn't know that."
"Wi.Ol,"'
Greg pointed
out rea
sonably, "after all, I had to b
born somewhere.'
Greg, forced down to 20 mile
an hour, had leisure to look uroun
him.
The small boy he had bee
careened clo\vn the road ahead of
him on the bicycle his father haJ
got him for Christmas. C;iret'roe
childhood
ihat was supposed to'
with ke the time of times, the pinnacle
ourins.
Nobcdy
can tear down
ieir traditional haunts in the rid-
culous name of progress.
The British not only preserve
Vestminster Abbey and their ca-
iedral. The government also pro-
ects against charge or deslruc-
ion SjOOO pubs, including one in
;hich the first Queen Elizabeth
ruaffed nutbrown ale and another
n which Henry V took a farewell
before hopping the channel
eriy to France and the battle at
igincourt.
The government, explaining that
the events that occurred in these
nns vould make a history o'f Eng-
and," plans to list as historical
a tavern. But, after all these year.-;,
doesn't the distillery that fueled
Gen. U. S. Granted perhaps de-
serve a memorial marker?
Any
Southerner will confirm, that it was
only
bottle
courage that
gave
Grant the nerve to take on the
peerless Robert E. Lee.
How about the bar off Gramercy
Park, New York, where lonely
O. Henry dreamed up his stories?
Isn't
that
a kind of monument
worth keeping?
There are many interesting po-
litical sites- worth preserving as
historic monuments
such as the
smoke-filled room where Warren
iod.The Game and Fish Commission
says the Monroe-Roc Roe Refuge
in Montoe County will be open to
deer hunters fod the first time
since it became a state refuge 20
years ago'.
Act Fat? When Cough From (|;
Common Cold Hangs On
Chronic bronchitis may develop if
your cough, chest cold, or acute bron-
chitis is not treated and you cannot
afford to take a chance with any medi-
cine less potent than Creomulsion. It
goes into the bronchial system to help
loosen and expel germ laden phlegm
and aid nature to soothe and heal raw,
tender.inflamcdbronchialmembrancs.
For children you can now get
milder, t»stier Creomulsion for Chil-
dren in a pink and blue package.
M,
Gel a large bottle of Creomulsion at «<
your drug store. Use it all as directed.
Creomulsion is guaranteed to please
you or druggist refunds money. Adv.
Harding wa.s picked as a
dential candidate, and the
conquered life but because he
iccepted it on its own terms.
At
a park on the outskirts of
own, Greg unhooked the trailer
and (ho three men drove slowly
nto Forrestville.
Forrestville was neither a pic-
iuresque village nor a thriving fac-
tory town. It was old, its houses
weatherbeaten and unpainted, with
an air of hard wo'rk and dogged
survival about them.
Daggett was having the time of
his life and to Greg's surprise he
suggested, "There's a hotel of
sorts. Let's lunch there for a
change."
presi-
exact
spot where Calvin Collidge put on
his first Indian headdress. These
would please Democrats greatly.
Republicans might equally enjoy
making a federal museum of Tarn-
many Hall, or erecting a granite
tower commemorating the "Tru-
man dollar."
Everybody, of course, would 'be
glad to contribute toward a na-
tional monument for the first man
in America who finds a free place
to
park his
car legally. But no
such fund will ever be raised. No
guy lucky enough to find a park-
ing space would give away his sa-
cret
fame.
for so empty a reward as
The hotel lobby was uninviting,
with linoleum on the floor and a
pot-bellied
stove in
the middle
of the room.
Greg led the way
to
a corner table 5n the dining
girls,
ANNOUNCES A NEW POLICY!
No» yewcon have yswr Hsme Rewired
KKAll
12 Easy Payments
sprinkling of older couples. Oddly
enough, it was the latter who made
the most noise.
Rupert made his way to the bar
like a homing' pigeon and Greg
followed him,
Some of the girls weren't bad at
all. In a few minutes one of them
came up to him.
She smiled tentatively.
"Hello,
Goodlooking. Want to dance"
"Why not" Greg led her out
on the floor. He .was not a good
dancer but the girl was expert and
she made him feel better than he
wag. it was pleasant to have a
wpman in his arms and this one
was not demanding. He bought her
a drink and they danced again.
"Who
is your handsome friend"
She sighed. *'What a girl would
gjve for those eyes and lashes.
Wasted on a man,"
"Want to meet him"
pbviously stye did, but business
of happiness. But I can't, Greg ru-
minated,
remember
being con-
scious of happiness; I was always
:oo busy, tco inleruslud, too ab-
sorbed in whatever I was doing.
The bicycle and roller- skates
ond a sled. Somehow he hud them,
however small the earnings from
his father's pharmacy. Small, Greg
remembered,
because his father
not collect .from U-.e needy.
came
pjensure, "You
did
How exasperated his mother had
been!
Prosperity had mellowed
her, relaxed her, brought out an
unexpected sweetness in her .na-
ture, made licr lively to look at.
But his father
Greg tried to sue
him through adult eyes. It .was,
he thought, very difficult to sue
cue's parents as people. For the
first time it ot-curied to him that
his father's! quietness had
beenH
neither patience nor muinalibn;
it had been the deep-rooted seren-
ity of fulfillment. IK hud adored
liis \yifc we' likul Ins work.
room where Daggett could sit with
his back to the room. Not until they
were seated did he notice with
foreboding the three rowdies at the
next table who were annoying the
waitress, a raw-boned girl with a
plain face flushed from exertion
and suopressed anger, trying to
rerve them and at the same time
to avoid their impertinent hands.
Rupert
innocently
precipitated
the trouble. When the waitress
came to take their order he re-
marked, "A nice girl should not
to pestered by hoodlums."
She shook her head warningly.
'What'll you have to start! clam
chowder or vegetable soup?" She
lowered her voice. "One of them
is the boss' nepliew."
The three at' the next table were
sdlent and the waitress scurried
off. When she returned with their
order, Rupert smiled at her. From
tho
next
table came a snicker.
"That guy's making time with
your girl, Sam."
Qreg •• recovnized Sam's type, the
Ten Persons Die
in Accidents
NEW YORK UP) Ten persons, in-
cluding six children, were killed
yesterday by fumes from a faulty
gas
water
heater ir. a crowded
tenement apartment.
The tragedy brought city
offi-
cials to the scene. They opened a
thorough investigation and
t h c
health commissioner advised a city
wide drive to avoid similar deaths
in the future.
Found
dead
orirly
yesterday
were a -family of eight ard two
guests who had come for a bap-
kind
who seems to be perman-
tp
ently conditioned by his Comman-
do training. Whatever force might
have slanted
back his brow, it
was the army that had taught him
all the secrets of fighting; he was
spoiling to make use of his knowl-
edge, He looked irom Rupert to
Greg and then his eyes rested on
Raggett's twisted face.
tismal celebration the
The. . ... victims were
noxt day.
Ed ubirgcs
.
Gonza'les, 33; his wife Victoria, 29;
their
s.jx children; Domingo Mo-
tos, 3}, and his wife, 27.
The youngest Gonzales child, a
4-mohths-old girl, was to be bap-
tized yesterday, neighbors said.
End was taken dead from her bed
already
dressed her
pink bap-
tismal gown.
The Motos had fpent the night
in the Gonzales home after a pve-
baptism party. Orphaned by the
tragedy were their own three sons.
aged 4 to 8 who had stayed else-
where with relatives.
Two windows in the three room
apartment were open but
there
was not enough ventilation to re-
move the gases. One city official
said 'enough carbon monoxide had
teen formed to "kill oft en entire
squadron of men in half an hour."
It's impossible hot tc
fee! a healthy, mellow c
as cares and worries, <
pains melt away.Expert attendants^
are maintained in the Majestic'$
own bath department to restore
your vim, vigor and vitality.
And remember, our Bath House
is operated in accordance with
regulations prescribed by the
National Park Service of the
US Government's Department of the Inferior.
HOT SPRINGS
luul found
Wry. preg *>covpml wtyrl a,
rich auet g«od. Uv>C
w
w
'•Now
I've
seen
evenything,
3^eg Ml 14s stomach
The U, S. Office o fEducation es-
timates that
between 10 and 12
million dollars worth pf building is
*QJ? cleiasrc^rni, in /. g,
NATIONAL PARK, ARKANSAS
Here at the MAJESTIC HOTEL you'll find
rest and relaxation, fine food and fun to
suit your mood and your budget, Write today
for further information!
MAJESTIC
Horn
HAPARTMINT5
IP PATHS
t COTTAGiSy
M'$f^&..lt$laJ$'&»i$ik
-: -"q^T -f -^pri-Jip
'r-;^-. • V^\f_f
*
-
"^«
To City Subscribers:
If you fail to get your Stdf
please telephone 7*3431 by
6 p. m. and a special carrier
will deliver your paper.
Star
Bi
ihd
.
24hours eridihf at % S, rft.; '
4ft . \
^'
Stdr of Mejf 1899, Press 1927
56TH YEAR: VOL. 56 — NO. 23
consolidated Jan. is, 1929
HOPE AftKANSAS, tUlSOAY, NOViMBtR 9 19S4
M*mber: the Attattated PHtJ* & Audit Bureau «f Clfedtatlai.!
Av. Net Paid Circl. 6 Me*. Cndtrig Sept. 30, 1954 —
Selection of
Harlan Brings
Democrat Praise
By TED LEWIS, JR.
WASHINGTON (UP)
T wo
Democratic members of the Sen-
i/fte judiciary
committee
today
praised President Eisenhower's
nomination of a jurist
Appelate
Judge John Marshall Harlan
to
the Supreme Court.
Schedule of
Fire Inspection
12:40 p. m. - Stage Show - High
School.
1:00 p. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
1:45 p. m. - Stage Show - Junior
High School.
2:00 p. m. - Movies - Brookwood
School.
3:00 p. m. - Movies - Garland
School.
•
I
WASH1NGTO N
Wi
Russia has
Wednesday November 10
'countered
an
American
protest
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR .over the latest cold war aerial in-
Moscow Claims
'Innocence' in
Downing Plane
By WARREN
ROGERS JR,
The White Houre was expected School.
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
9:30 a. m. - Movies - Oglesby
T
to send the nomination of Harlen,
55-year-old New York federal cir-
cuit court judge and a Republi-
can, to the Senate during the day.
But it was not certain whether the
upper chamber would act on it
during the 'current session oh cen-
^iring Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy.
Sens. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn)
fnd Thomas C. Hcnnings. Jr (D-
Mo;, members of the judiciary
committee which must approve the
appointment, praised the selection
of a judge to succeed Justice Rob-
ert H. Jackson who died of a heart
attack last month. Kefauver said
he saw no "difficulties" in the way
of Marian's confirmation.
The Tennessee Democrat said he
/J,as a "very high opinion" of Har
Jan and -aid he was glad Mr. Ei-
senhower had
selected Someone
"has come up through the courts."
Hennings agreed.
"By and large, it contributes to
the
strength of the court to ap-
point, other things being equal, a
eminent
judge
whose
decisions
have to commended him to the
country, as have Judge Harlan's, '
Hennings declared.
If confirmed, Harlan will be the
4»iird Bepublican on the high court
and the "second justice to be ap-
pointed by Mr. Eisenhower. A for-
mer counsel to the New York state
crime commission,. Harlan is the
granduon and namesake of a fa-
mous justice who served 34 years
on the court.
The White House was also ex-
pected to send to the Senate the
nomination of Atomic Enprgy Com-
missioner
Joseph Campbell
as
omptroller general. Mr. Eisenhow-
announcd both appo i n tin ents
yesterday.
' • • , _ •
10 a. m. - Stage Show - Yerger
School.
with a declaration of abso-
lute innocence, but U. S. officials
indicate the Soviets haven't heard
the last of the matter.
Cigarette Controvefey Seems
tc ^ Flaming Hotter and the
Public Wants to Know Truth
Hubbard /s Elected
Head of Arkansas
Guidance Group
Horace Hubbard, Vocational Gui-
dance Director of Hope High Scho-
ol, has been elected President
of
the Vocational Guidance section of
the Arkansas Education Associat-
For
the eighth time since the ion
cold war began, the United States
yesterday demanded an
apology
11 a. m. - Movies - Paisley Scho-jand reparations from Russia
fir
pi.
violence done American aircraft by
12 noon - Combined Luncheon -
Lions, Rotary, Kiwanis
(Barlow
Hotel).
1:00 p. m. • Movies - Hopewell
School.
4:00 p. m. - Parade
4:30 p. m. - Fire Department De-
monstration (First National 'Bank
Building).
Thursday, November 11
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
Fire Department.
Says Crippling
TVA Aim of
Power Proposal
WASHiNGTON UP) The
general
manager of the American.
Public
Power Association asserted today
that
the porposed
Dixon-Yates
power contract :'s "the
opening
wedge in crippling the Tennessee
Valley Authority (TVA)"
Alex Radin, who said his
organ
ization represents more than 700
local publicly-owned electric util-
ities, was in the witness chair as
the Senate-House Committee
on
Soviet planes.
Moscow countered \yith a claim
that its planes were in the right.
But the original U.S. note
had
promised thst the Kremlin would
head more from Washington after
investigation established all
the
facts "regarding human life and
material losses."
The latest incident occurred Sun-
day over Japan's northern Hokkai-
do Island. Ten members of a U.S.
Air . Force
photo-reconnaissance
plane parachuted to safety.
Tha
llth go't snagged in ,his parachute
and drowned.
The United States fired a stiff
protest to Moscow, saying it ex-
pects the Kremlin "To make
all
such moral and material repara-
tions as lies within its power."
The Guidance section is compos-
ed of 60 full time and part time
Counselors in the state of Arkan-
sas.
As President of this organization,
Mr. Hubbard will preside at both
the annual meeting of Counselors
on Petit Jean mountain in Septem-
ber and the Sectional meeting at
the AEA convention next Fall.
The Guidance program at Hope
High School is seven years old this
year. Mr. Hubbard has been the
director since July 1948.
(Editor's Note
Few
re-
search
problems
of modern
times have captured the public
interest more than the current
search for an answer to this
question: Is cigarette smoking
a
substantial
h a z a r d
to
health? The interest is
justi-
fied, for the stakes are high.
Here is a concise summary of
what fe involved.)
By AtljON U. BLAKESLEE
AP Science Reporter
NEW ,YOR K
,The great cig-
arette cbntroversy is flaming hot-
ter.
'
.
'
It has millions
of
Americans
uzzled i or
confused, and many
rightencd. Are cigarettes
really
Knowland Is
Shocked at
Bohlen Deed
WASHINGTON (UP)
Republic a n
Leader William F.
Knowland (Calif;) said today
he
was "deeply shocked" that U. S.
Senate
American GI
Goes Over
to Russians
By RICHARD O'REGAN
VIENNA, Austria (/P) The Soviet
information service announced to-
day that and American Army ser
geant has asked the Russians ir
Aut'tiia for political asylum anc
has been granted it.
The
Red
information
identified the soldier as. Sgt. Wil-
liam Clayton Turner, ?2. and -ifaid
until Oct. 15 he had becVi'in •Cbm-
rany B of the 124th ArtiUery'Sup
ply. Battalion and in the military
police of the U. S. 7th Army's 2nd
Armored Division in Germany.
IT. S. Army authorities in Aus
tria said they were checking Avitt
Atomic Energy resumed its study I Ambassador Charles E.
Bohlen the Army in Germany On ; the;' re
of the controversial contract
to
feed private power into the TVA
lines.
Radin said the contract
affect
"all'the people of the nation," Tf
*is destroyed, he said, "the
attended an official party in Mos-
cow a few hours
after
Russian
plants shot down an American B-29
<jver':'Northern Japan,-
The' State Department paid yes- fg<jnc>' £uotCJd ,p: .letter
,
>-'lcl =
__*•..
,
. '
. bad written which eav
port.
The Soviet agency said
had jsked fori
- anc] becrj gTjBntoc
liv«t 4wi'Russia;1 iTlier
Firemen to
iVA'is destroyed.. Jie saio, "the terday and confirmed again last
people of the nation will have lost r.ioh/in --cnnnsP to new i'nnuiries.
Fire Fighting
^ As a part of Hope's three-day
"town inspection" campaign, the
Hope Fire Department will offer a
fire fighting demonstration Wednes-
day afternoon at 4:30 p. iri. at the
1st National Bank Building. In ma-
king this announcement, Chief A.
S. Willis said "This fire
fighting
demonstration staged by the mem-
bers of the Hope Fire Department
will be well worth seeing by every
citizen in Hope.
'jffe
1 The Fire Department will dem-
onstrate ' the
use of its various
equipment, including its splendid
junior arial, the 45 foot Bangor lad-
der in a spectacular hotel rescue
raise, life-net work, and countless
other educational and entertaining
features.
School children and the general
public are invited to witness the
demonstration Chief Willis said.
The
demonstration
will be pre-
..ceeded by a parade through the
Business district by the fire depart-
ment, school children 'and the visit-
ing members of the State Fire Pre-
vention Association, including "Stu-
pid Carelessness, the Fire Clown."
New Method Aids
Mental Treatment
ST. LOUIS W Development
of
afet
''electric shock" treatment
one o ftheir most effective allies
in bringing lower electric mies
and greater consumption of elect-
ric rates and greater consumption
of electricity to all
the homes,
farms and industries of the nat-
ion."
The proposed Dixon-Yates con-
tract, backed by the administra-
tion, provides for private
> power
interests to construct a 107 million
dollar power plant at West Mem-
phis,
Ark.,
to supply power to
TVA.
Mrs. C. E. Baker
Succumbs in
Local Hospital
Mrs. Exa Lera Baker, aged 57,
wife of Hope Police Chief Clarence
E. Baker, died early today in a
local hospital. She has been ill
only a short time. Mrs. Baker hjs
lived in Hempstead all her life.
Besides her husband she is sur-
vived by her mother, Mrs. Rosa
Parker of Spring Hill, two daugh-
r,ight in response to new inquiries,
that Bohlen did not know about
the plane incident when be and
other foreign diplomats attended a
dinner given by Soviet Premier
Georgi Malenkov Sunday night
to
celebrate the 37th anniversary of
the Communist revolution.
Knowland, in
a
brief
Senate
cpeoch, indicated that he was not
aware of the State Department's
ct&temcnt on this point. He
ac-
knowledged that there might have
been ''extenuating circumstances'1
in Bohlen's attendance at the Mos-
cow party, and said he had asked
the State Department for a
full
report.
Knowland said news of the plane
shooting -incident was broadcast by
Moscow radio at 6 p. m. Moscow
time Sunday
about two hours
before Bohlen went to the party.
State Department officials
said,
however, that Bohlen first learned
of the incident through an official
message Washington that was do.
it said he
had written which gave this ac
count of his defection from the
West:
While serving in Germany, h
became convinced, that the rebirt!
of an "aggressive German army'
would lead to war. He became cer
tain that
the U. S.
go'vernmen
was -preparing new aggression i
collaboration with Facist clement
n West Germany.
He said he crossed from Ger
nany to Austria Oct. 15 "with th
dea ol seeking political asylum i:
he Soviet Union."
"I have decided to go wher
here is real freedom for a. sun
ile man, arid I therefore ask fo
ie possibility to live and work i
tie Soviet Union," he was quotec
The letter
said
Turner
w
rafted in J942, took part in th
Normandy
landings
and serve
vith the 29th Division. From 194
o 1952, 'after his discharge froi
he ciimy, he was mostly out of
vork. In 1952 he was drafted again
and sent to West Germany.
U.S. Embassy in
3 a. m. Moscow
ters, Miss Ruth Baker and Mrs.;did Monday.
Eunice Dale Witt of Texarkana;
two sisters, Mrs. Sid Sinyard and^l
Mrs. Elmer Nations of Spring Hill
and two brothers, Arlin and Elgin
of Hope,
two grandchildren, Billy
and Clarence Kennedy.
Funeral services will be held
at
Herndon-Cornelius
Funeral
Home Chapel at 2:30 p. m. Wed-
livered to the
Moscow about
time Sunday right, after the par-
ty. It was this message that
in-
structed Bohlen to file a protest
note with the Kremlin, which lie
GIRL TALK
NEWTON, Mass., (UP)
Bos
ton College Football Captain Joe
Mattaliano was dined last night
by Boston University grid co-capt-
nesday by the Rev. Wesley Thoma- iano.
s Joe Terras! ard Frank Guil-
„
.
.
uuliSUIJ,
UUL;
uw*i^-«»
j.v**-"
—~ — >•
•
^^"S'J,a"L,°fu!±rm:'?"8C« Frank Douglas, Ray Turner and
drugs" have made
possible" to give beneficial shock
treatments to mentally-ill oldsters
onqe deemed too"fragils" for the
procedure.
This was reported today to tho
Southern Medical Association's 48th
annual meeting by Dr. James Ward
and Dr. James A.' Bectcr, of Hill
Crest
Sanitarium,
Birmingham,
Ala.
DON'T FORGET
FrfomU in $trvi«t
•\yri.te often. The USD knows there's
14e a letter at
» Miow frel swell.
U<
f
ce
Back at the BC campus, team-
mates eagerly asked Mattsliano iJ
he
talked with his hosts-, about
satin-day's BC-BU game, the first
^Ul.s'"w, -•«,
.
-
,in in 12 years.
'
nug.i Garner. Honorary, members
"We tallied about blondes, brun-
of City Police force, city and Coun- ettes and redheads," Muttaliano
,y officials.
'
son, assisted by the Rev. Carlton
Roberts.
Active pallbearers; Thomas An-
derson. Joe Jones. Faris Downs.
said.
Maybe You Are a Lucky Young
Girl Who Can Go to Movies on
Sunday Without Any Fuss
By ALVN STEINKOPF
(For Hal Boyle)
LONDON I*1 Ju st imagine you
are a lively- 24-year-old girl liv-
ing in London.
It's'a dank and dreary Sunday.
You have to turn on the light in
the middle of thw afternoon.
If'you were just any 24 year-old
girl,: earning your living typing in
an office, you could give that pony-
tail haircut a swipe with a comb,
slip c-n a mackintosh and go to
the movies.
Tens of thousands of young girls
do just that, and manage to sur-
vive a gloomy afternoon. There are
thick, moist end noisy masses .of
them in Oxford St
Put you had better do nothin
c| the kind if you arc
Margaret. She yenture4
Piincess
Margaret, it
seems
broke a royal tradition. Conspirina
with her in this act of lashnes.
were her lady-in-waiting,
Miss
Irish Peakc, and two unidentified
young men.
Members
of the royal
familj
may engage in a lot of .sprightly
activities, such as shooting quail
drinking champagne for
lunch
playing polo any old day,
an-:
betting on the races. But member
of the roval family do not go t.
the movies on Sunday.
The Princess went to see sonic
thing
rather
new in London
method, of projection known
a
Cinerama. She and her ccmpan
ions went 5nto the Casino The.a
ter and occupied seats, which cos
$2 IP anicee. Then they went hem
the gloom.
ta ne.wsiyjpjers, %$ SKfUe^ ft
. tot sM $$$$$' 'fifitesft
Fighter Escorts
May Be Used,
Dulles Warns
WASHINGTON W
The United
States is considering giving fight-
er escorts
to American aircraft
which fly near
Communist terri-
tory, Secretary of State Dulles dis
closed, today.
Dulles told a news conference Lena Newton,
studied by the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
He noted that the pilol of the
RB27 photographic plane shot down
by Soviet fighters over Japanese
waters last Sunday has authority
to ?hoot back, but did not do so.
Dulles said this was one of those
hairline decisions on which people
might make different judgement.1
afterwards. That was the case also
with ambassador Charles E. Boh-
len and his decision to attend a
It finds'Hho house of science and Soviet Party in Moscow .Sunday
night- following the plane incident,
Judgments Are
Awarded in
Circuit Court
A wreck near Emmet In which
three Negro workers were killed
resulted in a law suit in Hempstaad
Circuit court yesterday with a jury
awarding judgements totaling $i,-
002. Two cases were combinedt with
a total of eight persons suing John
W. Kizer Jr., driver of one of the
cars involved.
' Ben Hill was awarded $200 by
a
jury, Grover Rankin $1, Warren
Powell $1, Rachel Lee Slay, $200|
angeroUs?
moking!?
Should
YOU
stop
and her child-
Jr-
Nell, a total of
Court will reconvene this after-
noon.
'By Alvtn'SpN
WASHINGTON
Senate source*
friends of Sen.
the n
medicine divided. Some authorities
rankly call cigarettes a major fac-
or in causing human cancer, es-
ecially'lung cancer, and say they
re bad for your heart. But others,
qually -prominent, say the . case
gainst cigarettes is by no means
woved. .
.
-
:
'
'
•
'
•
It finds' many hundreds of thou-
ands of dollars being poured into
eseareh to find the answer,
or
•nswers. That fact could produce
;reat
boons
for all
on
the
eseareh will dig deep
into some
biological m y s t e r i e s , What is
earned could turn up vita), links
about the cause, control or treat-
nent of cancer, heart disease or
jossibly other health m a t t e r s ,
quite aside from its effect in the
cigarette controversy.
The controversy finds;• unknown
thousands of .men
and women
jiving lip- cigarettes, or trying to,
6r3thinking they should. ;
• . • . ' .
Humaiij healthy is one stake in
;he controversy: Are
cigarettes
.armleshs, bad, or scmewhere
in
jotweeri!?- Human enjoyment is an-
other: ityfost smokers enjoy their
smoking,,
..
The tobacco industry 'the '.big
arid sm&ll growers and manufac-
turers ind processors, •middlemen,
Ji-'1'1-r'-' .ers, retailers, vending nrui-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ^Vferaiors and many oth.Si.-s.
owes
its livelihood
to tobacco.
Governments derive much revenue
from tobacco taxes.
"
Science ar.d medicine have
a
stake. Should a reputable sciel?.-
tist disclose his findings which lead
him to suspect hazards in smok-
ing, or anything else? Or should
he wait until he has definite proof?
If he is proved wrong after his
early announcement, will
people
accuse him of scare mongering,
or
lose faith in scientific 're-
search? If he is proved right after
deciding not to warn the public
would people accuse him of hav-
ing shirked his responsibility?
The cigarette controversy,
like
Continued on Page Three
.
Dulles said.
Dulles said Bohlen had,to make
a ouick judgment without instruc-
tions from Washington on the basis
of incomplete information which
reached him less than an hour be-
fore lie left for the party.
The ambassador's attendance at
the party had- been criticized by
Sens. Knowland
(R-Calif)
and
Bridges (R-NH) .just before Dulles'
meeting with newsmen.
Urine Test
May Detect
a Cancer
; By FRANK
CAREY
AP 'Science
Reporter
; ST. LOUIS
Possible discov-
ery of a new and highly accurate
test for cancer, omplpying urine
instead of blood
was announced
to'day to the Southern Medical As-
sociation.
';:
i
«""
Doctors T.; C. Terrell and H.H.
Beard of Fort -Worth, Tex.,1 said
the..
Duke Disclaims
Knowledge of
German Writer
By KINGSBURY SMITH
PARIS (INS )
The British gov-
ernment today published German
Vorld War Two records in which
he
Duke of Windsor was quoted
as the source of information on
Allied milita-.-y plane's.
The 'former King Edward' VIII.
vho now is in London, telephoned
o this correspondent a statement
saying he "never met or had any
connection" with the
Ge/rman
A'hose statements were quoted by
the London government.
A German, spy organizer, Count
Julius Von Zech-Burkersrpda,
at
:he time minister to The Nether-
ands, claimed in a message to his
aome government that he "might
'lave- the opportunity to establish
Certain lines leading to the DuXe
cf Windsor."
The two loiters that the German
envoy wrote to his superiors in the
Berlin foreign ministry mentioned
the duke several times. They were
cjuoted in the latest collection of
"documents on German
.Foreign
Policy" published by the British
government.
The documents cover the period
from immediately after the British
and French declaration of
war
Sept. 3, 1939 up to the eve of
tfce
Hitler-Mussolini meeting at
the
Brenner Pass March IS, 1940. This
was the so-called
"phony
war'
ftage before
the Germans
'' tin. arnount of a (p«e hor-
mone,,-called •. "chroionic gonadtro-
phin" found in urine collected over
a 24-hour period.
They told.the SMA's 48th annual
meeting that this hormone ; occurs
in only small amounts ir. normal
individuals but that it showed up
at substantial levels in 94 per cent
of 51 proved cases of cancer.
And the researchers described
chemical technique for separat-
ing the hormone from other sub-
stances in the urine. This allows
a quantitative measurement of the
hormone, depending upon intensity
cf v. blue-green color.
. The doctors said this ability to
detect varying quantities of the
suggested
possbilitle?
Evangelist
SaysReligion
Greatest Need
In the opening Revival :. service-
in the City Hall Auditorium last ni-
ght Evangelist G. P. Comer told
the audience that America's great-
est need and of the world is a "Re-
vival Of Religion."
He said,
"In
America we art-
spending 18 billion dollars a year
for crime, 12 billion dollars a year
for gambling 9 bullion for
liquor
which makes a total of 39 billion
dollars while we are spending ono
billion by the protestants, Jews and
Catholics. 50 thousand high school
girls become mothers of illegiti-
mate children, God have mercy on
us as a nation" he declared.
The music is an outstanding fea-
ture of these services with Mrs.
Nan Frazier, presiding at the organ
console and Mrs. Spencer at the
piano, and the Rev. Spencer lead-
ing the song service and singing
special numbers with their boys,
Henry and Bobby.
A daily broadcast is heard-'each
afternoon over KXAR direct from
the auditorium from 4:30 to 5 p. m.
The services 'are held dally at
7:30 p. m. Evangelist Coiner has
held revivals in 28 states of th«
nation but he says this is^his first
revival in Arkansas but he
a
his party have been greatly
pressed by the hospitality of
the
people of Hope.
.
:;;
substance
cf:
•• 1. Detecting cancer before symp-
toms become apparent.
2. Testing for the presence or
absence of any signs of "spread-
ing'' of a cancer following surgical
or other treatment of the original
malignancy.
3,'Differentiation between "be-
nign" and malignant tumors.
Dr. Beard told a repoiter that,
aside from studies of cells or tis-
sues, most tests for cancer in th3
past have employed blood
sam-
ples. But he said these "have the
drawback- that they
produce
a
large number of 'fal»e positives'
due .to
the
complexity of sub-
stances in blood,"
"Falfe positives" are. also possl
ble with the new technique but to
a far lesser degree, the doctors
declared.
AEC Head May
Have Time in
Getting Nod
By John A.-Goldsmith
-
WASHINGTON (UP) Atomic
Energy
Commissioner
Joseph
Campbell today faced a possible
Senate -fight for confirmation as
comptroller general because of his
support of the Dixon-Yates con*
tract.
' Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-TemO,
an outspoken foe of the contro-
versial power contract, said Camp-
bell's supoort of it as a member
of the AEC was a "substantial
made of dlsqualifiiation for
the
office of comptroller general. Ke-
fauver called for an investigation
of Campbell's record.
The White House announced yes-
terday that President Eisenhower
Would nominate Campbell for the
GOA post today. The appointment
must be confirmed by the Senate
where' maty Democratic tempers
have been roused by the proposed
Dixon-Yates p'ower deal. Although
his appointment may go to the
Senate today," action will not be
forthcoming for some time."<^ ,;v
' As comptroller general, Camp-
bell, a Republican, wotild head the"
General
Accounting' Office'
<in-
vestgating "armX of *'Congress. He
would serve ' a 15-year term with
a salary"of $17,500-annually.,,t' i.
Peterson Is
i
Accused of
V
Copying Codes
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (LT?)
, Th^
gov,enment today iharged Jhat Jo-
seph S. Peters-en, Jr., former gov.
eminent employe indicted on es-
pionage charges, illegally copied
secret documents which,, shp.wed
that the United .States had 'brok-
en n Dutch government code,
A bill of particulars filed by sfov-
err»ment prosecutors in Jttexandria,
federal court also charged that
of the
newsmen tha,t*a'
is being workedy
thy supporters w
1. The drafting-
tion to ,tone ' dd
censmre' mollo'ri
fered tomorroy
mittee headed
Watldns ; ,
2..TlS?
if t- mafo
Under a
gust,
until
«. By JAG*
sisted
McCarthy •'(
talk to ^de&jL4 „ „
ing his^cerisure)^
at? opens. " "
did
two influ
who as)t
they had
jnay.be :
yesterday i'dfe'sj i
i .That' was0"^
in'1! an f,>d;
agreed i
nien,tarfan« ,s|
byf thu|. *-"--il-
r'csplvvtioi
83rd'Con
.
dieted
- -f *-*r T •*-—'-ty. j-~j- 7]E,
censuring M£'
leged
heads,/,
tersen, now free on $10,000 • bond
pending trial Jan. 4, improperly
removed secret government docu-
ments dealing vlth Red China s
cnde and with the "routing of
North Korean politi9al security
traffic."
' '
The nature of these documents
was not explained. '
Petersen was dismissed from ms
$7,700-a-y3ar job as a research an-
alyst with the hush-hush National
Security Agency on Oct.-1. He was,
lalei indicted on three counts deal-
in? with improper removal of su-
per-secret agency documents.
H\?
was charged with using the infor-
mation "in a manner
prejudicial
to the safety and nterest of the
United States."
gaticnsC Bu.bc<,j.nini1
«,.fA-f
»«(!.•<.'• ,_,A"
. ••'!» Pr.W*-il^W
of rape and *i
Judge, Mi"
of James J
ed in lolk
tion
Rock.«
'. THICK SIV10KE
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, (IF>
Smoke, pouring from a burning tav-
ern was so Ihick firemen could not
see a fire hydiant on the corner,
Thty finally lound the hydrant 1>Y
nrobing through the heavy smoke
varied France,
End Belgium.
m-
The
Netherlands,
Arkansas Weather
For Nov. 9-14 :
Arkansas
Temperatu r es
degiees above
normal.
Mrs, J.R.Lester
Son at Lewisville
»•
Mrs. J, R. Lester, aged 93, wife
of the late J. T. Lester
of Mars
Hill
in
Lafayette County, died
at ih,e home of a son in LewisviUe
last night.
survived by four sons, Ed
Arrest Follows
*
Altercation
City Police arrested Robert Lee
Jones on an assault with intent ,tt>
kill charge following an altercation
in which Bobby Lee Rogers was
badly slashed on the side of th»
face and apross his lips. He was ta-
ken to a hospital for treatment. The
incident occurred on the P^tmoa
)Ro«.<J,
• All Around the Town
•y Thf War
ttuff
' .
Arkansas' great football team
stiU is ranked 4th in tile nation ac-
cording to the AP poll of sporte-
\ydters . . • its ironic to §ee strate
. . •
gy employed by Midwest and
West writers who like tq build up
their teams for the Rose Bowl fitt-
rne which has dropped in prestige
considerably
for instance just
who h;ave the West Coast teams
played?
vi'hich has
take
met
Southern, Cal
only
of their own area with one excep.-.
tion and that
TCV<
were smeared SO tc, 7' in, th
back yard amj UCL4 has
,1
T
11
...n«l>
nnriut
rt
m,eet
(
,
t
of Coushatta. La., C. D. Lester of (thanks to votes of the
_ _
"Stp^.Bir T
«
T^~
_ • I •»-, .
1-1 r _. _i
.....J£A.in
Jo
4-7
Normal m .njma 3,6-ifJ. Nonn^l max*
ima gjMfi, §}
Wto.'fiii
' .rtrt/iaic
Hope, John F. and 0. B. Lester of
Lewisvyie, two daughters, Mrs. ft.
L, Rpyd of Texarkana, and Mrs.
Ifenry 8hea of Mflrs JftU communi-
•
Far West writers, is back
flrst
ten while TOV "'*"
ttnem handily is >w,t Jn
J . . UCLA "»«'* •<"> *
Rose Bowl look good , , • you 8,n4
I know what would happen, if, jioy
W*§t Coast ieam p}ayed_a sc,hf
like Arkansas" has . .*. tpp hag
have more votes than th,r—
Hope Athletic Deparfw
$7.84 on the Magnolia gp^
week ,
with an
t. .
one mw$ hqroe 'geroe
n^ent, ,is .W^y to gQ^
this year
'W|.h
o.|l?ns
20-20
of $34044
Bagging
bycks
m$
V^A'JV"^ ff^ffl^.
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
larlow
t-'tfV .'
f
lift
It thi s
lluclans begin put-
interpretations &i
ions, otte conclusion
a second one seems
t ,
uWican Defeat.
Ilheii? dissatis-
Ican control of
'the House and
te over to the
final Senate re-
kn,owti uhlil after
narrowness
pretty good
6f voters
disturbed by the
as
a whole
•—
or in distress
"expresed
thefr
._£ ganger' by giving th-j
ats pati, overwhelming vie-
"fcHMge'the direction. This
?,i6,tner hand) if they had
' enthusiastic about
jfcrfbrmarce of tho
mm fit seems reason-
teV4 they would have
]& GOP control of Con-
.'• did the reverse.
even' division of
.„„ ..fas best reflected
races where, In Ore-
id/ New Jersey, only
votes separated the
^although
i roughly
five
*otes'( were cast in the
'•S, '
'Democrats achieved pp
^majority in1 capturing
tjthe House over Presi
?veijhqWer's
last-minute
f i
' the Bepubicans in
the little booths and moved close.
Rupert left the bar and swerved
toward the booth where Greg was
Sitting with the girl.
The girl gave him a melting
glance. "Are you going to dance
With me"
"No," Rupert said. "Never do
that. Never take away my friend's
girl."
She laughed with
mechanical
brightness. "Say, you're
good.
Want to order some champagne."
I'm crazy about champagyne."
"No,"
Rupert said again. "No
wine—no kick in it."
The girl answered this with an
obliging scream of laughter. ''No
Wine. No women. How do you feel
about song"
"Song" Rupert echoed in his
rasping voice. Abruptly he buried
his face in his arms on the table.
He was crying, hard, tearing sobbs
that shook his thi nbody.
The uneasy silence was broken
by a man's embarrassed laughter.
"What a crying jag."
Greg paid the bill, waited unti'
Rupert was quiet, and then said,
"Let's go." .
NEXT TIME HE'LL REALLY GET SERVICE-Mrs. Lucille
Gregory shows the grand tip she received for services in a Dallas,
Tex., restaurant She served a well-dressed man in his fifties
a $1.50 sirloin steak and when She returned to pick up the dishes
she found a $100, $50 and $1 bill on the table.
T4351 Bouse seatsi the Dem
?n 2Si2 to the Republicans
by 'gaining 17
^epublicaiis are trying too
[themselves by recalling that
la "ce'ntury
with one ex
JJ934', the party in con-
'pngiess has lost some
vihe \inid-term. l election's
T^may argue that their
'seats'this year was far
*,Jhe f-ecc-nt average of
•picked by, the
party
the, mid-term bal-
fijct. remains the yotfi s
can, when they
mid-term tiadi-
the grip on Con-
r in power. They
finp'3834' to show their eh-
ifwjthe NeW Deal begun
ifideht .Roosevelt two years
WHILE MOM'S AWAY—Seven piglets feed from a bottle rack
under the watchful eye of Carl Teska, of Albany, Ni Y. His
brother, Richard, rigged up the device alter the piglets' mother
had disowned>them.
He got Rupert outside and they
began to walk away from the road
house. Rupert staggered but he
pulled the key from his packet as
though it were a talisman
and
tossed it from hand to hand.
At length
Greg said
quietly
"What happened to yen?"
"One of Mussolini's boys." Ru
pert said. ' I wa.s singing at La
Scala and this fellow was annoyed
because I refused to sirg for n
Fascist gathering. He was persu
asive. Fir&t he hung me by a stvar
and played a little tattoo on m>
back." For once there
was
IT
drama, no overstatement in hi
voice.
He
sounded unspeakabl;
tired. "Then" the pause length
ened until Greg thought lie wouTc
not speak
any more that nigh
"they operaetd on my tin oat."
Greg leaned against the gate anc
lighted ja cigaret. There was noth
ing to ^say.
"So much has hap
pened since then," Rupert v/en
on, "but that was the thing tha
mattered most. My family is gone
my hcme, rny country, my profe;
sion. I am practically an author
ity on concentration camps, on cs
capes, on crossing frontiers with
out a passport. It
is a itrang
thing to belong
nowhere, Greg
Even the' ticking of a clock is lik
a voice saying, 'Move on. Move on
Move on.',"
He clung to the top post of th
gate, turning the key over an
ever in his hand. "That is the ke;
to the house my family moved int
after the Fascists got me.
M
mother
was killed arid my tw
young sisters." He slipped the ke
back into his pocket. "Not by Fas
cists or Nazis. It was an America
bomb. War is like that. No onn
you see, is
to blame. Or all o
us."
yfithe'laBt timrf in Roose-
"^""ilj.that happened. In
__-^elections of 3P3& and
j.\j3emocrats lost ground but
*—<l> of/House or Senate.
x^anje token the voters
ffitt"they
had felt over-
B enthusiasm for the Re-
^''/'could have added
to
WjXk' 1n, both houses. They
^Vto< •
|»bssible that
Eisenhower's
* '
efforts for the Repub-
them from a worse
thevoters may have
p*' their minds before he
|gj;'*tneek-deep into the cam-
,o, special situations such
,,,jiloyjment in Michigan and
pvanja
the, voters made
bejirigs. known by unseating
SJS.tet Republican (Michigan)
^'a.cing, a Republican with
5' as governor .Pennsyl-
09,01 the main Democratic
that
farmers were
t tbs Eisenhower ad-
$ tflejuble price sup-
THE
STORY:
Greg Seaver, a
young man who wants to °o some
thing on his owri, leaves the rela-
tive secur'ty of working .for his
stepfather to become a chauffeur
for a wealthy Invalid, Wade Da'g-
gelt, who is also tired of staying
In one place.. Tr^velng in
Dag-
gett's car and trailer they rescue
a displaced alien, Ruper1 Uandus-
ky, from a probably death by ex-
posure. Somehow they haven't the
Water, water everywhere might sum up the story
of Southeast Arkansas. From this fact has grown a
rice industry which is third largest in the nation.
Rice mills (1) and paddies mark hundreds of square
miles of land in Southeast Arkansas and where the
rice leaves off the ducks seem to take over. Duck
hunting (2) attracts thousands of sportsmen from
every state in the union to the marshes of Southeast
Arkansas each year and when the marshes begin to
thin out toward the most deeply southern part of the
state, the Loblolly pine forests dominate the land-
scape. Where the forests and the rice marshes meet
is Mattox Bay, one of the cut-off lakes of the White
River. Here occurs one of the most unusual sports
in America—bow h u n t i n g for gar (3). Archery
affacianados of Arkansas look forward all year long
to the big August gar hunt vyhcn all members of the
Arkansas Bow Hunters Association gather here to
try their skills for prizes against the most vicious
fish in fresh water. The first white settlement west
of the Mississippi, and now a State Park, Arkansas
Post (4), allows for a glance at Arkansas misty past
in the Small mementoes and historic artifacts on dis-
play there. Lake Chicot and Grand Lake provide the
top-notch' fishing of the deepest part of Southeast
Arkansas, while the numerous lumber towns and mills
give the tourist a chance to see the tree-to-paper-sack
progress of the wood which dominates the economy
of the area. The verdict on roads here is better-than-
average.
Arkansas Publicity and Information Department
\, November 8,
—
—
Doctors Must
Hove Faith,
AMATold
*
By FRANK CAREY
AP Science Reporter
ST LOUIS — Dr.
Elmer Hess,
president-elect of the American
Medical Association,
said today
any
doctor "who lacks faith m
the Supreme Being" has nc right
to practice -medicine.
"A physician who walks .into a
sick room is not alore," said th?
Erie, Pa., doctor who is a special
ist in urology. "He can only nun- %
ister to the ailing person v.ith tho
material tools of scientific medi-
cine his father in a higher pow-
er does the reft.
"Shew me the doctor who der-ca
the existence of the Supreme Bo-
ing and I will say that hn has no
right to practice the healing art.
Hess made the statements in a
prepared digest of extemporane-
ous remarks he planned for the
opening of ihe 43th annual meet,-
ing of the Southern Medical .Asso- I/
fiat ion.
The SMA, with a total
membership of lO.OOC, doctors, ranks
second only to the A'MA as the
largest general medical organiza-
tion in the country.
"Our medical schools are doing
a magnificent job of teaching the
fundamentals of scientific medi-
cine," declared Hess.
"However,
I'm afraid that the concentration
on basic science is so great the
teaching of spiritual values is al-^
most neglected."
*
At another point he asserted:
"Any man whe enters the med-
ical profession with financial gain
as his sold objective is 'a discredit
to
his colleagues.
The market
place is where you
<JO to
make
money, not the sick room. Doctors
lake care of sick folks-period."
The AMA official declared
that
organization has launched a long-
range program designed to solve
the "medical care problems of thej|
indigent and the chronically ill.™
"Special attention must be giv-
en," he said, "to the problems o£
those who are Unable to pay for
their own medical care, or buy
insurance to protect
themselves
against such costs. Wc are urging
state and county medicr.l socie-
ties to make this a major project."
Continued from Page One
five lamous American
historical
monuments. He'd probably name
monuments several thousand more
pubs. The British lean to the theo-
ry
that -any post
where a man
shakes his thirst' has a place in
history.
Americans are loathe to
make
monuments of their saloons, even
though some of modern society's
the Statue of Liberty, the Washing- bluest blod has been shed in them
. ,.
.
.,
T • „_•,„
or.j
ton Monument
the Lincoln
and in recent years, and despite the
'
Deer Season Is
ten in Arkansas
LITTLE ROCK (/P) —Deer hunt-
ing season opens in Arkansas to-
day with the promise of fair skies
and cool weather. The first period
of the split season closes Friday.
The school period is Dec. 13-18.
The limit is one buck each per-
fect
Washlngton
hig
Jefferson memorials. Then he d be iarevfeii address to his officers in
nowhere. For the first cov.plel In thjs mattei. of keeping
thi
urs, Greg had been vaguely
avor Qf lhe past aliv6j wc nav,
heart to turn
him in, for he is
illegally in the country, but Rupert
is afraid. When he sees a police-
man n a New England town, he
flees In fear,
XII
port
program
,was
not .born
out by the results.
On the contrary. In the normaly
Republican
farm sttate of Iowa
Sen, Gillette, a personally popular
Democrat seeking his third term,
was defeated.
APPLES
„„., - '
Wholesale or Retail
pa 'ARKANSAS BLACKS
• ROME BEAUTY
• GOLDEN
'f|jf UPIOU8 • RED DELICIOUS • STAYMEN WINESAP
C A G E E G G S
USSELl/S CURB MARKET
901 West 3rd
Phone 7-9933
ITEEL CONSTRUCTION
iv §>Jieds, Farm Butjdings and Industrial Buildings
!|-lpQ<if according to specifications. Can pe con-
aTftructed at low cost,
SALL,., PR7-4(583
for complete information,
UCKETT STEEL &
EQUIPMENT CO.
He was in the third bar Greg
entered, a glass in his hand, his
dollar bill on; the counter before
him. He caught sight of Greg and
finished his drink in a hurry.
Greg stood beside him .trying to
hold in his smoldering a n g e r .
"What are you drinking"
"Brandy. It works faster."
Greg ordered another brandy for
Rupert and beer for himself. "Why
did you run away"
"I thought this might be my last
drink,"
"Why
did you think I'd turn you
in" In his outrage at this betrayal
Greg forgot entirely th at he had
sponsored the idea only a few days
earlier.
"It has happened to me before."
"Nothing is going to happen to
you here. Just relax."
Greg pushed Rupert's dollar bill
toward him and paid the check.
XIII
The traffic seemed- to spring u
from
of hours
aware that there were more cars
on the road than usual, but now
there was a steady line of trafic
and he slowed down.
"What have you got into?" Dag-
gett demanded impatiently.
"I don't know. According to the
map there is nothing special ahead.
We may run out tit this soon."
"AUs-ays in. a hurry to move on,"
Rupert commented. "And to think
that you like it. Sometimes I be-
lieve you art; the youngest of us."
"Don't say that,"' Daggett pro-
tested. "It makes me feel so old
to have people tell me how youns
am. It's
the last step before
senility. .Dawdling makes me ner-
vous, that's all. And especially on
a
road like this where there is
nothing to see."
"You hold your horses," Greg
called over his shoulder. Then his
eyes were caught by a roadside
s-ign and he begun to laugh. "Oh.
ttumped
unless you let him in-
clude Mae West or Sophie Tucker.
the
a moment's hesitation the
crept over Rupert's cheek
After
color
bones and his hand moved forward
slowly. He pocketed the money.
That day
Daggett insisted • on
driving longer than usual. It was
not until they passed a roadhouse
that he consented to stop for the
night a( a nearby trailer park.
After he was settled in bed, with
a book and cigarets within reach,
he suggested, "Why don't you two
go up for a 'drink."
There were a do/en or more
cars parked in front of the road
house but it seemed nearly empty.
It Vvas a barn of a place, dim^y
lighted. Through the gloom, Greg
could make out couples sitting at
Forrestvillc., Of course. I should
have remembered. They always
have big doings in April. Wc am
on our way to a local celebration
An annual affair that has gene on
beyond the memory of m:iD."
"But why at this senson?
hardy idiots like ourselves visit
Maine for pleasure in April. I
won't thaw out here for anothev
small tables, factory girls
their escorts,
professional
" Anniversary of the founder'
l.irth,"
Greg
explained. "The}
have horse racing and parachut
drops during the day and a ear
niv-il at night."
"How
do you know all this?
Daggett asked.
"I was born in Maine."
"I didn't know that."
"Wi.Ol,"'
Greg pointed
out rea
sonably, "after all, I had to b
born somewhere.'
Greg, forced down to 20 mile
an hour, had leisure to look uroun
him.
The small boy he had bee
careened clo\vn the road ahead of
him on the bicycle his father haJ
got him for Christmas. C;iret'roe
childhood
ihat was supposed to'
with ke the time of times, the pinnacle
ourins.
Nobcdy
can tear down
ieir traditional haunts in the rid-
culous name of progress.
The British not only preserve
Vestminster Abbey and their ca-
iedral. The government also pro-
ects against charge or deslruc-
ion SjOOO pubs, including one in
;hich the first Queen Elizabeth
ruaffed nutbrown ale and another
n which Henry V took a farewell
before hopping the channel
eriy to France and the battle at
igincourt.
The government, explaining that
the events that occurred in these
nns vould make a history o'f Eng-
and," plans to list as historical
a tavern. But, after all these year.-;,
doesn't the distillery that fueled
Gen. U. S. Granted perhaps de-
serve a memorial marker?
Any
Southerner will confirm, that it was
only
bottle
courage that
gave
Grant the nerve to take on the
peerless Robert E. Lee.
How about the bar off Gramercy
Park, New York, where lonely
O. Henry dreamed up his stories?
Isn't
that
a kind of monument
worth keeping?
There are many interesting po-
litical sites- worth preserving as
historic monuments
such as the
smoke-filled room where Warren
iod.The Game and Fish Commission
says the Monroe-Roc Roe Refuge
in Montoe County will be open to
deer hunters fod the first time
since it became a state refuge 20
years ago'.
Act Fat? When Cough From (|;
Common Cold Hangs On
Chronic bronchitis may develop if
your cough, chest cold, or acute bron-
chitis is not treated and you cannot
afford to take a chance with any medi-
cine less potent than Creomulsion. It
goes into the bronchial system to help
loosen and expel germ laden phlegm
and aid nature to soothe and heal raw,
tender.inflamcdbronchialmembrancs.
For children you can now get
milder, t»stier Creomulsion for Chil-
dren in a pink and blue package.
M,
Gel a large bottle of Creomulsion at «<
your drug store. Use it all as directed.
Creomulsion is guaranteed to please
you or druggist refunds money. Adv.
Harding wa.s picked as a
dential candidate, and the
conquered life but because he
iccepted it on its own terms.
At
a park on the outskirts of
own, Greg unhooked the trailer
and (ho three men drove slowly
nto Forrestville.
Forrestville was neither a pic-
iuresque village nor a thriving fac-
tory town. It was old, its houses
weatherbeaten and unpainted, with
an air of hard wo'rk and dogged
survival about them.
Daggett was having the time of
his life and to Greg's surprise he
suggested, "There's a hotel of
sorts. Let's lunch there for a
change."
presi-
exact
spot where Calvin Collidge put on
his first Indian headdress. These
would please Democrats greatly.
Republicans might equally enjoy
making a federal museum of Tarn-
many Hall, or erecting a granite
tower commemorating the "Tru-
man dollar."
Everybody, of course, would 'be
glad to contribute toward a na-
tional monument for the first man
in America who finds a free place
to
park his
car legally. But no
such fund will ever be raised. No
guy lucky enough to find a park-
ing space would give away his sa-
cret
fame.
for so empty a reward as
The hotel lobby was uninviting,
with linoleum on the floor and a
pot-bellied
stove in
the middle
of the room.
Greg led the way
to
a corner table 5n the dining
girls,
ANNOUNCES A NEW POLICY!
No» yewcon have yswr Hsme Rewired
KKAll
12 Easy Payments
sprinkling of older couples. Oddly
enough, it was the latter who made
the most noise.
Rupert made his way to the bar
like a homing' pigeon and Greg
followed him,
Some of the girls weren't bad at
all. In a few minutes one of them
came up to him.
She smiled tentatively.
"Hello,
Goodlooking. Want to dance"
"Why not" Greg led her out
on the floor. He .was not a good
dancer but the girl was expert and
she made him feel better than he
wag. it was pleasant to have a
wpman in his arms and this one
was not demanding. He bought her
a drink and they danced again.
"Who
is your handsome friend"
She sighed. *'What a girl would
gjve for those eyes and lashes.
Wasted on a man,"
"Want to meet him"
pbviously stye did, but business
of happiness. But I can't, Greg ru-
minated,
remember
being con-
scious of happiness; I was always
:oo busy, tco inleruslud, too ab-
sorbed in whatever I was doing.
The bicycle and roller- skates
ond a sled. Somehow he hud them,
however small the earnings from
his father's pharmacy. Small, Greg
remembered,
because his father
not collect .from U-.e needy.
came
pjensure, "You
did
How exasperated his mother had
been!
Prosperity had mellowed
her, relaxed her, brought out an
unexpected sweetness in her .na-
ture, made licr lively to look at.
But his father
Greg tried to sue
him through adult eyes. It .was,
he thought, very difficult to sue
cue's parents as people. For the
first time it ot-curied to him that
his father's! quietness had
beenH
neither patience nor muinalibn;
it had been the deep-rooted seren-
ity of fulfillment. IK hud adored
liis \yifc we' likul Ins work.
room where Daggett could sit with
his back to the room. Not until they
were seated did he notice with
foreboding the three rowdies at the
next table who were annoying the
waitress, a raw-boned girl with a
plain face flushed from exertion
and suopressed anger, trying to
rerve them and at the same time
to avoid their impertinent hands.
Rupert
innocently
precipitated
the trouble. When the waitress
came to take their order he re-
marked, "A nice girl should not
to pestered by hoodlums."
She shook her head warningly.
'What'll you have to start! clam
chowder or vegetable soup?" She
lowered her voice. "One of them
is the boss' nepliew."
The three at' the next table were
sdlent and the waitress scurried
off. When she returned with their
order, Rupert smiled at her. From
tho
next
table came a snicker.
"That guy's making time with
your girl, Sam."
Qreg •• recovnized Sam's type, the
Ten Persons Die
in Accidents
NEW YORK UP) Ten persons, in-
cluding six children, were killed
yesterday by fumes from a faulty
gas
water
heater ir. a crowded
tenement apartment.
The tragedy brought city
offi-
cials to the scene. They opened a
thorough investigation and
t h c
health commissioner advised a city
wide drive to avoid similar deaths
in the future.
Found
dead
orirly
yesterday
were a -family of eight ard two
guests who had come for a bap-
kind
who seems to be perman-
tp
ently conditioned by his Comman-
do training. Whatever force might
have slanted
back his brow, it
was the army that had taught him
all the secrets of fighting; he was
spoiling to make use of his knowl-
edge, He looked irom Rupert to
Greg and then his eyes rested on
Raggett's twisted face.
tismal celebration the
The. . ... victims were
noxt day.
Ed ubirgcs
.
Gonza'les, 33; his wife Victoria, 29;
their
s.jx children; Domingo Mo-
tos, 3}, and his wife, 27.
The youngest Gonzales child, a
4-mohths-old girl, was to be bap-
tized yesterday, neighbors said.
End was taken dead from her bed
already
dressed her
pink bap-
tismal gown.
The Motos had fpent the night
in the Gonzales home after a pve-
baptism party. Orphaned by the
tragedy were their own three sons.
aged 4 to 8 who had stayed else-
where with relatives.
Two windows in the three room
apartment were open but
there
was not enough ventilation to re-
move the gases. One city official
said 'enough carbon monoxide had
teen formed to "kill oft en entire
squadron of men in half an hour."
It's impossible hot tc
fee! a healthy, mellow c
as cares and worries, <
pains melt away.Expert attendants^
are maintained in the Majestic'$
own bath department to restore
your vim, vigor and vitality.
And remember, our Bath House
is operated in accordance with
regulations prescribed by the
National Park Service of the
US Government's Department of the Inferior.
HOT SPRINGS
luul found
Wry. preg *>covpml wtyrl a,
rich auet g«od. Uv>C
w
w
'•Now
I've
seen
evenything,
3^eg Ml 14s stomach
The U, S. Office o fEducation es-
timates that
between 10 and 12
million dollars worth pf building is
*QJ? cleiasrc^rni, in /. g,
NATIONAL PARK, ARKANSAS
Here at the MAJESTIC HOTEL you'll find
rest and relaxation, fine food and fun to
suit your mood and your budget, Write today
for further information!
MAJESTIC
Horn
HAPARTMINT5
IP PATHS
t COTTAGiSy
M'$f^&..lt$laJ$'&»i$ik
-: -"q^T -f -^pri-Jip
'r-;^-. • V^\f_f
*
-
"^«
To City Subscribers:
If you fail to get your Stdf
please telephone 7*3431 by
6 p. m. and a special carrier
will deliver your paper.
Star
Bi
ihd
.
24hours eridihf at % S, rft.; '
4ft . \
^'
Stdr of Mejf 1899, Press 1927
56TH YEAR: VOL. 56 — NO. 23
consolidated Jan. is, 1929
HOPE AftKANSAS, tUlSOAY, NOViMBtR 9 19S4
M*mber: the Attattated PHtJ* & Audit Bureau «f Clfedtatlai.!
Av. Net Paid Circl. 6 Me*. Cndtrig Sept. 30, 1954 —
Selection of
Harlan Brings
Democrat Praise
By TED LEWIS, JR.
WASHINGTON (UP)
T wo
Democratic members of the Sen-
i/fte judiciary
committee
today
praised President Eisenhower's
nomination of a jurist
Appelate
Judge John Marshall Harlan
to
the Supreme Court.
Schedule of
Fire Inspection
12:40 p. m. - Stage Show - High
School.
1:00 p. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
1:45 p. m. - Stage Show - Junior
High School.
2:00 p. m. - Movies - Brookwood
School.
3:00 p. m. - Movies - Garland
School.
•
I
WASH1NGTO N
Wi
Russia has
Wednesday November 10
'countered
an
American
protest
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR .over the latest cold war aerial in-
Moscow Claims
'Innocence' in
Downing Plane
By WARREN
ROGERS JR,
The White Houre was expected School.
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
9:30 a. m. - Movies - Oglesby
T
to send the nomination of Harlen,
55-year-old New York federal cir-
cuit court judge and a Republi-
can, to the Senate during the day.
But it was not certain whether the
upper chamber would act on it
during the 'current session oh cen-
^iring Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy.
Sens. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn)
fnd Thomas C. Hcnnings. Jr (D-
Mo;, members of the judiciary
committee which must approve the
appointment, praised the selection
of a judge to succeed Justice Rob-
ert H. Jackson who died of a heart
attack last month. Kefauver said
he saw no "difficulties" in the way
of Marian's confirmation.
The Tennessee Democrat said he
/J,as a "very high opinion" of Har
Jan and -aid he was glad Mr. Ei-
senhower had
selected Someone
"has come up through the courts."
Hennings agreed.
"By and large, it contributes to
the
strength of the court to ap-
point, other things being equal, a
eminent
judge
whose
decisions
have to commended him to the
country, as have Judge Harlan's, '
Hennings declared.
If confirmed, Harlan will be the
4»iird Bepublican on the high court
and the "second justice to be ap-
pointed by Mr. Eisenhower. A for-
mer counsel to the New York state
crime commission,. Harlan is the
granduon and namesake of a fa-
mous justice who served 34 years
on the court.
The White House was also ex-
pected to send to the Senate the
nomination of Atomic Enprgy Com-
missioner
Joseph Campbell
as
omptroller general. Mr. Eisenhow-
announcd both appo i n tin ents
yesterday.
' • • , _ •
10 a. m. - Stage Show - Yerger
School.
with a declaration of abso-
lute innocence, but U. S. officials
indicate the Soviets haven't heard
the last of the matter.
Cigarette Controvefey Seems
tc ^ Flaming Hotter and the
Public Wants to Know Truth
Hubbard /s Elected
Head of Arkansas
Guidance Group
Horace Hubbard, Vocational Gui-
dance Director of Hope High Scho-
ol, has been elected President
of
the Vocational Guidance section of
the Arkansas Education Associat-
For
the eighth time since the ion
cold war began, the United States
yesterday demanded an
apology
11 a. m. - Movies - Paisley Scho-jand reparations from Russia
fir
pi.
violence done American aircraft by
12 noon - Combined Luncheon -
Lions, Rotary, Kiwanis
(Barlow
Hotel).
1:00 p. m. • Movies - Hopewell
School.
4:00 p. m. - Parade
4:30 p. m. - Fire Department De-
monstration (First National 'Bank
Building).
Thursday, November 11
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
Fire Department.
Says Crippling
TVA Aim of
Power Proposal
WASHiNGTON UP) The
general
manager of the American.
Public
Power Association asserted today
that
the porposed
Dixon-Yates
power contract :'s "the
opening
wedge in crippling the Tennessee
Valley Authority (TVA)"
Alex Radin, who said his
organ
ization represents more than 700
local publicly-owned electric util-
ities, was in the witness chair as
the Senate-House Committee
on
Soviet planes.
Moscow countered \yith a claim
that its planes were in the right.
But the original U.S. note
had
promised thst the Kremlin would
head more from Washington after
investigation established all
the
facts "regarding human life and
material losses."
The latest incident occurred Sun-
day over Japan's northern Hokkai-
do Island. Ten members of a U.S.
Air . Force
photo-reconnaissance
plane parachuted to safety.
Tha
llth go't snagged in ,his parachute
and drowned.
The United States fired a stiff
protest to Moscow, saying it ex-
pects the Kremlin "To make
all
such moral and material repara-
tions as lies within its power."
The Guidance section is compos-
ed of 60 full time and part time
Counselors in the state of Arkan-
sas.
As President of this organization,
Mr. Hubbard will preside at both
the annual meeting of Counselors
on Petit Jean mountain in Septem-
ber and the Sectional meeting at
the AEA convention next Fall.
The Guidance program at Hope
High School is seven years old this
year. Mr. Hubbard has been the
director since July 1948.
(Editor's Note
Few
re-
search
problems
of modern
times have captured the public
interest more than the current
search for an answer to this
question: Is cigarette smoking
a
substantial
h a z a r d
to
health? The interest is
justi-
fied, for the stakes are high.
Here is a concise summary of
what fe involved.)
By AtljON U. BLAKESLEE
AP Science Reporter
NEW ,YOR K
,The great cig-
arette cbntroversy is flaming hot-
ter.
'
.
'
It has millions
of
Americans
uzzled i or
confused, and many
rightencd. Are cigarettes
really
Knowland Is
Shocked at
Bohlen Deed
WASHINGTON (UP)
Republic a n
Leader William F.
Knowland (Calif;) said today
he
was "deeply shocked" that U. S.
Senate
American GI
Goes Over
to Russians
By RICHARD O'REGAN
VIENNA, Austria (/P) The Soviet
information service announced to-
day that and American Army ser
geant has asked the Russians ir
Aut'tiia for political asylum anc
has been granted it.
The
Red
information
identified the soldier as. Sgt. Wil-
liam Clayton Turner, ?2. and -ifaid
until Oct. 15 he had becVi'in •Cbm-
rany B of the 124th ArtiUery'Sup
ply. Battalion and in the military
police of the U. S. 7th Army's 2nd
Armored Division in Germany.
IT. S. Army authorities in Aus
tria said they were checking Avitt
Atomic Energy resumed its study I Ambassador Charles E.
Bohlen the Army in Germany On ; the;' re
of the controversial contract
to
feed private power into the TVA
lines.
Radin said the contract
affect
"all'the people of the nation," Tf
*is destroyed, he said, "the
attended an official party in Mos-
cow a few hours
after
Russian
plants shot down an American B-29
<jver':'Northern Japan,-
The' State Department paid yes- fg<jnc>' £uotCJd ,p: .letter
,
>-'lcl =
__*•..
,
. '
. bad written which eav
port.
The Soviet agency said
had jsked fori
- anc] becrj gTjBntoc
liv«t 4wi'Russia;1 iTlier
Firemen to
iVA'is destroyed.. Jie saio, "the terday and confirmed again last
people of the nation will have lost r.ioh/in --cnnnsP to new i'nnuiries.
Fire Fighting
^ As a part of Hope's three-day
"town inspection" campaign, the
Hope Fire Department will offer a
fire fighting demonstration Wednes-
day afternoon at 4:30 p. iri. at the
1st National Bank Building. In ma-
king this announcement, Chief A.
S. Willis said "This fire
fighting
demonstration staged by the mem-
bers of the Hope Fire Department
will be well worth seeing by every
citizen in Hope.
'jffe
1 The Fire Department will dem-
onstrate ' the
use of its various
equipment, including its splendid
junior arial, the 45 foot Bangor lad-
der in a spectacular hotel rescue
raise, life-net work, and countless
other educational and entertaining
features.
School children and the general
public are invited to witness the
demonstration Chief Willis said.
The
demonstration
will be pre-
..ceeded by a parade through the
Business district by the fire depart-
ment, school children 'and the visit-
ing members of the State Fire Pre-
vention Association, including "Stu-
pid Carelessness, the Fire Clown."
New Method Aids
Mental Treatment
ST. LOUIS W Development
of
afet
''electric shock" treatment
one o ftheir most effective allies
in bringing lower electric mies
and greater consumption of elect-
ric rates and greater consumption
of electricity to all
the homes,
farms and industries of the nat-
ion."
The proposed Dixon-Yates con-
tract, backed by the administra-
tion, provides for private
> power
interests to construct a 107 million
dollar power plant at West Mem-
phis,
Ark.,
to supply power to
TVA.
Mrs. C. E. Baker
Succumbs in
Local Hospital
Mrs. Exa Lera Baker, aged 57,
wife of Hope Police Chief Clarence
E. Baker, died early today in a
local hospital. She has been ill
only a short time. Mrs. Baker hjs
lived in Hempstead all her life.
Besides her husband she is sur-
vived by her mother, Mrs. Rosa
Parker of Spring Hill, two daugh-
r,ight in response to new inquiries,
that Bohlen did not know about
the plane incident when be and
other foreign diplomats attended a
dinner given by Soviet Premier
Georgi Malenkov Sunday night
to
celebrate the 37th anniversary of
the Communist revolution.
Knowland, in
a
brief
Senate
cpeoch, indicated that he was not
aware of the State Department's
ct&temcnt on this point. He
ac-
knowledged that there might have
been ''extenuating circumstances'1
in Bohlen's attendance at the Mos-
cow party, and said he had asked
the State Department for a
full
report.
Knowland said news of the plane
shooting -incident was broadcast by
Moscow radio at 6 p. m. Moscow
time Sunday
about two hours
before Bohlen went to the party.
State Department officials
said,
however, that Bohlen first learned
of the incident through an official
message Washington that was do.
it said he
had written which gave this ac
count of his defection from the
West:
While serving in Germany, h
became convinced, that the rebirt!
of an "aggressive German army'
would lead to war. He became cer
tain that
the U. S.
go'vernmen
was -preparing new aggression i
collaboration with Facist clement
n West Germany.
He said he crossed from Ger
nany to Austria Oct. 15 "with th
dea ol seeking political asylum i:
he Soviet Union."
"I have decided to go wher
here is real freedom for a. sun
ile man, arid I therefore ask fo
ie possibility to live and work i
tie Soviet Union," he was quotec
The letter
said
Turner
w
rafted in J942, took part in th
Normandy
landings
and serve
vith the 29th Division. From 194
o 1952, 'after his discharge froi
he ciimy, he was mostly out of
vork. In 1952 he was drafted again
and sent to West Germany.
U.S. Embassy in
3 a. m. Moscow
ters, Miss Ruth Baker and Mrs.;did Monday.
Eunice Dale Witt of Texarkana;
two sisters, Mrs. Sid Sinyard and^l
Mrs. Elmer Nations of Spring Hill
and two brothers, Arlin and Elgin
of Hope,
two grandchildren, Billy
and Clarence Kennedy.
Funeral services will be held
at
Herndon-Cornelius
Funeral
Home Chapel at 2:30 p. m. Wed-
livered to the
Moscow about
time Sunday right, after the par-
ty. It was this message that
in-
structed Bohlen to file a protest
note with the Kremlin, which lie
GIRL TALK
NEWTON, Mass., (UP)
Bos
ton College Football Captain Joe
Mattaliano was dined last night
by Boston University grid co-capt-
nesday by the Rev. Wesley Thoma- iano.
s Joe Terras! ard Frank Guil-
„
.
.
uuliSUIJ,
UUL;
uw*i^-«»
j.v**-"
—~ — >•
•
^^"S'J,a"L,°fu!±rm:'?"8C« Frank Douglas, Ray Turner and
drugs" have made
possible" to give beneficial shock
treatments to mentally-ill oldsters
onqe deemed too"fragils" for the
procedure.
This was reported today to tho
Southern Medical Association's 48th
annual meeting by Dr. James Ward
and Dr. James A.' Bectcr, of Hill
Crest
Sanitarium,
Birmingham,
Ala.
DON'T FORGET
FrfomU in $trvi«t
•\yri.te often. The USD knows there's
14e a letter at
» Miow frel swell.
U<
f
ce
Back at the BC campus, team-
mates eagerly asked Mattsliano iJ
he
talked with his hosts-, about
satin-day's BC-BU game, the first
^Ul.s'"w, -•«,
.
-
,in in 12 years.
'
nug.i Garner. Honorary, members
"We tallied about blondes, brun-
of City Police force, city and Coun- ettes and redheads," Muttaliano
,y officials.
'
son, assisted by the Rev. Carlton
Roberts.
Active pallbearers; Thomas An-
derson. Joe Jones. Faris Downs.
said.
Maybe You Are a Lucky Young
Girl Who Can Go to Movies on
Sunday Without Any Fuss
By ALVN STEINKOPF
(For Hal Boyle)
LONDON I*1 Ju st imagine you
are a lively- 24-year-old girl liv-
ing in London.
It's'a dank and dreary Sunday.
You have to turn on the light in
the middle of thw afternoon.
If'you were just any 24 year-old
girl,: earning your living typing in
an office, you could give that pony-
tail haircut a swipe with a comb,
slip c-n a mackintosh and go to
the movies.
Tens of thousands of young girls
do just that, and manage to sur-
vive a gloomy afternoon. There are
thick, moist end noisy masses .of
them in Oxford St
Put you had better do nothin
c| the kind if you arc
Margaret. She yenture4
Piincess
Margaret, it
seems
broke a royal tradition. Conspirina
with her in this act of lashnes.
were her lady-in-waiting,
Miss
Irish Peakc, and two unidentified
young men.
Members
of the royal
familj
may engage in a lot of .sprightly
activities, such as shooting quail
drinking champagne for
lunch
playing polo any old day,
an-:
betting on the races. But member
of the roval family do not go t.
the movies on Sunday.
The Princess went to see sonic
thing
rather
new in London
method, of projection known
a
Cinerama. She and her ccmpan
ions went 5nto the Casino The.a
ter and occupied seats, which cos
$2 IP anicee. Then they went hem
the gloom.
ta ne.wsiyjpjers, %$ SKfUe^ ft
. tot sM $$$$$' .^IStefift
Fighter Escorts
May Be Used,
Dulles Warns
WASHINGTON W
The United
States is considering giving fight-
er escorts
to American aircraft
which fly near
Communist terri-
tory, Secretary of State Dulles dis
closed, today.
Dulles told a news conference Lena Newton,
studied by the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
He noted that the pilol of the
RB27 photographic plane shot down
by Soviet fighters over Japanese
waters last Sunday has authority
to ?hoot back, but did not do so.
Dulles said this was one of those
hairline decisions on which people
might make different judgement.1
afterwards. That was the case also
with ambassador Charles E. Boh-
len and his decision to attend a
It finds'Hho house of science and Soviet Party in Moscow .Sunday
night- following the plane incident,
Judgments Are
Awarded in
Circuit Court
A wreck near Emmet In which
three Negro workers were killed
resulted in a law suit in Hempstaad
Circuit court yesterday with a jury
awarding judgements totaling $i,-
002. Two cases were combinedt with
a total of eight persons suing John
W. Kizer Jr., driver of one of the
cars involved.
' Ben Hill was awarded $200 by
a
jury, Grover Rankin $1, Warren
Powell $1, Rachel Lee Slay, $200|
angeroUs?
moking!?
Should
YOU
stop
and her child-
Jr-
Nell, a total of
Court will reconvene this after-
noon.
'By Alvtn'SpN
WASHINGTON
Senate source*
friends of Sen.
the n
medicine divided. Some authorities
rankly call cigarettes a major fac-
or in causing human cancer, es-
ecially'lung cancer, and say they
re bad for your heart. But others,
qually -prominent, say the . case
gainst cigarettes is by no means
woved. .
.
-
:
'
'
•
'
•
It finds' many hundreds of thou-
ands of dollars being poured into
eseareh to find the answer,
or
•nswers. That fact could produce
;reat
boons
for all
on
the
eseareh will dig deep
into some
biological m y s t e r i e s , What is
earned could turn up vita), links
about the cause, control or treat-
nent of cancer, heart disease or
jossibly other health m a t t e r s ,
quite aside from its effect in the
cigarette controversy.
The controversy finds;• unknown
thousands of .men
and women
jiving lip- cigarettes, or trying to,
6r3thinking they should. ;
• . • . ' .
Humaiij healthy is one stake in
;he controversy: Are
cigarettes
.armleshs, bad, or scmewhere
in
jotweeri!?- Human enjoyment is an-
other: ityfost smokers enjoy their
smoking,,
..
The tobacco industry 'the '.big
arid sm&ll growers and manufac-
turers ind processors, •middlemen,
Ji-'1'1-r'-' .ers, retailers, vending nrui-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ^Vferaiors and many oth.Si.-s.
owes
its livelihood
to tobacco.
Governments derive much revenue
from tobacco taxes.
"
Science ar.d medicine have
a
stake. Should a reputable sciel?.-
tist disclose his findings which lead
him to suspect hazards in smok-
ing, or anything else? Or should
he wait until he has definite proof?
If he is proved wrong after his
early announcement, will
people
accuse him of scare mongering,
or
lose faith in scientific 're-
search? If he is proved right after
deciding not to warn the public
would people accuse him of hav-
ing shirked his responsibility?
The cigarette controversy,
like
Continued on Page Three
.
Dulles said.
Dulles said Bohlen had,to make
a ouick judgment without instruc-
tions from Washington on the basis
of incomplete information which
reached him less than an hour be-
fore lie left for the party.
The ambassador's attendance at
the party had- been criticized by
Sens. Knowland
(R-Calif)
and
Bridges (R-NH) .just before Dulles'
meeting with newsmen.
Urine Test
May Detect
a Cancer
; By FRANK
CAREY
AP 'Science
Reporter
; ST. LOUIS
Possible discov-
ery of a new and highly accurate
test for cancer, omplpying urine
instead of blood
was announced
to'day to the Southern Medical As-
sociation.
';:
i
«""
Doctors T.; C. Terrell and H.H.
Beard of Fort -Worth, Tex.,1 said
the..
Duke Disclaims
Knowledge of
German Writer
By KINGSBURY SMITH
PARIS (INS )
The British gov-
ernment today published German
Vorld War Two records in which
he
Duke of Windsor was quoted
as the source of information on
Allied milita-.-y plane's.
The 'former King Edward' VIII.
vho now is in London, telephoned
o this correspondent a statement
saying he "never met or had any
connection" with the
Ge/rman
A'hose statements were quoted by
the London government.
A German, spy organizer, Count
Julius Von Zech-Burkersrpda,
at
:he time minister to The Nether-
ands, claimed in a message to his
aome government that he "might
'lave- the opportunity to establish
Certain lines leading to the DuXe
cf Windsor."
The two loiters that the German
envoy wrote to his superiors in the
Berlin foreign ministry mentioned
the duke several times. They were
cjuoted in the latest collection of
"documents on German
.Foreign
Policy" published by the British
government.
The documents cover the period
from immediately after the British
and French declaration of
war
Sept. 3, 1939 up to the eve of
tfce
Hitler-Mussolini meeting at
the
Brenner Pass March IS, 1940. This
was the so-called
"phony
war'
ftage before
the Germans
'' tin. arnount of a (p«e hor-
mone,,-called •. "chroionic gonadtro-
phin" found in urine collected over
a 24-hour period.
They told.the SMA's 48th annual
meeting that this hormone ; occurs
in only small amounts ir. normal
individuals but that it showed up
at substantial levels in 94 per cent
of 51 proved cases of cancer.
And the researchers described
chemical technique for separat-
ing the hormone from other sub-
stances in the urine. This allows
a quantitative measurement of the
hormone, depending upon intensity
cf v. blue-green color.
. The doctors said this ability to
detect varying quantities of the
suggested
possbilitle?
Evangelist
SaysReligion
Greatest Need
In the opening Revival :. service-
in the City Hall Auditorium last ni-
ght Evangelist G. P. Comer told
the audience that America's great-
est need and of the world is a "Re-
vival Of Religion."
He said,
"In
America we art-
spending 18 billion dollars a year
for crime, 12 billion dollars a year
for gambling 9 bullion for
liquor
which makes a total of 39 billion
dollars while we are spending ono
billion by the protestants, Jews and
Catholics. 50 thousand high school
girls become mothers of illegiti-
mate children, God have mercy on
us as a nation" he declared.
The music is an outstanding fea-
ture of these services with Mrs.
Nan Frazier, presiding at the organ
console and Mrs. Spencer at the
piano, and the Rev. Spencer lead-
ing the song service and singing
special numbers with their boys,
Henry and Bobby.
A daily broadcast is heard-'each
afternoon over KXAR direct from
the auditorium from 4:30 to 5 p. m.
The services 'are held dally at
7:30 p. m. Evangelist Coiner has
held revivals in 28 states of th«
nation but he says this is^his first
revival in Arkansas but he
a
his party have been greatly
pressed by the hospitality of
the
people of Hope.
.
:;;
substance
cf:
•• 1. Detecting cancer before symp-
toms become apparent.
2. Testing for the presence or
absence of any signs of "spread-
ing'' of a cancer following surgical
or other treatment of the original
malignancy.
3,'Differentiation between "be-
nign" and malignant tumors.
Dr. Beard told a repoiter that,
aside from studies of cells or tis-
sues, most tests for cancer in th3
past have employed blood
sam-
ples. But he said these "have the
drawback- that they
produce
a
large number of 'fal»e positives'
due .to
the
complexity of sub-
stances in blood,"
"Falfe positives" are. also possl
ble with the new technique but to
a far lesser degree, the doctors
declared.
AEC Head May
Have Time in
Getting Nod
By John A.-Goldsmith
-
WASHINGTON (UP) Atomic
Energy
Commissioner
Joseph
Campbell today faced a possible
Senate -fight for confirmation as
comptroller general because of his
support of the Dixon-Yates con*
tract.
' Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-TemO,
an outspoken foe of the contro-
versial power contract, said Camp-
bell's supoort of it as a member
of the AEC was a "substantial
made of dlsqualifiiation for
the
office of comptroller general. Ke-
fauver called for an investigation
of Campbell's record.
The White House announced yes-
terday that President Eisenhower
Would nominate Campbell for the
GOA post today. The appointment
must be confirmed by the Senate
where' maty Democratic tempers
have been roused by the proposed
Dixon-Yates p'ower deal. Although
his appointment may go to the
Senate today," action will not be
forthcoming for some time."<^ ,;v
' As comptroller general, Camp-
bell, a Republican, wotild head the"
General
Accounting' Office'
<in-
vestgating "armX of *'Congress. He
would serve ' a 15-year term with
a salary"of $17,500-annually.,,t' i.
Peterson Is
i
Accused of
V
Copying Codes
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (LT?)
, Th^
gov,enment today iharged Jhat Jo-
seph S. Peters-en, Jr., former gov.
eminent employe indicted on es-
pionage charges, illegally copied
secret documents which,, shp.wed
that the United .States had 'brok-
en n Dutch government code,
A bill of particulars filed by sfov-
err»ment prosecutors in Jttexandria,
federal court also charged that
of the
newsmen tha,t*a'
is being workedy
thy supporters w
1. The drafting-
tion to ,tone ' dd
censmre' mollo'ri
fered tomorroy
mittee headed
Watldns ; ,
2..TlS?
if t- mafo
Under a
gust,
until
«. By JAG*
sisted
McCarthy •'(
talk to ^de&jL4 „ „
ing his^cerisure)^
at? opens. " "
did
two influ
who as)t
they had
jnay.be :
yesterday i'dfe'sj i
i .That' was0"^
in'1! an f,>d;
agreed i
nien,tarfan« ,s|
byf thu|. *-"--il-
r'csplvvtioi
83rd'Con
.
dieted
- -f *-*r T •*-—'-ty. j-~j- 7]E,
censuring M£'
leged
heads,/,
tersen, now free on $10,000 • bond
pending trial Jan. 4, improperly
removed secret government docu-
ments dealing vlth Red China s
cnde and with the "routing of
North Korean politi9al security
traffic."
' '
The nature of these documents
was not explained. '
Petersen was dismissed from ms
$7,700-a-y3ar job as a research an-
alyst with the hush-hush National
Security Agency on Oct.-1. He was,
lalei indicted on three counts deal-
in? with improper removal of su-
per-secret agency documents.
H\?
was charged with using the infor-
mation "in a manner
prejudicial
to the safety and nterest of the
United States."
gaticnsC Bu.bc<,j.nini1
«,.fA-f
»«(!.•<.'• ,_,A"
. ••'!» Pr.W*-il^W
of rape and *i
Judge, Mi"
of James J
ed in lolk
tion
Rock.«
'. THICK SIV10KE
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, (IF>
Smoke, pouring from a burning tav-
ern was so Ihick firemen could not
see a fire hydiant on the corner,
Thty finally lound the hydrant 1>Y
nrobing through the heavy smoke
varied France,
End Belgium.
m-
The
Netherlands,
Arkansas Weather
For Nov. 9-14 :
Arkansas
Temperatu r es
degiees above
normal.
Mrs, J.R.Lester
Son at Lewisville
»•
Mrs. J, R. Lester, aged 93, wife
of the late J. T. Lester
of Mars
Hill
in
Lafayette County, died
at ih,e home of a son in LewisviUe
last night.
survived by four sons, Ed
Arrest Follows
*
Altercation
City Police arrested Robert Lee
Jones on an assault with intent ,tt>
kill charge following an altercation
in which Bobby Lee Rogers was
badly slashed on the side of th»
face and apross his lips. He was ta-
ken to a hospital for treatment. The
incident occurred on the P^tmoa
)Ro«.<J,
• All Around the Town
•y Thf War
ttuff
' .
Arkansas' great football team
stiU is ranked 4th in tile nation ac-
cording to the AP poll of sporte-
\ydters . . • its ironic to §ee strate
. . •
gy employed by Midwest and
West writers who like tq build up
their teams for the Rose Bowl fitt-
rne which has dropped in prestige
considerably
for instance just
who h;ave the West Coast teams
played?
vi'hich has
take
met
Southern, Cal
only
of their own area with one excep.-.
tion and that
TCV<
were smeared SO tc, 7' in, th
back yard amj UCL4 has
,1
T
11
...n«l>
nnriut
rt
m,eet
(
,
t
of Coushatta. La., C. D. Lester of (thanks to votes of the
_ _
"Stp^.Bir T
«
T^~
_ • I •»-, .
1-1 r _. _i
.....J£A.in
Jo
4-7
Normal m .njma 3,6-ifJ. Nonn^l max*
ima gjMfi, §}
Wto.'fiii
' .rtrt/iaic
Hope, John F. and 0. B. Lester of
Lewisvyie, two daughters, Mrs. ft.
L, Rpyd of Texarkana, and Mrs.
Ifenry 8hea of Mflrs JftU communi-
•
Far West writers, is back
flrst
ten while TOV "'*"
ttnem handily is >w,t Jn
J . . UCLA "»«'* •<"> *
Rose Bowl look good , , • you 8,n4
I know what would happen, if, jioy
W*§t Coast ieam p}ayed_a sc,hf
like Arkansas" has . .*. tpp hag
have more votes than th,r—
Hope Athletic Deparfw
$7.84 on the Magnolia gp^
week ,
with an
t. .
one mw$ hqroe 'geroe
n^ent, ,is .W^y to gQ^
this year
'«4.h
o.|l?ns
20-20
of $34044
Bagging
bycks
m$
V^A'JV"^ ff^ffl^.
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
larlow
t-'tfV .'
f
lift
It thi s
lluclans begin put-
interpretations &i
ions, otte conclusion
a second one seems
t ,
uWican Defeat.
Ilheii? dissatis-
Ican control of
'the House and
te over to the
final Senate re-
kn,owti uhlil after
narrowness
pretty good
6f voters
disturbed by the
as
a whole
•—
or in distress
"expresed
thefr
._£ ganger' by giving th-j
ats pati, overwhelming vie-
"fcHMge'the direction. This
?,i6,tner hand) if they had
' enthusiastic about
jfcrfbrmarce of tho
mm fit seems reason-
teV4 they would have
]& GOP control of Con-
.'• did the reverse.
even' division of
.„„ ..fas best reflected
races where, In Ore-
id/ New Jersey, only
votes separated the
^although
i roughly
five
*otes'( were cast in the
'•S, '
'Democrats achieved pp
^majority in1 capturing
tjthe House over Presi
?veijhqWer's
last-minute
f i
' the Bepubicans in
the little booths and moved close.
Rupert left the bar and swerved
toward the booth where Greg was
Sitting with the girl.
The girl gave him a melting
glance. "Are you going to dance
With me"
"No," Rupert said. "Never do
that. Never take away my friend's
girl."
She laughed with
mechanical
brightness. "Say, you're
good.
Want to order some champagne."
I'm crazy about champagyne."
"No,"
Rupert said again. "No
wine—no kick in it."
The girl answered this with an
obliging scream of laughter. ''No
Wine. No women. How do you feel
about song"
"Song" Rupert echoed in his
rasping voice. Abruptly he buried
his face in his arms on the table.
He was crying, hard, tearing sobbs
that shook his thi nbody.
The uneasy silence was broken
by a man's embarrassed laughter.
"What a crying jag."
Greg paid the bill, waited unti'
Rupert was quiet, and then said,
"Let's go." .
NEXT TIME HE'LL REALLY GET SERVICE-Mrs. Lucille
Gregory shows the grand tip she received for services in a Dallas,
Tex., restaurant She served a well-dressed man in his fifties
a $1.50 sirloin steak and when She returned to pick up the dishes
she found a $100, $50 and $1 bill on the table.
T4351 Bouse seatsi the Dem
?n 2Si2 to the Republicans
by 'gaining 17
^epublicaiis are trying too
[themselves by recalling that
la "ce'ntury
with one ex
JJ934', the party in con-
'pngiess has lost some
vihe \inid-term. l election's
T^may argue that their
'seats'this year was far
*,Jhe f-ecc-nt average of
•picked by, the
party
the, mid-term bal-
fijct. remains the yotfi s
can, when they
mid-term tiadi-
the grip on Con-
r in power. They
finp'3834' to show their eh-
ifwjthe NeW Deal begun
ifideht .Roosevelt two years
WHILE MOM'S AWAY—Seven piglets feed from a bottle rack
under the watchful eye of Carl Teska, of Albany, Ni Y. His
brother, Richard, rigged up the device alter the piglets' mother
had disowned>them.
He got Rupert outside and they
began to walk away from the road
house. Rupert staggered but he
pulled the key from his packet as
though it were a talisman
and
tossed it from hand to hand.
At length
Greg said
quietly
"What happened to yen?"
"One of Mussolini's boys." Ru
pert said. ' I wa.s singing at La
Scala and this fellow was annoyed
because I refused to sirg for n
Fascist gathering. He was persu
asive. Fir&t he hung me by a stvar
and played a little tattoo on m>
back." For once there
was
IT
drama, no overstatement in hi
voice.
He
sounded unspeakabl;
tired. "Then" the pause length
ened until Greg thought lie wouTc
not speak
any more that nigh
"they operaetd on my tin oat."
Greg leaned against the gate anc
lighted ja cigaret. There was noth
ing to ^say.
"So much has hap
pened since then," Rupert v/en
on, "but that was the thing tha
mattered most. My family is gone
my hcme, rny country, my profe;
sion. I am practically an author
ity on concentration camps, on cs
capes, on crossing frontiers with
out a passport. It
is a itrang
thing to belong
nowhere, Greg
Even the' ticking of a clock is lik
a voice saying, 'Move on. Move on
Move on.',"
He clung to the top post of th
gate, turning the key over an
ever in his hand. "That is the ke;
to the house my family moved int
after the Fascists got me.
M
mother
was killed arid my tw
young sisters." He slipped the ke
back into his pocket. "Not by Fas
cists or Nazis. It was an America
bomb. War is like that. No onn
you see, is
to blame. Or all o
us."
yfithe'laBt timrf in Roose-
"^""ilj.that happened. In
__-^elections of 3P3& and
j.\j3emocrats lost ground but
*—<l> of/House or Senate.
x^anje token the voters
ffitt"they
had felt over-
B enthusiasm for the Re-
^''/'could have added
to
WjXk' 1n, both houses. They
^Vto< •
|»bssible that
Eisenhower's
* '
efforts for the Repub-
them from a worse
thevoters may have
p*' their minds before he
|gj;'*tneek-deep into the cam-
,o, special situations such
,,,jiloyjment in Michigan and
pvanja
the, voters made
bejirigs. known by unseating
SJS.tet Republican (Michigan)
^'a.cing, a Republican with
5' as governor .Pennsyl-
09,01 the main Democratic
that
farmers were
t tbs Eisenhower ad-
$ tflejuble price sup-
THE
STORY:
Greg Seaver, a
young man who wants to °o some
thing on his owri, leaves the rela-
tive secur'ty of working .for his
stepfather to become a chauffeur
for a wealthy Invalid, Wade Da'g-
gelt, who is also tired of staying
In one place.. Tr^velng in
Dag-
gett's car and trailer they rescue
a displaced alien, Ruper1 Uandus-
ky, from a probably death by ex-
posure. Somehow they haven't the
Water, water everywhere might sum up the story
of Southeast Arkansas. From this fact has grown a
rice industry which is third largest in the nation.
Rice mills (1) and paddies mark hundreds of square
miles of land in Southeast Arkansas and where the
rice leaves off the ducks seem to take over. Duck
hunting (2) attracts thousands of sportsmen from
every state in the union to the marshes of Southeast
Arkansas each year and when the marshes begin to
thin out toward the most deeply southern part of the
state, the Loblolly pine forests dominate the land-
scape. Where the forests and the rice marshes meet
is Mattox Bay, one of the cut-off lakes of the White
River. Here occurs one of the most unusual sports
in America—bow h u n t i n g for gar (3). Archery
affacianados of Arkansas look forward all year long
to the big August gar hunt vyhcn all members of the
Arkansas Bow Hunters Association gather here to
try their skills for prizes against the most vicious
fish in fresh water. The first white settlement west
of the Mississippi, and now a State Park, Arkansas
Post (4), allows for a glance at Arkansas misty past
in the Small mementoes and historic artifacts on dis-
play there. Lake Chicot and Grand Lake provide the
top-notch' fishing of the deepest part of Southeast
Arkansas, while the numerous lumber towns and mills
give the tourist a chance to see the tree-to-paper-sack
progress of the wood which dominates the economy
of the area. The verdict on roads here is better-than-
average.
Arkansas Publicity and Information Department
\, November 8,
—
—
Doctors Must
Hove Faith,
AMATold
*
By FRANK CAREY
AP Science Reporter
ST LOUIS — Dr.
Elmer Hess,
president-elect of the American
Medical Association,
said today
any
doctor "who lacks faith m
the Supreme Being" has nc right
to practice -medicine.
"A physician who walks .into a
sick room is not alore," said th?
Erie, Pa., doctor who is a special
ist in urology. "He can only nun- %
ister to the ailing person v.ith tho
material tools of scientific medi-
cine his father in a higher pow-
er does the reft.
"Shew me the doctor who der-ca
the existence of the Supreme Bo-
ing and I will say that hn has no
right to practice the healing art.
Hess made the statements in a
prepared digest of extemporane-
ous remarks he planned for the
opening of ihe 43th annual meet,-
ing of the Southern Medical .Asso- I/
fiat ion.
The SMA, with a total
membership of lO.OOC, doctors, ranks
second only to the A'MA as the
largest general medical organiza-
tion in the country.
"Our medical schools are doing
a magnificent job of teaching the
fundamentals of scientific medi-
cine," declared Hess.
"However,
I'm afraid that the concentration
on basic science is so great the
teaching of spiritual values is al-^
most neglected."
*
At another point he asserted:
"Any man whe enters the med-
ical profession with financial gain
as his sold objective is 'a discredit
to
his colleagues.
The market
place is where you
<JO to
make
money, not the sick room. Doctors
lake care of sick folks-period."
The AMA official declared
that
organization has launched a long-
range program designed to solve
the "medical care problems of thej|
indigent and the chronically ill.™
"Special attention must be giv-
en," he said, "to the problems o£
those who are Unable to pay for
their own medical care, or buy
insurance to protect
themselves
against such costs. Wc are urging
state and county medicr.l socie-
ties to make this a major project."
Continued from Page One
five lamous American
historical
monuments. He'd probably name
monuments several thousand more
pubs. The British lean to the theo-
ry
that -any post
where a man
shakes his thirst' has a place in
history.
Americans are loathe to
make
monuments of their saloons, even
though some of modern society's
the Statue of Liberty, the Washing- bluest blod has been shed in them
. ,.
.
.,
T • „_•,„
or.j
ton Monument
the Lincoln
and in recent years, and despite the
'
Deer Season Is
ten in Arkansas
LITTLE ROCK (/P) —Deer hunt-
ing season opens in Arkansas to-
day with the promise of fair skies
and cool weather. The first period
of the split season closes Friday.
The school period is Dec. 13-18.
The limit is one buck each per-
fect
Washlngton
hig
Jefferson memorials. Then he d be iarevfeii address to his officers in
nowhere. For the first cov.plel In thjs mattei. of keeping
thi
urs, Greg had been vaguely
avor Qf lhe past aliv6j wc nav,
heart to turn
him in, for he is
illegally in the country, but Rupert
is afraid. When he sees a police-
man n a New England town, he
flees In fear,
XII
port
program
,was
not .born
out by the results.
On the contrary. In the normaly
Republican
farm sttate of Iowa
Sen, Gillette, a personally popular
Democrat seeking his third term,
was defeated.
APPLES
„„., - '
Wholesale or Retail
pa 'ARKANSAS BLACKS
• ROME BEAUTY
• GOLDEN
'f|jf UPIOU8 • RED DELICIOUS • STAYMEN WINESAP
C A G E E G G S
USSELl/S CURB MARKET
901 West 3rd
Phone 7-9933
ITEEL CONSTRUCTION
iv §>Jieds, Farm Butjdings and Industrial Buildings
!|-lpQ<if according to specifications. Can pe con-
aTftructed at low cost,
SALL,., PR7-4(583
for complete information,
UCKETT STEEL &
EQUIPMENT CO.
He was in the third bar Greg
entered, a glass in his hand, his
dollar bill on; the counter before
him. He caught sight of Greg and
finished his drink in a hurry.
Greg stood beside him .trying to
hold in his smoldering a n g e r .
"What are you drinking"
"Brandy. It works faster."
Greg ordered another brandy for
Rupert and beer for himself. "Why
did you run away"
"I thought this might be my last
drink,"
"Why
did you think I'd turn you
in" In his outrage at this betrayal
Greg forgot entirely th at he had
sponsored the idea only a few days
earlier.
"It has happened to me before."
"Nothing is going to happen to
you here. Just relax."
Greg pushed Rupert's dollar bill
toward him and paid the check.
XIII
The traffic seemed- to spring u
from
of hours
aware that there were more cars
on the road than usual, but now
there was a steady line of trafic
and he slowed down.
"What have you got into?" Dag-
gett demanded impatiently.
"I don't know. According to the
map there is nothing special ahead.
We may run out tit this soon."
"AUs-ays in. a hurry to move on,"
Rupert commented. "And to think
that you like it. Sometimes I be-
lieve you art; the youngest of us."
"Don't say that,"' Daggett pro-
tested. "It makes me feel so old
to have people tell me how youns
am. It's
the last step before
senility. .Dawdling makes me ner-
vous, that's all. And especially on
a
road like this where there is
nothing to see."
"You hold your horses," Greg
called over his shoulder. Then his
eyes were caught by a roadside
s-ign and he begun to laugh. "Oh.
ttumped
unless you let him in-
clude Mae West or Sophie Tucker.
the
a moment's hesitation the
crept over Rupert's cheek
After
color
bones and his hand moved forward
slowly. He pocketed the money.
That day
Daggett insisted • on
driving longer than usual. It was
not until they passed a roadhouse
that he consented to stop for the
night a( a nearby trailer park.
After he was settled in bed, with
a book and cigarets within reach,
he suggested, "Why don't you two
go up for a 'drink."
There were a do/en or more
cars parked in front of the road
house but it seemed nearly empty.
It Vvas a barn of a place, dim^y
lighted. Through the gloom, Greg
could make out couples sitting at
Forrestvillc., Of course. I should
have remembered. They always
have big doings in April. Wc am
on our way to a local celebration
An annual affair that has gene on
beyond the memory of m:iD."
"But why at this senson?
hardy idiots like ourselves visit
Maine for pleasure in April. I
won't thaw out here for anothev
small tables, factory girls
their escorts,
professional
" Anniversary of the founder'
l.irth,"
Greg
explained. "The}
have horse racing and parachut
drops during the day and a ear
niv-il at night."
"How
do you know all this?
Daggett asked.
"I was born in Maine."
"I didn't know that."
"Wi.Ol,"'
Greg pointed
out rea
sonably, "after all, I had to b
born somewhere.'
Greg, forced down to 20 mile
an hour, had leisure to look uroun
him.
The small boy he had bee
careened clo\vn the road ahead of
him on the bicycle his father haJ
got him for Christmas. C;iret'roe
childhood
ihat was supposed to'
with ke the time of times, the pinnacle
ourins.
Nobcdy
can tear down
ieir traditional haunts in the rid-
culous name of progress.
The British not only preserve
Vestminster Abbey and their ca-
iedral. The government also pro-
ects against charge or deslruc-
ion SjOOO pubs, including one in
;hich the first Queen Elizabeth
ruaffed nutbrown ale and another
n which Henry V took a farewell
before hopping the channel
eriy to France and the battle at
igincourt.
The government, explaining that
the events that occurred in these
nns vould make a history o'f Eng-
and," plans to list as historical
a tavern. But, after all these year.-;,
doesn't the distillery that fueled
Gen. U. S. Granted perhaps de-
serve a memorial marker?
Any
Southerner will confirm, that it was
only
bottle
courage that
gave
Grant the nerve to take on the
peerless Robert E. Lee.
How about the bar off Gramercy
Park, New York, where lonely
O. Henry dreamed up his stories?
Isn't
that
a kind of monument
worth keeping?
There are many interesting po-
litical sites- worth preserving as
historic monuments
such as the
smoke-filled room where Warren
iod.The Game and Fish Commission
says the Monroe-Roc Roe Refuge
in Montoe County will be open to
deer hunters fod the first time
since it became a state refuge 20
years ago'.
Act Fat? When Cough From (|;
Common Cold Hangs On
Chronic bronchitis may develop if
your cough, chest cold, or acute bron-
chitis is not treated and you cannot
afford to take a chance with any medi-
cine less potent than Creomulsion. It
goes into the bronchial system to help
loosen and expel germ laden phlegm
and aid nature to soothe and heal raw,
tender.inflamcdbronchialmembrancs.
For children you can now get
milder, t»stier Creomulsion for Chil-
dren in a pink and blue package.
M,
Gel a large bottle of Creomulsion at «<
your drug store. Use it all as directed.
Creomulsion is guaranteed to please
you or druggist refunds money. Adv.
Harding wa.s picked as a
dential candidate, and the
conquered life but because he
iccepted it on its own terms.
At
a park on the outskirts of
own, Greg unhooked the trailer
and (ho three men drove slowly
nto Forrestville.
Forrestville was neither a pic-
iuresque village nor a thriving fac-
tory town. It was old, its houses
weatherbeaten and unpainted, with
an air of hard wo'rk and dogged
survival about them.
Daggett was having the time of
his life and to Greg's surprise he
suggested, "There's a hotel of
sorts. Let's lunch there for a
change."
presi-
exact
spot where Calvin Collidge put on
his first Indian headdress. These
would please Democrats greatly.
Republicans might equally enjoy
making a federal museum of Tarn-
many Hall, or erecting a granite
tower commemorating the "Tru-
man dollar."
Everybody, of course, would 'be
glad to contribute toward a na-
tional monument for the first man
in America who finds a free place
to
park his
car legally. But no
such fund will ever be raised. No
guy lucky enough to find a park-
ing space would give away his sa-
cret
fame.
for so empty a reward as
The hotel lobby was uninviting,
with linoleum on the floor and a
pot-bellied
stove in
the middle
of the room.
Greg led the way
to
a corner table 5n the dining
girls,
ANNOUNCES A NEW POLICY!
No» yewcon have yswr Hsme Rewired
KKAll
12 Easy Payments
sprinkling of older couples. Oddly
enough, it was the latter who made
the most noise.
Rupert made his way to the bar
like a homing' pigeon and Greg
followed him,
Some of the girls weren't bad at
all. In a few minutes one of them
came up to him.
She smiled tentatively.
"Hello,
Goodlooking. Want to dance"
"Why not" Greg led her out
on the floor. He .was not a good
dancer but the girl was expert and
she made him feel better than he
wag. it was pleasant to have a
wpman in his arms and this one
was not demanding. He bought her
a drink and they danced again.
"Who
is your handsome friend"
She sighed. *'What a girl would
gjve for those eyes and lashes.
Wasted on a man,"
"Want to meet him"
pbviously stye did, but business
of happiness. But I can't, Greg ru-
minated,
remember
being con-
scious of happiness; I was always
:oo busy, tco inleruslud, too ab-
sorbed in whatever I was doing.
The bicycle and roller- skates
ond a sled. Somehow he hud them,
however small the earnings from
his father's pharmacy. Small, Greg
remembered,
because his father
not collect .from U-.e needy.
came
pjensure, "You
did
How exasperated his mother had
been!
Prosperity had mellowed
her, relaxed her, brought out an
unexpected sweetness in her .na-
ture, made licr lively to look at.
But his father
Greg tried to sue
him through adult eyes. It .was,
he thought, very difficult to sue
cue's parents as people. For the
first time it ot-curied to him that
his father's! quietness had
beenH
neither patience nor muinalibn;
it had been the deep-rooted seren-
ity of fulfillment. IK hud adored
liis \yifc we' likul Ins work.
room where Daggett could sit with
his back to the room. Not until they
were seated did he notice with
foreboding the three rowdies at the
next table who were annoying the
waitress, a raw-boned girl with a
plain face flushed from exertion
and suopressed anger, trying to
rerve them and at the same time
to avoid their impertinent hands.
Rupert
innocently
precipitated
the trouble. When the waitress
came to take their order he re-
marked, "A nice girl should not
to pestered by hoodlums."
She shook her head warningly.
'What'll you have to start! clam
chowder or vegetable soup?" She
lowered her voice. "One of them
is the boss' nepliew."
The three at' the next table were
sdlent and the waitress scurried
off. When she returned with their
order, Rupert smiled at her. From
tho
next
table came a snicker.
"That guy's making time with
your girl, Sam."
Qreg •• recovnized Sam's type, the
Ten Persons Die
in Accidents
NEW YORK UP) Ten persons, in-
cluding six children, were killed
yesterday by fumes from a faulty
gas
water
heater ir. a crowded
tenement apartment.
The tragedy brought city
offi-
cials to the scene. They opened a
thorough investigation and
t h c
health commissioner advised a city
wide drive to avoid similar deaths
in the future.
Found
dead
orirly
yesterday
were a -family of eight ard two
guests who had come for a bap-
kind
who seems to be perman-
tp
ently conditioned by his Comman-
do training. Whatever force might
have slanted
back his brow, it
was the army that had taught him
all the secrets of fighting; he was
spoiling to make use of his knowl-
edge, He looked irom Rupert to
Greg and then his eyes rested on
Raggett's twisted face.
tismal celebration the
The. . ... victims were
noxt day.
Ed ubirgcs
.
Gonza'les, 33; his wife Victoria, 29;
their
s.jx children; Domingo Mo-
tos, 3}, and his wife, 27.
The youngest Gonzales child, a
4-mohths-old girl, was to be bap-
tized yesterday, neighbors said.
End was taken dead from her bed
already
dressed her
pink bap-
tismal gown.
The Motos had fpent the night
in the Gonzales home after a pve-
baptism party. Orphaned by the
tragedy were their own three sons.
aged 4 to 8 who had stayed else-
where with relatives.
Two windows in the three room
apartment were open but
there
was not enough ventilation to re-
move the gases. One city official
said 'enough carbon monoxide had
teen formed to "kill oft en entire
squadron of men in half an hour."
It's impossible hot tc
fee! a healthy, mellow c
as cares and worries, <
pains melt away.Expert attendants^
are maintained in the Majestic'$
own bath department to restore
your vim, vigor and vitality.
And remember, our Bath House
is operated in accordance with
regulations prescribed by the
National Park Service of the
US Government's Department of the Inferior.
HOT SPRINGS
luul found
Wry. preg *>covpml wtyrl a,
rich auet g«od. Uv>C
w
w
'•Now
I've
seen
evenything,
3^eg Ml 14s stomach
The U, S. Office o fEducation es-
timates that
between 10 and 12
million dollars worth pf building is
*QJ? cleiasrc^rni, in /. g,
NATIONAL PARK, ARKANSAS
Here at the MAJESTIC HOTEL you'll find
rest and relaxation, fine food and fun to
suit your mood and your budget, Write today
for further information!
MAJESTIC
Horn
HAPARTMINT5
IP PATHS
t COTTAGiSy
M'$f^&..lt$laJ$'&»i$ik
-: -"q^T -f -^pri-Jip
'r-;^-. • V^\f_f
*
-
"^«
To City Subscribers:
If you fail to get your Stdf
please telephone 7*3431 by
6 p. m. and a special carrier
will deliver your paper.
Star
Bi
ihd
.
24hours eridihf at % S, rft.; '
4ft . \
^'
Stdr of Mejf 1899, Press 1927
56TH YEAR: VOL. 56 — NO. 23
consolidated Jan. is, 1929
HOPE AftKANSAS, tUlSOAY, NOViMBtR 9 19S4
M*mber: the Attattated PHtJ* & Audit Bureau «f Clfedtatlai.!
Av. Net Paid Circl. 6 Me*. Cndtrig Sept. 30, 1954 —
Selection of
Harlan Brings
Democrat Praise
By TED LEWIS, JR.
WASHINGTON (UP)
T wo
Democratic members of the Sen-
i/fte judiciary
committee
today
praised President Eisenhower's
nomination of a jurist
Appelate
Judge John Marshall Harlan
to
the Supreme Court.
Schedule of
Fire Inspection
12:40 p. m. - Stage Show - High
School.
1:00 p. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
1:45 p. m. - Stage Show - Junior
High School.
2:00 p. m. - Movies - Brookwood
School.
3:00 p. m. - Movies - Garland
School.
•
I
WASH1NGTO N
Wi
Russia has
Wednesday November 10
'countered
an
American
protest
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR .over the latest cold war aerial in-
Moscow Claims
'Innocence' in
Downing Plane
By WARREN
ROGERS JR,
The White Houre was expected School.
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
- Fire Department.
9:30 a. m. - Movies - Oglesby
T
to send the nomination of Harlen,
55-year-old New York federal cir-
cuit court judge and a Republi-
can, to the Senate during the day.
But it was not certain whether the
upper chamber would act on it
during the 'current session oh cen-
^iring Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy.
Sens. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn)
fnd Thomas C. Hcnnings. Jr (D-
Mo;, members of the judiciary
committee which must approve the
appointment, praised the selection
of a judge to succeed Justice Rob-
ert H. Jackson who died of a heart
attack last month. Kefauver said
he saw no "difficulties" in the way
of Marian's confirmation.
The Tennessee Democrat said he
/J,as a "very high opinion" of Har
Jan and -aid he was glad Mr. Ei-
senhower had
selected Someone
"has come up through the courts."
Hennings agreed.
"By and large, it contributes to
the
strength of the court to ap-
point, other things being equal, a
eminent
judge
whose
decisions
have to commended him to the
country, as have Judge Harlan's, '
Hennings declared.
If confirmed, Harlan will be the
4»iird Bepublican on the high court
and the "second justice to be ap-
pointed by Mr. Eisenhower. A for-
mer counsel to the New York state
crime commission,. Harlan is the
granduon and namesake of a fa-
mous justice who served 34 years
on the court.
The White House was also ex-
pected to send to the Senate the
nomination of Atomic Enprgy Com-
missioner
Joseph Campbell
as
omptroller general. Mr. Eisenhow-
announcd both appo i n tin ents
yesterday.
' • • , _ •
10 a. m. - Stage Show - Yerger
School.
with a declaration of abso-
lute innocence, but U. S. officials
indicate the Soviets haven't heard
the last of the matter.
Cigarette Controvefey Seems
tc ^ Flaming Hotter and the
Public Wants to Know Truth
Hubbard /s Elected
Head of Arkansas
Guidance Group
Horace Hubbard, Vocational Gui-
dance Director of Hope High Scho-
ol, has been elected President
of
the Vocational Guidance section of
the Arkansas Education Associat-
For
the eighth time since the ion
cold war began, the United States
yesterday demanded an
apology
11 a. m. - Movies - Paisley Scho-jand reparations from Russia
fir
pi.
violence done American aircraft by
12 noon - Combined Luncheon -
Lions, Rotary, Kiwanis
(Barlow
Hotel).
1:00 p. m. • Movies - Hopewell
School.
4:00 p. m. - Parade
4:30 p. m. - Fire Department De-
monstration (First National 'Bank
Building).
Thursday, November 11
7:45 a. m. - Radio Station - KXAR
9:00 a. m. - Headquarters Open
Fire Department.
Says Crippling
TVA Aim of
Power Proposal
WASHiNGTON UP) The
general
manager of the American.
Public
Power Association asserted today
that
the porposed
Dixon-Yates
power contract :'s "the
opening
wedge in crippling the Tennessee
Valley Authority (TVA)"
Alex Radin, who said his
organ
ization represents more than 700
local publicly-owned electric util-
ities, was in the witness chair as
the Senate-House Committee
on
Soviet planes.
Moscow countered \yith a claim
that its planes were in the right.
But the original U.S. note
had
promised thst the Kremlin would
head more from Washington after
investigation established all
the
facts "regarding human life and
material losses."
The latest incident occurred Sun-
day over Japan's northern Hokkai-
do Island. Ten members of a U.S.
Air . Force
photo-reconnaissance
plane parachuted to safety.
Tha
llth go't snagged in ,his parachute
and drowned.
The United States fired a stiff
protest to Moscow, saying it ex-
pects the Kremlin "To make
all
such moral and material repara-
tions as lies within its power."
The Guidance section is compos-
ed of 60 full time and part time
Counselors in the state of Arkan-
sas.
As President of this organization,
Mr. Hubbard will preside at both
the annual meeting of Counselors
on Petit Jean mountain in Septem-
ber and the Sectional meeting at
the AEA convention next Fall.
The Guidance program at Hope
High School is seven years old this
year. Mr. Hubbard has been the
director since July 1948.
(Editor's Note
Few
re-
search
problems
of modern
times have captured the public
interest more than the current
search for an answer to this
question: Is cigarette smoking
a
substantial
h a z a r d
to
health? The interest is
justi-
fied, for the stakes are high.
Here is a concise summary of
what fe involved.)
By AtljON U. BLAKESLEE
AP Science Reporter
NEW ,YOR K
,The great cig-
arette cbntroversy is flaming hot-
ter.
'
.
'
It has millions
of
Americans
uzzled i or
confused, and many
rightencd. Are cigarettes
really
Knowland Is
Shocked at
Bohlen Deed
WASHINGTON (UP)
Republic a n
Leader William F.
Knowland (Calif;) said today
he
was "deeply shocked" that U. S.
Senate
American GI
Goes Over
to Russians
By RICHARD O'REGAN
VIENNA, Austria (/P) The Soviet
information service announced to-
day that and American Army ser
geant has asked the Russians ir
Aut'tiia for political asylum anc
has been granted it.
The
Red
information
identified the soldier as. Sgt. Wil-
liam Clayton Turner, ?2. and -ifaid
until Oct. 15 he had becVi'in •Cbm-
rany B of the 124th ArtiUery'Sup
ply. Battalion and in the military
police of the U. S. 7th Army's 2nd
Armored Division in Germany.
IT. S. Army authorities in Aus
tria said they were checking Avitt
Atomic Energy resumed its study I Ambassador Charles E.
Bohlen the Army in Germany On ; the;' re
of the controversial contract
to
feed private power into the TVA
lines.
Radin said the contract
affect
"all'the people of the nation," Tf
*is destroyed, he said, "the
attended an official party in Mos-
cow a few hours
after
Russian
plants shot down an American B-29
<jver':'Northern Japan,-
The' State Department paid yes- fg<jnc>' £uotCJd ,p: .letter
,
>-'lcl =
__*•..
,
. '
. bad written which eav
port.
The Soviet agency said
had jsked fori
- anc] becrj gTjBntoc
liv«t 4wi'Russia;1 iTlier
Firemen to
iVA'is destroyed.. Jie saio, "the terday and confirmed again last
people of the nation will have lost r.ioh/in --cnnnsP to new i'nnuiries.
Fire Fighting
^ As a part of Hope's three-day
"town inspection" campaign, the
Hope Fire Department will offer a
fire fighting demonstration Wednes-
day afternoon at 4:30 p. iri. at the
1st National Bank Building. In ma-
king this announcement, Chief A.
S. Willis said "This fire
fighting
demonstration staged by the mem-
bers of the Hope Fire Department
will be well worth seeing by every
citizen in Hope.
'jffe
1 The Fire Department will dem-
onstrate ' the
use of its various
equipment, including its splendid
junior arial, the 45 foot Bangor lad-
der in a spectacular hotel rescue
raise, life-net work, and countless
other educational and entertaining
features.
School children and the general
public are invited to witness the
demonstration Chief Willis said.
The
demonstration
will be pre-
..ceeded by a parade through the
Business district by the fire depart-
ment, school children 'and the visit-
ing members of the State Fire Pre-
vention Association, including "Stu-
pid Carelessness, the Fire Clown."
New Method Aids
Mental Treatment
ST. LOUIS W Development
of
afet
''electric shock" treatment
one o ftheir most effective allies
in bringing lower electric mies
and greater consumption of elect-
ric rates and greater consumption
of electricity to all
the homes,
farms and industries of the nat-
ion."
The proposed Dixon-Yates con-
tract, backed by the administra-
tion, provides for private
> power
interests to construct a 107 million
dollar power plant at West Mem-
phis,
Ark.,
to supply power to
TVA.
Mrs. C. E. Baker
Succumbs in
Local Hospital
Mrs. Exa Lera Baker, aged 57,
wife of Hope Police Chief Clarence
E. Baker, died early today in a
local hospital. She has been ill
only a short time. Mrs. Baker hjs
lived in Hempstead all her life.
Besides her husband she is sur-
vived by her mother, Mrs. Rosa
Parker of Spring Hill, two daugh-
r,ight in response to new inquiries,
that Bohlen did not know about
the plane incident when be and
other foreign diplomats attended a
dinner given by Soviet Premier
Georgi Malenkov Sunday night
to
celebrate the 37th anniversary of
the Communist revolution.
Knowland, in
a
brief
Senate
cpeoch, indicated that he was not
aware of the State Department's
ct&temcnt on this point. He
ac-
knowledged that there might have
been ''extenuating circumstances'1
in Bohlen's attendance at the Mos-
cow party, and said he had asked
the State Department for a
full
report.
Knowland said news of the plane
shooting -incident was broadcast by
Moscow radio at 6 p. m. Moscow
time Sunday
about two hours
before Bohlen went to the party.
State Department officials
said,
however, that Bohlen first learned
of the incident through an official
message Washington that was do.
it said he
had written which gave this ac
count of his defection from the
West:
While serving in Germany, h
became convinced, that the rebirt!
of an "aggressive German army'
would lead to war. He became cer
tain that
the U. S.
go'vernmen
was -preparing new aggression i
collaboration with Facist clement
n West Germany.
He said he crossed from Ger
nany to Austria Oct. 15 "with th
dea ol seeking political asylum i:
he Soviet Union."
"I have decided to go wher
here is real freedom for a. sun
ile man, arid I therefore ask fo
ie possibility to live and work i
tie Soviet Union," he was quotec
The letter
said
Turner
w
rafted in J942, took part in th
Normandy
landings
and serve
vith the 29th Division. From 194
o 1952, 'after his discharge froi
he ciimy, he was mostly out of
vork. In 1952 he was drafted again
and sent to West Germany.
U.S. Embassy in
3 a. m. Moscow
ters, Miss Ruth Baker and Mrs.;did Monday.
Eunice Dale Witt of Texarkana;
two sisters, Mrs. Sid Sinyard and^l
Mrs. Elmer Nations of Spring Hill
and two brothers, Arlin and Elgin
of Hope,
two grandchildren, Billy
and Clarence Kennedy.
Funeral services will be held
at
Herndon-Cornelius
Funeral
Home Chapel at 2:30 p. m. Wed-
livered to the
Moscow about
time Sunday right, after the par-
ty. It was this message that
in-
structed Bohlen to file a protest
note with the Kremlin, which lie
GIRL TALK
NEWTON, Mass., (UP)
Bos
ton College Football Captain Joe
Mattaliano was dined last night
by Boston University grid co-capt-
nesday by the Rev. Wesley Thoma- iano.
s Joe Terras! ard Frank Guil-
„
.
.
uuliSUIJ,
UUL;
uw*i^-«»
j.v**-"
—~ — >•
•
^^"S'J,a"L,°fu!±rm:'?"8C« Frank Douglas, Ray Turner and
drugs" have made
possible" to give beneficial shock
treatments to mentally-ill oldsters
onqe deemed too"fragils" for the
procedure.
This was reported today to tho
Southern Medical Association's 48th
annual meeting by Dr. James Ward
and Dr. James A.' Bectcr, of Hill
Crest
Sanitarium,
Birmingham,
Ala.
DON'T FORGET
FrfomU in $trvi«t
•\yri.te often. The USD knows there's
14e a letter at
» Miow frel swell.
U<
f
ce
Back at the BC campus, team-
mates eagerly asked Mattsliano iJ
he
talked with his hosts-, about
satin-day's BC-BU game, the first
^Ul.s'"w, -•«,
.
-
,in in 12 years.
'
nug.i Garner. Honorary, members
"We tallied about blondes, brun-
of City Police force, city and Coun- ettes and redheads," Muttaliano
,y officials.
'
son, assisted by the Rev. Carlton
Roberts.
Active pallbearers; Thomas An-
derson. Joe Jones. Faris Downs.
said.
Maybe You Are a Lucky Young
Girl Who Can Go to Movies on
Sunday Without Any Fuss
By ALVN STEINKOPF
(For Hal Boyle)
LONDON I*1 Ju st imagine you
are a lively- 24-year-old girl liv-
ing in London.
It's'a dank and dreary Sunday.
You have to turn on the light in
the middle of thw afternoon.
If'you were just any 24 year-old
girl,: earning your living typing in
an office, you could give that pony-
tail haircut a swipe with a comb,
slip c-n a mackintosh and go to
the movies.
Tens of thousands of young girls
do just that, and manage to sur-
vive a gloomy afternoon. There are
thick, moist end noisy masses .of
them in Oxford St
Put you had better do nothin
c| the kind if you arc
Margaret. She yenture4
Piincess
Margaret, it
seems
broke a royal tradition. Conspirina
with her in this act of lashnes.
were her lady-in-waiting,
Miss
Irish Peakc, and two unidentified
young men.
Members
of the royal
familj
may engage in a lot of .sprightly
activities, such as shooting quail
drinking champagne for
lunch
playing polo any old day,
an-:
betting on the races. But member
of the roval family do not go t.
the movies on Sunday.
The Princess went to see sonic
thing
rather
new in London
method, of projection known
a
Cinerama. She and her ccmpan
ions went 5nto the Casino The.a
ter and occupied seats, which cos
$2 IP anicee. Then they went hem
the gloom.
ta ne.wsiyjpjers, %$ SKfUe^ ft
. tot sM $$$$$' 'fifitesft
Fighter Escorts
May Be Used,
Dulles Warns
WASHINGTON W
The United
States is considering giving fight-
er escorts
to American aircraft
which fly near
Communist terri-
tory, Secretary of State Dulles dis
closed, today.
Dulles told a news conference Lena Newton,
studied by the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
He noted that the pilol of the
RB27 photographic plane shot down
by Soviet fighters over Japanese
waters last Sunday has authority
to ?hoot back, but did not do so.
Dulles said this was one of those
hairline decisions on which people
might make different judgement.1
afterwards. That was the case also
with ambassador Charles E. Boh-
len and his decision to attend a
It finds'Hho house of science and Soviet Party in Moscow .Sunday
night- following the plane incident,
Judgments Are
Awarded in
Circuit Court
A wreck near Emmet In which
three Negro workers were killed
resulted in a law suit in Hempstaad
Circuit court yesterday with a jury
awarding judgements totaling $i,-
002. Two cases were combinedt with
a total of eight persons suing John
W. Kizer Jr., driver of one of the
cars involved.
' Ben Hill was awarded $200 by
a
jury, Grover Rankin $1, Warren
Powell $1, Rachel Lee Slay, $200|
angeroUs?
moking!?
Should
YOU
stop
and her child-
Jr-
Nell, a total of
Court will reconvene this after-
noon.
'By Alvtn'SpN
WASHINGTON
Senate source*
friends of Sen.
the n
medicine divided. Some authorities
rankly call cigarettes a major fac-
or in causing human cancer, es-
ecially'lung cancer, and say they
re bad for your heart. But others,
qually -prominent, say the . case
gainst cigarettes is by no means
woved. .
.
-
:
'
'
•
'
•
It finds' many hundreds of thou-
ands of dollars being poured into
eseareh to find the answer,
or
•nswers. That fact could produce
;reat
boons
for all
on
the
eseareh will dig deep
into some
biological m y s t e r i e s , What is
earned could turn up vita), links
about the cause, control or treat-
nent of cancer, heart disease or
jossibly other health m a t t e r s ,
quite aside from its effect in the
cigarette controversy.
The controversy finds;• unknown
thousands of .men
and women
jiving lip- cigarettes, or trying to,
6r3thinking they should. ;
• . • . ' .
Humaiij healthy is one stake in
;he controversy: Are
cigarettes
.armleshs, bad, or scmewhere
in
jotweeri!?- Human enjoyment is an-
other: ityfost smokers enjoy their
smoking,,
..
The tobacco industry 'the '.big
arid sm&ll growers and manufac-
turers ind processors, •middlemen,
Ji-'1'1-r'-' .ers, retailers, vending nrui-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ^Vferaiors and many oth.Si.-s.
owes
its livelihood
to tobacco.
Governments derive much revenue
from tobacco taxes.
"
Science ar.d medicine have
a
stake. Should a reputable sciel?.-
tist disclose his findings which lead
him to suspect hazards in smok-
ing, or anything else? Or should
he wait until he has definite proof?
If he is proved wrong after his
early announcement, will
people
accuse him of scare mongering,
or
lose faith in scientific 're-
search? If he is proved right after
deciding not to warn the public
would people accuse him of hav-
ing shirked his responsibility?
The cigarette controversy,
like
Continued on Page Three
.
Dulles said.
Dulles said Bohlen had,to make
a ouick judgment without instruc-
tions from Washington on the basis
of incomplete information which
reached him less than an hour be-
fore lie left for the party.
The ambassador's attendance at
the party had- been criticized by
Sens. Knowland
(R-Calif)
and
Bridges (R-NH) .just before Dulles'
meeting with newsmen.
Urine Test
May Detect
a Cancer
; By FRANK
CAREY
AP 'Science
Reporter
; ST. LOUIS
Possible discov-
ery of a new and highly accurate
test for cancer, omplpying urine
instead of blood
was announced
to'day to the Southern Medical As-
sociation.
';:
i
«""
Doctors T.; C. Terrell and H.H.
Beard of Fort -Worth, Tex.,1 said
the..
Duke Disclaims
Knowledge of
German Writer
By KINGSBURY SMITH
PARIS (INS )
The British gov-
ernment today published German
Vorld War Two records in which
he
Duke of Windsor was quoted
as the source of information on
Allied milita-.-y plane's.
The 'former King Edward' VIII.
vho now is in London, telephoned
o this correspondent a statement
saying he "never met or had any
connection" with the
Ge/rman
A'hose statements were quoted by
the London government.
A German, spy organizer, Count
Julius Von Zech-Burkersrpda,
at
:he time minister to The Nether-
ands, claimed in a message to his
aome government that he "might
'lave- the opportunity to establish
Certain lines leading to the DuXe
cf Windsor."
The two loiters that the German
envoy wrote to his superiors in the
Berlin foreign ministry mentioned
the duke several times. They were
cjuoted in the latest collection of
"documents on German
.Foreign
Policy" published by the British
government.
The documents cover the period
from immediately after the British
and French declaration of
war
Sept. 3, 1939 up to the eve of
tfce
Hitler-Mussolini meeting at
the
Brenner Pass March IS, 1940. This
was the so-called
"phony
war'
ftage before
the Germans
'' tin. arnount of a (p«e hor-
mone,,-called •. "chroionic gonadtro-
phin" found in urine collected over
a 24-hour period.
They told.the SMA's 48th annual
meeting that this hormone ; occurs
in only small amounts ir. normal
individuals but that it showed up
at substantial levels in 94 per cent
of 51 proved cases of cancer.
And the researchers described
chemical technique for separat-
ing the hormone from other sub-
stances in the urine. This allows
a quantitative measurement of the
hormone, depending upon intensity
cf v. blue-green color.
. The doctors said this ability to
detect varying quantities of the
suggested
possbilitle?
Evangelist
SaysReligion
Greatest Need
In the opening Revival :. service-
in the City Hall Auditorium last ni-
ght Evangelist G. P. Comer told
the audience that America's great-
est need and of the world is a "Re-
vival Of Religion."
He said,
"In
America we art-
spending 18 billion dollars a year
for crime, 12 billion dollars a year
for gambling 9 bullion for
liquor
which makes a total of 39 billion
dollars while we are spending ono
billion by the protestants, Jews and
Catholics. 50 thousand high school
girls become mothers of illegiti-
mate children, God have mercy on
us as a nation" he declared.
The music is an outstanding fea-
ture of these services with Mrs.
Nan Frazier, presiding at the organ
console and Mrs. Spencer at the
piano, and the Rev. Spencer lead-
ing the song service and singing
special numbers with their boys,
Henry and Bobby.
A daily broadcast is heard-'each
afternoon over KXAR direct from
the auditorium from 4:30 to 5 p. m.
The services 'are held dally at
7:30 p. m. Evangelist Coiner has
held revivals in 28 states of th«
nation but he says this is^his first
revival in Arkansas but he
a
his party have been greatly
pressed by the hospitality of
the
people of Hope.
.
:;;
substance
cf:
•• 1. Detecting cancer before symp-
toms become apparent.
2. Testing for the presence or
absence of any signs of "spread-
ing'' of a cancer following surgical
or other treatment of the original
malignancy.
3,'Differentiation between "be-
nign" and malignant tumors.
Dr. Beard told a repoiter that,
aside from studies of cells or tis-
sues, most tests for cancer in th3
past have employed blood
sam-
ples. But he said these "have the
drawback- that they
produce
a
large number of 'fal»e positives'
due .to
the
complexity of sub-
stances in blood,"
"Falfe positives" are. also possl
ble with the new technique but to
a far lesser degree, the doctors
declared.
AEC Head May
Have Time in
Getting Nod
By John A.-Goldsmith
-
WASHINGTON (UP) Atomic
Energy
Commissioner
Joseph
Campbell today faced a possible
Senate -fight for confirmation as
comptroller general because of his
support of the Dixon-Yates con*
tract.
' Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-TemO,
an outspoken foe of the contro-
versial power contract, said Camp-
bell's supoort of it as a member
of the AEC was a "substantial
made of dlsqualifiiation for
the
office of comptroller general. Ke-
fauver called for an investigation
of Campbell's record.
The White House announced yes-
terday that President Eisenhower
Would nominate Campbell for the
GOA post today. The appointment
must be confirmed by the Senate
where' maty Democratic tempers
have been roused by the proposed
Dixon-Yates p'ower deal. Although
his appointment may go to the
Senate today," action will not be
forthcoming for some time."<^ ,;v
' As comptroller general, Camp-
bell, a Republican, wotild head the"
General
Accounting' Office'
<in-
vestgating "armX of *'Congress. He
would serve ' a 15-year term with
a salary"of $17,500-annually.,,t' i.
Peterson Is
i
Accused of
V
Copying Codes
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (LT?)
, Th^
gov,enment today iharged Jhat Jo-
seph S. Peters-en, Jr., former gov.
eminent employe indicted on es-
pionage charges, illegally copied
secret documents which,, shp.wed
that the United .States had 'brok-
en n Dutch government code,
A bill of particulars filed by sfov-
err»ment prosecutors in Jttexandria,
federal court also charged that
of the
newsmen tha,t*a'
is being workedy
thy supporters w
1. The drafting-
tion to ,tone ' dd
censmre' mollo'ri
fered tomorroy
mittee headed
Watldns ; ,
2..TlS?
if t- mafo
Under a
gust,
until
«. By JAG*
sisted
McCarthy •'(
talk to ^de&jL4 „ „
ing his^cerisure)^
at? opens. " "
did
two influ
who as)t
they had
jnay.be :
yesterday i'dfe'sj i
i .That' was0"^
in'1! an f,>d;
agreed i
nien,tarfan« ,s|
byf thu|. *-"--il-
r'csplvvtioi
83rd'Con
.
dieted
- -f *-*r T •*-—'-ty. j-~j- 7]E,
censuring M£'
leged
heads,/,
tersen, now free on $10,000 • bond
pending trial Jan. 4, improperly
removed secret government docu-
ments dealing vlth Red China s
cnde and with the "routing of
North Korean politi9al security
traffic."
' '
The nature of these documents
was not explained. '
Petersen was dismissed from ms
$7,700-a-y3ar job as a research an-
alyst with the hush-hush National
Security Agency on Oct.-1. He was,
lalei indicted on three counts deal-
in? with improper removal of su-
per-secret agency documents.
H\?
was charged with using the infor-
mation "in a manner
prejudicial
to the safety and nterest of the
United States."
gaticnsC Bu.bc<,j.nini1
«,.fA-f
»«(!.•<.'• ,_,A"
. ••'!» Pr.W*-il^W
of rape and *i
Judge, Mi"
of James J
ed in lolk
tion
Rock.«
'. THICK SIV10KE
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, (IF>
Smoke, pouring from a burning tav-
ern was so Ihick firemen could not
see a fire hydiant on the corner,
Thty finally lound the hydrant 1>Y
nrobing through the heavy smoke
varied France,
End Belgium.
m-
The
Netherlands,
Arkansas Weather
For Nov. 9-14 :
Arkansas
Temperatu r es
degiees above
normal.
Mrs, J.R.Lester
Son at Lewisville
»•
Mrs. J, R. Lester, aged 93, wife
of the late J. T. Lester
of Mars
Hill
in
Lafayette County, died
at ih,e home of a son in LewisviUe
last night.
survived by four sons, Ed
Arrest Follows
*
Altercation
City Police arrested Robert Lee
Jones on an assault with intent ,tt>
kill charge following an altercation
in which Bobby Lee Rogers was
badly slashed on the side of th»
face and apross his lips. He was ta-
ken to a hospital for treatment. The
incident occurred on the P^tmoa
)Ro«.<J,
• All Around the Town
•y Thf War
ttuff
' .
Arkansas' great football team
stiU is ranked 4th in tile nation ac-
cording to the AP poll of sporte-
\ydters . . • its ironic to §ee strate
. . •
gy employed by Midwest and
West writers who like tq build up
their teams for the Rose Bowl fitt-
rne which has dropped in prestige
considerably
for instance just
who h;ave the West Coast teams
played?
vi'hich has
take
met
Southern, Cal
only
of their own area with one excep.-.
tion and that
TCV<
were smeared SO tc, 7' in, th
back yard amj UCL4 has
,1
T
11
...n«l>
nnriut
rt
m,eet
(
,
t
of Coushatta. La., C. D. Lester of (thanks to votes of the
_ _
"Stp^.Bir T
«
T^~
_ • I •»-, .
1-1 r _. _i
.....J£A.in
Jo
4-7
Normal m .njma 3,6-ifJ. Nonn^l max*
ima gjMfi, §}
Wto.'fiii
' .rtrt/iaic
Hope, John F. and 0. B. Lester of
Lewisvyie, two daughters, Mrs. ft.
L, Rpyd of Texarkana, and Mrs.
Ifenry 8hea of Mflrs JftU communi-
•
Far West writers, is back
flrst
ten while TOV "'*"
ttnem handily is >w,t Jn
J . . UCLA "»«'* •<"> *
Rose Bowl look good , , • you 8,n4
I know what would happen, if, jioy
W*§t Coast ieam p}ayed_a sc,hf
like Arkansas" has . .*. tpp hag
have more votes than th,r—
Hope Athletic Deparfw
$7.84 on the Magnolia gp^
week ,
with an
t. .
one mw$ hqroe 'geroe
n^ent, ,is .W^y to gQ^
this year
'W|.h
o.|l?ns
20-20
of $34044
Bagging
bycks
m$
1'-!','•
A'sf.'^y
«,#"*•
5k S&C ;•.
1*1:'^ £frj;
M O M S T A R ,
H O P E , A f t K A N S A S
I-JWMIM"- .;,}', .
fe>? #>
|C» '•/ ,
j.
<;,? • • • •
ire
™-fe\-
s
.™jtW \ < *
t. Credited with
SflejStfra
tnatch
__._lal'All«l
$7. ItnjttMrtl
m is Wtt.
MARKETS
Ho
\\\
elides
i fhe
tullding
# 3t M*' M&
tk£ outs'Md
W "1 jbre-
t An .an at-
tWWWtOlA'* K«S
• to
think
against lha
>'Ugh widows
|« at ,$100,000, said
s Had", Been afcumu-
iri6r,s>veral days,
structure
Me
?W»*
•f&sr
,r: "
smmmn^'^i
*
fe4^ * t"-,H> *,*
J
JAfc-B-Q
tT A jJJ',"'*S^. '. ( . *_^
Ff*^r°<
<"
W&ii
s 12,060; lower;
liSO-75; about a
hoke Nd. Is and 2s 19.85! ISO-
Ib Iflf&.SOOO; 225-240 Ih 1900-
); 246-260 Ib W.tS«i&.$${ sdWs 400
down
tt.2S-?3j
fdW at 18.00;
iei"* POV/S 15.50-17,2,'}!
b6ars
3XW-J5.00, ,
Cattle 6,000; calves 1,700: about
ady but little ddndj tltillty and
commercial cow* 85CM2.06; can-
and citttSfs e.00-d.5(5:
llsht
iitlly c a n ft e r s 1&0-?0; bulls
ItJtfdyJ
Utility
arid
commercial
l.OO'llOO; cfttlner and cutte* btilU
.OO-lO.SOi vpnldrs steady:
good
nd choice 17,06-23.00; few
at
500! commercial art dloW
good
2.00-IO.OO; slaughter calves slow;
orrtrnerclal arid goad 11,00-15.00;
Hilly and low commercial 8.00-
0.00,
heep 1,700; wool lambs weak to
I lower; icveral lots good
to
rime 1800-19.50; early top 19.50;
fend not fully established;
a«ed
hecp steady; ."laughter ewes 3.00
.00.
POULTRY AND PRODUCE
CHICAGO' W) Live
poul
tr
toady ort Hens; barely stendy on
•oung stock; receipts 971 coops
66,425 Ib; F O.B. paying prices un-
hangedt Hoavy hens 16-19; light
lens 12-14; fryers and broilers 23-
5! old roosters 12-12.5; caponette
young hert turkeys
34-5(5;
gecsc 23.
Butter firm;
receint s 017,814;
vholcsale buylrig prices I'A lower
o
1 "higher; 93 score AA 58.5;
92 A 68.25-5; 90 B 57.5; 89 C 56
cnrn 90 B-8; 89 C 6.
Eggs mixed;
receipt s
10,552
wholesale buying prices 1 lower to
higher; U.S. large white 34.5
mixed 35.5; U. S. mediums 27; US
ttandards 2 ;
current
receipts
none; dirties 20; checks 20
NEW YORK STOCKS
NEW YORJC 1<P) The sto ck m ar
<et developed a certain amount o
hesitancy today following its sen
satkmal post-qlection surge aheac
On .balance, , the market
w o
barely higher. Gains
of 1 to
points were found in several sec
tions of the list, but most advance
small. Losses appeared fre
guently, sometimes passing a poln*
1 ^Business maintained a swift par
at-'around the highest levels of th
.GRAIN
!
' Wheat: Noric. Corn:
No. 2 ye
low41.51; No. 3 yellow 1.47-1.49
No 4 137'/4-1.43'/2; No.. 5 129-135
M>; sa mole -grade yellow 1.2
Oats: Sample gr^'de white 87.
_
Bareley ,nomin,ai :MalJ>ng .ehoic
1.31-52; feed 1.10-22.
explosion," \.said Dale "Plunk, 18
year-old high school junior. "It wa
terrible."
j|y^H%«Mlay, November 11,1954
S^S:k4!iwfT-.i^i- • n A V
rmgti
jgitffirf? ;
/||^ill-'n9,t be ppen for business
feffife-above 'date, being a legal
jFj«3j(8fl •
'
,
J?$'v'; v
•
• •
'itizens National Bank
First National Bank
m&fk''*'
it^rr" -
®«v
' "*i~ -.''
HOPE
Three Mental
Escapees
Still ot Large
LITTLE
ates of
the
cfimiftal
i'ouf
ward
Governors of
South Divided
on Segregation
feOCA BATON, Fla. t*) Sdtilhern
states, divided as they are on their
approach to the explosive school
:sFiie, may find 9 'com-
either on the conference floor, or
away.
Three states
Gccrpia, Louisia-
na end South Caroline, have tak-
en action to put themselves in a
por.ition • to keep Negroes out of
white schools.
Georgia adopted a constitutional
rmendmeht Nov. 2 permitting the
legislature to abolish the public
system
tion.
Louisiana
rather than end segrega-
approved
an amend-
ap-
out-
Er-
,
-
,
,.
....
ftiori ground approach to the prob- mont at thc sam-^ time permitting
l«rr. at the annual Southern Cover- 1 'he state tc invoke police powers
afiod frcfn the State hdspital herd
st night .after threatening four
ttohdants.
Deitt Tatum, 27, of Parogould,
hargcd v/ith staying his wife, gaV<3
rhself up a few, minutes. after
he escape which occurred about
40 p. m.
The other
three
still were at
arge today.
State police Identified them as
ohnhie areen, 37, an ex-convict
ho was arrested at Fort Smith
n a charge of burglary; Char'es
rice, 23, Litild Rock, charged with
urglor, and L. B. Veach (address
nknown,) charged wilh l&rceny.
All but Veach Were undergoing 30-
ay sanity tests at the hospital,
Officers said Veach waa from
nother ward at the hospital and
nly recently had been transferred
i the criminal ward section.
Tntum told Little Rock detectives
hot Green and Price •"abandoned
s" (Tntum and Veach) after ctt-
isting their aid to oscapa. . •
Green and Price were'; believed
o be together with a third^person
n an automobile which
Tatum
aid was -waiting"' for them when
hey made the break.
Tatum told .officers, the braak
wan planned by Price..
It was the second escape of four
nrtiates of the ward sir.ce'. May.
t also was-the second time that
attendant C. H.: Ahart had' been
hreatened with a sharp instru-
ment.
' • - ' ' . -
Ahart said he was standing near
he door to Ihe fire escape when
3recn approached, 'drew, a knife,
arid ordered • him
to - unlock
the
dcor.
Ahavt said that 'another "atten-
dant, Charles Copeland, shouted to
him to stop scirffling with Green.
Other attendents, A. H. Williams
and W. N. .Leach,, were threatened
by Tatum and Veach, Ahart said.
Tatum told officers Price had
planned to head for Mexico
or
California.
Attendants said they didn't know
where Green .got the knife.
ftor's Conference
Thursday.
opening
h e r e to maintain segregation m the pub-
lic schools.
The
conference
meeting
date
falls less thfen a month from the
lime the IT. S.
Supreme
Court
cptns arguments Dec. 0 on how
end when it should order Into ef-
fect its May 17 edict that segre-
gated public shhools must end.
There's no mention of scgregrt-
tion matters as such on the official
conference program, but there's
South Carolina's Legislature al-
ready has authority to abolish t'rw
school system.
A fourth state, Mississippi, voles
Dec. 2l on a proposition to em-
power the Legislature to abolish
public schools ns a means of re-
taining segregation.
Some of the oth?r southern states
have indicated they thought
the
cient time.
A possible' middle ground
proach in the Florida plan
lined by Ally. Gen. Richard
v'in
of that state in a
Supreme
Court brief in' which he pleads for
time and for a large, degree of lo-
cal determination as to when seg-
regated schools should be ended.
The FloHd'a plan provides
that
in cases where suits are brought to
gain
admittance to
segregated
schools, thc trial courts should- be
given wide discretion to hold hear
ings, and to
determine
on the
basis of local conditions whether
the petition should be granted.
In cases where schools author-
ties and thn trial courts detcrmin
cd thc races shouldn't be integrat-
ed, new hearings could be held at
a later datd to determine whether
conditions may change.
little doubt the subject Will be one problem could
,
the most lively.'to come Up'the Supreme Court
Arkansans to
Arrive in U, S.
SEATTLE,
USS Gen. G-.
Wash. (UP)
Th-2
M. Randall will ar
Do: ado; SFC Boy E Schnarr,
tie Rock; Airman Will.am R. Sm-
ngton, Attica; Cpl. Ernest S. oul
Ivan; Rosiej
PFC Hartzell Wat-
son,
Gregory; ^and Pvt. Johnny
Whittle, Piggott.
Women have had a lower death
rive at the Army port of embarka
Sion here Wednesday
v/ith
2,269
pasrengers from the Far East.
Among them will be tire follow-
ing Arkansas servicemen:
Cpl. Collier
Anders. Jr.,
Au-
vergne; Sgt. John
R. Anthony
Bearden; S-Sgt. James L. Besly,
Hazen; PFC Rofus
Cobb, Jr. Au-
susta; Capt. John C.
Freeman,
Crt-ssett; Airman 3-. W.
Harper,
Wilmar; Cpl. Charles G. Harwell,
Okay;
Airman
Winsley
Henry,
Mar'ianna-; Cpl. Claudie- L. Higgins,
Fort Smith.
Cpl. Carl Hudson, Rudy; Air-
man Albert E.'Jankins,
Truman;
Cpl.
Willard
G. Lawson, Rogers;
Pvt. Melvir. C. Locke, Camdcn;
rale than men for many years andiCp!. Jessie M. Martin, Okean; Air-
since 1930 the lives of women have, Iman William J.'Moore, Jr., Wynne
Mr. Fulbrighf
Has Problems
WASHINGTON W)
If the Mc-
Carthy censure debate runs on to*
any great length, Sen. Fulbright
(D-Ark) may have 'to become A
New York commuter.
Fulbright while greatly
inter-
ested in the censure proceedings,
also is a U. S. delegate to the-Unit-
ed Nation's session now.; going on
in New York.
He said today he will stay in
Washington for a time to see how'
the censure matter proceeds in the
Senate but that he wants to return
to the U. N. Sessions.
.
•Fulbright'was1 one .of the origi-
nal group of senators urging adop-
tion of the
resolution
by , Sen.
Flanders (R-Vt) calling for cen-
sure of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis).
The Flanders resolution war sub-
mitted to •'• a
special
committee
which recommended censure.
Fulbright told a Reporter it 's.
his present inclination to take. little,
or no part in,the debate. It, would
appear better stratgey, he said, to
let the Watkins cprnmittee
pre-
sent the case and then permit Mc-
Carthy and his supporters to do
the talking.
»
, , . ' . . . -
• . . • . . •
Six European nations, Luxem-
bourg, Andorra, Liechtenstein, San j
Marino, Monaco arid Vatican City
have a total area smalled than that
o fthe King Ranch in Texas.
Fdom 1903 through 1014, more
than 750,000 immigrants come to
the United States and more than a
million, entered
in six of those
years.
•M,
$?'>.yl've waited years and
fv
gears /or power as exciting
;
^ as the '55 FORD'S new
BUGGER-TORQUE!/
i,
ON DISPLAY
FRIDAY
far move than those of men.
$19.95 NOW $14.95
Get them before the
season opens and save.
WESTERN AUTO
ASSOCIATE StORE
_
•
——
Bad
Colds
WICKS
WVAPORUB
RelieveSuffeting
SHOP
IGGLY WIGGLY
AND YOU GET
DOUBLE
S&H GREEN STAMP'S. WEDNESDAY
(ON PURCHASES OF $2.50 OR MORE)
Prices Effective Wed. Nov. 10th
Pineapple Juice 25c
ARMOURSMilk
&IOc
BEST MEAT IN TOWN
'
<>*^P .
1 *
I11
'
'
'
"
{
;
OMAHA BEEF — CHUCK
ROAST
MAPLECREST
FRYERS
Lb
UNCLE BEN'S CONVERTED
RICE
THE FOAMING CLEANSER
BABO
NABISCO RITZ
.VL
CRACKERS
NAB I SCO OREO CREAM
SANDWICH
PLANTERS COCKTAIL
PEANUTS
14 pz. OCr
Pkg.
JL*J\~
Giant TT-
Size
I-/ C
PALWOUIVE
SOAP
Reg..
Bars
17c
BAKE-RltE
_ •
SHORTENING
1 Lb-
ttr
Pkg.
O^C
4 Oz. 9Q
Pkg.
ZVC
8 Oz. OCr
Can
w«Jv«
73<
PALMOLIVE
SOAP
2 32 23c
IMPERIAL
SUPER SUDS
Large
Pkg.
29c
AIR WICK
UNDERWOOD DEVILEp
HAM
SALAD BOWL SALAD
DRESSING
CRYSTAL WHITE
SOAP
BEST PRODUCE IN TOWN!
Potatoes
IB .:^ipP W ^ ^^^B ^W^ ^^r-
5iOz- AOr
Bottle Q^C
Reg.
9| r
Can
<61C
1602.
-Oft-
Jar
4»TV
2
Large
1 "T-
Par5
I/C
Cashmere Bpyquet
SOAP
2
Reg-
17«
Bgrs
I /- V
W
Bouquet
SOAP
Large
Pkg.
29c
VEL
Tuetday, November 9, 1954
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
* IV SOCIETY
Phone 7-3431 Between 8 A. M. and 4 P. M.
ilendar
Tuesday
November 9
fhe
Business
Woman's Circle
I the First Baptist Chuhch will
sday, November 9,
at
. in the
home of Mrs.
|de Osburn, 405 S.
Greening.
members are urged to attend.
let Tuesd
E p. m. i
the Golden Circle Class of the
1st Baplist
Church will meet
1'sday, November 9, at 7:30 p.
(in the home of Mrs. Phinis Her-
320 East 13th, for their month-
Ibusiness and
social meeting.
Glen Seaver
It
will be co-hos
IriJtt
Same night wil! be held at tha
Ipe Country Club at 7:45 p. m.
jsday, Npvember 9. Hosts will
|jMr. and Mrs. George P. New-
and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ste-
h.
.
hapter AE of the P. E. O. Sis-
lood will meet Tuesday, Novem-
9, at 3 p. m. with Mrs. Mack
Stuart.
The Iris Garden Club meets at
2:30 Tuesday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. Claud Sutton, with Mrs.
C. M. Agee as associate hostess.
Arrangements for
the afternoon
will be chrysanthemums.
' Mrs. Claud Sutton will entertain
the
Builders Sunday School Class
of the First Baptist Church
on
Tuesday night at 7:30 at her home
on the Rosston road.
ference held in Prescott on Thurs-
day, October 28.
Reports were given by the Bod-
caw P. T. A. along with the reports
from other P. T. A.'s represented.
In the afternoon, a short skit on
"Leadership Training"
was pre*
sented by seven of the Bodcaw re*
presentatives: Mrs. Carl Lewis,
Mrs. Chester
Whittert, Mrs. Jr.
Goodwin, Mrs. Bill Jones, Mrs. J.
D. Allen, Mrs.
Ray
Martin and
Mrs. K. K. Mitchell.
Others from Bodcaw who attend-
ed the conference were Mrs. Her-
man May, Mrs. Teddy May, Mrs.
Otha Mullins, Mrs. Enoch Benson,
Mrs. Clarence Dunn, Mrs. E. D.
Downs, Mrs. Earl May, Mrs. Alex
Boswell, Mrs. Cliff Butler, Mrs.
Ben Trahan and Mrs. E, D. Spen.
cer.
._«-.i
The Ambassador Class of Gar-
rell Memorial Baplist Church will
meet Tuesday, November 9, at 7:30
p. m. in the home of Mrs. Wade
Warren, wilh Mrs. Clifton Billings
as co-hostess.
Wednesday November 10
The John 'Cain Chapter of the
D. A. R. will meet in Ihe home of
Mrs. B. L. Reltig, 420 Wesl Avenue
ndia, Ceylon and Pakistan. U was
nnouneed that "Korea Day" would
16 Sunday, November 14,
The meeting was closed with the
V. S. C. S. benediction.
Refreshments were served to 50
members and two guests, the Rev.
and Mrs. Doss.
Hope Jr.-Sr. High
P. T. A. To Meet
"Team Work for Better Schools"
will be the theme of the program
when the Hope Junior-Senior High
School P. T. A. meets
Thursday,
November 11, at 3:30 p. m. in the
auditorium of the Junior High Scho-
ol. "What do we want of our scho-
ols" and "Is Yours a Good School"
discussed by Mrs. P. L. Perkins,
ei faculty member, and Mrs. Dick
jviia. u, oj. jn.i:LLi£, i^v vvtiM- rtvuuut: , ~ ------- "
,,, ,
t 11 ,«^
B .on Wednesday, November 10, at1 Watkins, a parent, will be followed
12 noon. Mrs. R. L. Searcy of
,
a buzz session. Ihe Glee Club
* SAENGER
*
LAST DAY •
•
•
FEATURE TIMES •
.
.
. .
-
wisville. Mrs. Dick Watkins and ' "nder the direction of Mrs. B. C.
Hyatt will sing, and n speech stu-
'dent w111 brm8 the natlonal Presl'
dent's message.
The aim of the National Congress
of Parents and Teachers is to give
Garland P. T. A. will meet Wed- every generation a chance to serve
esday, November 10, at 3 p. m. children and youth and the aim of
2:56
- 7:11
! FULL LENGTH
-'
l O SllMI'S
'
il U1U1H HIOUl'S !i,f,ii»ioui>nii~;
OgNE WITHJHE WIND :
GUUBIE • VIVIQUtlGH • lESUEHOWRO
OUVlAdeHAVIlUND
•
.TECHNICOLOR!
1. "DROOPY" CARTOON
2. LATE NEWS EVENTS
e guest speaker. Executive com-
mittee will meet at 2:30.
t WED.-THURS. •
Up Front on the West's
deadly Twenty-Mile run!
to show their appreciation for this
fine spirit by enlisting and working
in this important organization whi
Wednesday November 10
ch tends to bring closer togethe
Patmos P. T. A. will have a sup- the home, the school and the chur
er in the school lunchroom Wed- ch.
esday night, November 10, at 7:30. [ Believing that fathers and emplo-
Each family is asked to bring a yed mothers are interested in be-
overed dish.
coming better
acquainted
with
their child's school and teachers
the P. T. A. had a very successful
SHOKRIN
A WAINIKIIOS. PICTUIE
avneMORRIS
^PRESCRIPTION'
MEANS
PROTECTION1
Wore often than you might sup-
)se,
we hear the question:
Vhy do I need a prescription to
ly the medicine the doctor has
dered to make me well? It
st seems to make the cost go
i,"
It's easy to see why some
ople ask this, and the answer
just as 'simple. Your doctor's
•escription is written for y9ur
p'im.
It is his explicit
der by us, your pharmacists.,
e are'trained by years of col-
ge and practical experience to
low his scientific instructions
the letter.
We are also the final check-
int
before
the
medicine
aches you. We double-check
1 prescriptions. It's our duty
see that there are no mistakes
id to call the doctor if there is
y question about his orders.
[So,
"prescription" r e a l l y
earif ^"protection" . . . your
•otec'flon. We're happy to pro-
de it.
!
IWard & Son
DRUGGIST
Phone 7-2292
102 W. Second St.
Irs. Richard Howards of Hope
•c associate hostesses. Members
lease note
change in
meeting
,
, a
.
.
he executive board will meet at1 the Hope school unit is to have
15. The meeting will be dismissed | every mother and father or guar
. • ..
°
.
.
..
- ' j:««
rtf
T,,Mir*»._C!e,«ir»t' TTicrVi Rr»hnn
n time for the members to attend
ic Fire Prevention Parade.
Hope Federation of Garden Clubs
ill meet in the home of Mds. Ha£-
Id M. Brents, Oakhaven, on Wed-
esday,' November 10, at 10 a. m.
dian of Junior-Senior High Schoo:
students belonging to and attend
ing when possible the Parent Tea-
cher Association. If parents expect
their children to be interested
in
their books, then they should show
an interest in the school the chil
ed.
-au.a.y, iiuveiiiucj.
au, at AU ct. in-
*
-.
.
acn club is urged to be represen- dren attend, and the teachers who
train them. Never in a school P
T. A. have the teachers been more
congenial
and cooperative
than
those in the Hope
Junior-Senioi
Paisley P. T. A. will meet Wed-
esclay, November 10, at 3 p. m.
cauetj, .i.'iu vtuuuti j . u , c i i . u p . iii.
-
_
.
„,
i j
t the school. Charles Gough will High School, so parents are asked
Mrs. Bob MasslngUI
Entertains Business
Womans Circle No. 2
The Business
Woman's
Circle
No. 2 of the First Baptist Church
met Monday evening in the home
of Mrs. Bob Massingill.
After a brief business
session,
Mrs. P. J, Holt gave the devotional.
The program was presented by
he following special guests, Mrs.
Basil York,
Mrs. C. C. Collins,
VIrs. Frank Douglas, Mrs. W. H.
Gurtter, Sr., and Mrs. A .D. Bran-
nan, Sr. The title of the program
was "African Missions".
Senior Ladles
Auxiliary Has
Thanksgiving Program
Court Docket
Municipal Court of Hope, Arkan-
sas, November 8, 1954.
City Docket
Herman
Williams,
improper
lights on car, Forfeited $1.00 cash
bond.
Herman Williams. No State Car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Herman Williams, Fictitious car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Arthur Jackson.
Running Stop
sign, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond
Daniel Huddleston, Frank Adams,
Speeding, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond,
Kennie Atkins, Berlin Fuller, Ha-
zardous driving,
Forfeited $10.00
cash bond,
Charlie Lee Howard,
No driv-
ers license, Forfeited $5.00 cash
bond.
B. M. Mouser, Robert E. Lee,
Failure to yield right of way, Plea
gulity, fined $5.00.
Lela Bell Jones, Hershel Ward,
Shirk Conway, Drunkenness, For-
feited $10.00 cash bond.
Thn QO«;«,. T n ^ '
A, -r
*
Calvin McPherson, Assault & Bat-
The Senior Ladies Auxiliary of torv Vnrfou^
«.ln'nn „„„*, ,—A
the Unity Baptist Church met Mon-
day afternoon, November 8, at 2
o'clock, in the home of Mrs. E. L.
Lane.
Songs were led'by Elder White,
who also led in prayer.
Mrs. Barney Gaines, president
of the
auxiliary, presented
the
Thanksgiving program, assisted by
Mrs.
Tom Anderson, Mrs. Lane and
Mrs. Howard Collier. Mrs. Jesse
Sinclair gave the devotional from
the 100th Psalm.
A report of the previous meeting
was given by Mrs. Sinclair, and
Mrs. Anderson dismissed the group.
The hostess served refreshments
to 11 members.
tery, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Eugene Gill, Clarence
Chipps,
Gaming, Plea guilty, fined $10.00.
James Wilbert, W. L. Holbert,
Willie Malone, Gaming, Forfeited
$10.00 cash bond.
State Docket
James D. Welch, Operating a mo-
tor vehicle vvthout a driver's licen-
se, Plea guilty, fined $5.00.
E. F. Simmons, Passing in a "No
Passing" zone, Plea guilty,
JEined
$5.00.
Continued from *»flge Ofl*
Mayfair
quivered
with
gossip.
Margaret had been to church. And
because
it
was
Remembrance
Sunday, she had been dowri
in
Whitehall to stand by reverently
while her sister, Queen Elizabeth,
honored the men and women who
had lost their lives in wars. Then
in the afternoon she went to thc
movies.
Theater managers Were
inter-
viewed, and they 'said: "Tradition-
shattering," "what
a
surprise,"
it must have been unofficial" and
"tut-tut and tch-tchl"
The objection to royalty's going
to movies on Sunday is inspired
largely by the conservative ele-
ments among English churchmen,
Whose influence Is great. The pop-
ulation
is being
reminded con-
stantly that the sovereign is the
defender of the faith, and that the
Lord's Day must be respected.
But curiously while Margaret is
being talked about lor
breaking
tradition, thc Church of England
itself is being sniped at by per-
sons whose moral indignation gets
stirred up
easily. The
church,
which lately turned its financial
affairs over to a committee
of
experts, made a handsome clean-
ing in the stock exchange.
It's
gambling, say critics, and
natibn simmers.
Louis and Ernest Wyndor of New
York, and by Dr. Mortoti L. Lev-
in and associates of Albany. N.Y.
A British study just a bit later
Some folks think they are a s6-
ctol success when they master the
art of sayf ng nasty things th a hke
way.
'
J^Mi F. JtjSnkfel,
Robert W. Hansetl that m
itt a false fkc fiiilrM
wanted to be Wcked.lip
Arrives."
/
* -
Hansen said "I -*ould
punish you most by
case and letting you „_.
ydu another chance* I'll
t months in the '
ion."
'
' • " . '
by
Dr. Richard Doll and Prof.
A. Bradford Hill, ptjinling to
an
association between cigarettes and
lung cancer, also was published by
American newspapers.
But these and other reports com-
ing still
loiter seemed to
find
l'tt.1
Deaths Over
the Nation
Brookvvood P. T. A. will meet
Wednesday in the school auditorium j night meeting in October and will
t 3 p. m. The executive board will have another such meeting in the
All members are spring.
Yard of Month
Winners Announced
The Hope Garden Clubs announce
the following
as
"Yard-of-the-
Month" winners for November:
Ward 1-Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hane-
gan, 606 East Second;
Ward 2-Mr. and Mrs. Sam War-
mack, 616 South Washington;
Ward 3-Mr. and Mrs. J. M. O'-
Neal, 621 West Avenue C;
Ward 4-Mr. and
Mrs. Elbert
Jones,, 420 North Elm;
Oakhaven and Beverly Hills-Mr,
and Mrs. Jack Carnahan, Oak-
naven.
Notice
The party planned for the Inter-
mediate MYF of the First Metl>
dist Church will not be held as
lanned. The date will be announc-
d later.
By. The Associated Press
San Francisco
Charles
B.
Henderson, 81, U.S. senator from
Nebada from 191? to 1921 and . a
former chairman of' the Board of
the Reconstruction Finance Corp.
Died Monday.
•
Glen
Head,'
N.
Y.
' Julian
Starkweather Ma'spn, 78, .'former
edito'r-in-chief of the New
York
Evening Post, who held ..editorial
posts on several Chicago newspa-
pers before
becoming managing
editor of the Naw York Herald
Tribune in 1922. Born in Chicago.
DiedMonday.
!
Baltimore
Dr. Francis
S.
neet at 2:15.
urged to attend.
Oglesby P. T. A. will meet Wed-
nesday, November 10, at 3 p._m.
.'he executive meeting will be held
at 2:30. '
Planned projects for this year
include a donation to the Junior
and Senior libraries, records and
films for visual education, supplies
for first aid rooms for both schools,
and contributions to the school ca-
feteria, Girl Scouts, and the youth
The Bodcaw P. T. A. will meet at center. The only methods of raising
he high school at 7 p. m. on Wed- j funds to carry out these projects
nesday, November 10. After the are the annual membership drive
•egular program, a short skit will' and talent
program.
The talent
be presented and then coffee and program will not be given until
doughnuts will be served in
chool cafeteria.
tfce
Thursday November 11
Hope Junior-Senior High School
sometime
in December
but the
membership drive has been in full
sway for four weeks now and will
close this week. The goal for this
year is 850 members but to date
P. T. A. will meet Thursday at 3:30 I there are only 300. Parents who
D. m. in the Junior High auditor-1 haven't sent their dues of only fif-
Him. The executive board will meet ty cents per member per year, to
'
at 3 p. m.
school by their child are asked to
do so tomorrow. Or, contact the
Ladies of the Eastern Star will membership
chairmen, Mrs.
sponsor a spaghetti supper Thurs-j Franklin
Horton
or
Mrs. ' Jim
day,
November 11, at 6:30 at the. Cole. In the definite pageant of the
Masonic H^ll. The public is invit- parent-teacher movement there is
ed. Adults, $1.00; children, 50 cents.;need for all: there is work for all.
Parents, teachers and all communi-
ty citizens interested in the Junior-
Senior High School are invited to
Thursday November 11
The Adult Fellowship of the First
Methodist Church will meet Thurs-j join the P. T. A. to make this the
day at 7 o. m. for a pot luck sup-1 best year it has ever had.
per. Guest speaker will be the Rev. | All members
and prospective
~~
" •
~ '
""— members are urged to make a spe-
cial effort to attend the meeting
Thursday and all interested persons
are extended a cordial invitation to
visit.
Edmund Pendleton. Baby
will be provided.
sitters
The Blevins P. T. A. will meet
in Ihe high school auditorium Thur-
sday, November 11, at 7 p. m. A
special program is planned and all
parents and patrons are urged to
be present.
Beacon Sunday School
Class Meets Monday
On Monday evening, November 8
, ,
,
members of the
Beacon Sunday
Hope B & PW Club will celebrate School class of the First Baptis
its 30th birthday anniversary
on church.met in the home of Mrs
Thursday
November 11, ^ 7 Russell McClain for a" combination
p. m. with a ban(lue^___a^kejlotel business and social meeting.
Moving pictures
were taken o
those
present,
following a shot-
business session. Mrs, Fred Bar
Barlow. Every member is urged to
be present.
Bodcaw P. T. A. Members
Attend District Conference
The Bodcaw P. T. A. was
represented
at the
District Con-
gave the devotional.
Refreshments
were
served t
Red Hot Wednesday
SPECIALS
IXTRA SPECIAL
All I ET Cf*^C
ULLtT EGGS
Doz, 29c
Births
The Rev. and Mrs. Joe W. Hun-
er of Emmet, announce the birth
)f a daughter, Vicki Lynne, on
Dctober 29, at the Cora Donnell
lospital in Prescott.
Cigarette
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bales of
Stamps, Announced the arrival of a
on, John Robert, on Saturday,
November 6. The paternal grand-
>arents are Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Jales. The maternal grand par-
ents' are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harri-
on of Locksborg.
Coming and Going
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Hasky,
VIr. and Mrs. Bob Magness, and
. and Mrs. W. E. McFarland of
Smmet, attended
the Arkansas-
Rice game in Little Rock on Sat-
urday afternoon.
Schwentker, 50, •, nationally known
child specialist,"professor"of pedi-
atrics at Johnss;Hopkins
Medical
School and pediamciah:in' chief at
Johns Hopkins''Hospital. Born
in
Schenectady, N . y . Died Monday.
Elizabeth N. J.
John
J. Mc-
Gbvvan, 7, G, press representative
for the late
President Woodrow
Wilron, treasurer of the Democrat-
ic State Committee and
former
newspaperman rBorh iri Charlottes-
town, P.E.I., Canada. Died Sunday.
JTt
Be?voir, Va
Maj
Gen
Arthur W. Penqje, 56, commanding
general of the Army Engineer Cen-
ter at Ft. Belvoir. Died Monday.
Great Falls, Mont.
George W.
Hey, 79, who made his violin de-
but at 3 with the Syracuse, N Y.,
symphony orchestra, 'former man-
ager of a Billings, Mont, opera
house orphestra, and founder
of
Ihe Great Falls Conservatory
of
Music. Died Monday.
' Saginaw, Mich.
Chelsea Cur-
tis Fraser, 78, violin maker and au-
thor. Born in New Sarum,
Died Sunday.
Continued rrom Page One
mo'st big
public issues,
didn't
spring forth overnight.
Some 15 years ago, Dr. Alton
Ochsner, famous New Orleans sur-
geon, was reporting
observations
which led him to :believe that cig-
arette smoking .was a cause of
lung cancer. Just yesterday
Dr.
Ochsner published a bo'ok, "Smok-
ing and Cancer, a Doctor's
Re-
port" Julian messner, Inc.) which
reviews all the evidence used to
indict cigarettes as a cause cf
lung cancer and heart disease.
In 1939, an Argentine physician
Dr. A. H. Rcffo; reported that tars
obtained from tobacco often could
produce cancer in the:skin of rab-
bits.
the American public only mildly
interested.
Perhaps
many m i s s e d 'the
rtories. Perhaps it takes time and
repetition
in the
absence
of
rtark drama
to
get
rapt at-
tention. Or perhaps many people
wanted stronger evidence.
No doubt some dismissed the re-
ports as another instance of cry-
ing "wolf" at cigarettes. For to-
bacco has been accused of many
Sins in the past
of leading to
poverty, of creating mustaches on
women, making men sterile, pois-
oning the,unborn babies of smok-
ing mothers, contributing to tuber-
culosis.
Smoking has been banned
at
some times in a lew countries. In
Denmark
smokers and
snuffers
Help Wa
2 waitresses, penw
ent empoy
income. Apply" i
^
son*
f
.
- -
Barlow HolSl
Ho Phone Colls/ Please
DODGE
has
done1
it
t jv*
>•*•
These and other reports were
mentioned in the news through the
were once publicly whipped.
In
Turkey, King Amuralh once de-
creed beheading for anyone, who
smoked.
Not until about two years
ai?o
did the long-smouldering
contro-
versy over cigarettes really start
to build up
into the public con-
sciousness.
Evidence was being discovered
and rediscovered to blame' ciga-
rettes for sickness and
untimely
death.- ,So also was evidence
to
question that evidence, or to blame
dther
factors
for
the
troubles
being attribxited to cigarettes.
The public was to become > the
jury. As such, the public was to
hear a good deal,
from
' both
newspapers
headlined
years.,
In 1D50,
stories from a cancer;
congress
in Paris reporting three separate
studies, mostly statistical,-
which
linked cigarettes with at least part
betted
wait!
Flair-
Fashionefi
of
increase in lung
amoh{< Americans. ,, The
cancer
studies
were made by ; Dr. Ochsner,
by
Doctors Evarts Graham
of
St.
Out.
Mrs. Katherine Webb of Harbor
Seach, Michigan, is visiting her
sister, Mrs, E. G. Coop, and other
relatives.
Mrs. Anna Judson
hs returned
from a week's visit with her dau-
ghter, Mrs. Jewel Tolley, Mr. Tol-
ley and family in Beaumont, Texas.
Mrs. E. G. Coop and Mrs. Ka-
Harmony in
Congress Hits
a Sour Note
By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON
WASHINGTON (ff)
. The post-
election theme
of harmony be-
tween President
Eisenhower and
the Democratic
4th
Congresse
echoed some dissonant notes tpday
in the wake of. an exchange be-
therine Webb have returned from! tween party chairmen and new
a visit with Mrs. Coop's daughter,
sibie;'-public interest" coming at a
time when, Hall said, responsible
leaders in Congress, are pledging
cooperation.
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas
who will be majority floor leader
when the .Democrats organize the
new Senate in January publicly
criticized some of President Eisen-
hower's campaign remarks at a
news conference Saturday. He also
set out certain, conditions for coop
eration on democratic congression-
al leaders during the next
two
years.
:
.
.
-
-
.
U. S. mints have turned out 4^4
billion nichols since 1866 when the
coin was first issued,
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS WASTE
NnwtinB backache, loss ot pep and energy,
headaches and dizziness may be due to slow-
down of kidney function. Doctors say good
kidney function Is very important tp cottd
health. When some everyday condition, such
us stress and strain, causes this Important
function to slow down,many folka suffer non-
Sing backache—feel miserable, Minor blad-
der irritations due to cold or wrong diet may
cause Betting up nights orf requentpassaged.
Don't neglect your kidneys If these condi-
tions bother you. Try Doan's Pills—a mild
diuretic, Used successfully by millions for
over 60 years. It's amazing how many time*
Doan's give happy relief from these discom-
forts— help thelSmUcsof kidney tubes and fil-
ters flush out waste. Get Doan'a Fills todayl
207-E. Secbni
Hope/ Ark;,
;?4 ^ ^t
, i f«r,
Mrs. V. A. Keth and Mr. Keith in
Dallas, Texas.
Mrs. George Sundstrom and son,
George A., of Phoenix, Ariz., are
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J, A. Davis, and other relatives.
^oodard Cox, Mrs. A. D. Glass, Ji
Mrs. William Groves. Mrs. Horac
Hubbard, Mrs,
Jim James, Mrs
Lloyd Leverett, Mrs. Orval Tayloi
Mrs.' George Thompson; Mrs. Win
die Thompson,
the teacher; as-
sociate members, Mrs. C. M. Ro-
gers, Jr., and Mrs. J. B. Martin.
and the. special guest, Mrs. Fred
Barr.
ELICIOUS ROUND
Lb.
, WHITI, YELLOW SWANS DOWN
Box
AKE MIX
The Rev. and Mrs. Doss
Guest Speakers at
W. S. C. S. Meeting
The Woman's Society of Christian
Service of the First Methodist Churi.
ch met Monday, November 8, at'
2 p. m.
church,.
in the sanctuary of the
The worship service opened with
a song, "Happy the Home", and
Mrs. J. C. Carlton gave the de-
votional using as her subject "The
Dawn of a Soul", Mrs. C. D. Les-
ter closed with prayer.
Mrs. Johnny McCabe, a member
of Circle Three, presented the Rev
and Mrs. Alfred Doss of DeQueen,
who gave reports of the National
Family Life Conference held in
Cleveland, Ohio, which they attend-
ed in October.
Mrs. Albert Graves,
president,
presided over the business meet-
ing. Repovts were made, and the
circle count taken.
Circle
Five
winning wjtlj 15 members present
Hospital Notes
Julia Chester
Admitted: Mrs. Annie Madlock,
Hope, Mrs. Homer C. Gaines, Hope.
Mr. Clyde Zinn, Hope, Mrs. Lucy
Sipes, Columbus, Mrs. Sallie Col-
lier, Hope, Mr.
Edgar Lafferty,
Patmos, Mrs. Nettie Butler, Hope,
Paul
Rawson,
Cape Giradeau,
Mo., Ruby Lee Briggs, Hope.
Discharged:
Mrs. Dan
Green,
Hope, Mrs. Tom Gathright, Sara-
toga, Mr. Steve Atkins, Hope, Mrs.
John S.
Matthews, Hope, Mrs.
Wendell Sowards and son, McCas-
kill, Sarah Jones, Fulton, Dorothy
Powell and son, Hope.
Mr .and Mrs. Homer C, Gaines.
Hope, have a daughter, Mary Loui-
se, born at 10:02 p. m. Friday.
Branch
Admitted: ,Mrs. W. A. Powell,
Patmos, Mr. Steve Bader, Hope,
Mrs. Inez Tefteller, Hope.
Discharged: Ruby Lee Fleming,
Hope, Mrs. Mpnrpe Samuels, Rt.
3, Hope, Mrs. H, L. Levins, Wash-
ington.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Tefteller of
Hope, announce the arrival of a
baby boy on November 6, 1954.
statements by Democratic leaders.
Democratic National Chairman
Stpehen A. Mitchell said yesterday
in a statement that Vice Presi-
dent Nixon snould "retract
and
apologize for his campaign excess-
es." If Nixon continues, Mitchell
added, "I hope that the President
will take the opportunity to dis-,
associate himself from such char-
acter assassination by public dis-
avowal."
Republican National
Chairman
Leonard W. Hall replied of Mitch-
ell's remarks: "This is in the worst
possible taste and In the worst pos-
LOOK YOUR LOVELIEST
THE BEAUTY BOX
Open 6 days a week
After 5 appointments for
the \yorking girls
Latest Hair Styling
Phone 7-5850
112 S. Main
Ruth Hoelscher Janell Roberts
ON SALE
CLEAN UP MERCHANDISE FROM OUR
HARVEST
'; >
l»r>
;.*m
3 ONLY
MEN S TOPCOATS • •
SMALL LOT -- BROKEN SIZES
Program!
YORK M
Selected radio
NE
programs tonight:
NBC
7 People
Are Funny;
7:30
Dragnet;
8 Radio Theater,
"My Man Godfrey."
CBS — 7 Stop The Music; 3:30
Amos And Andy: 9:15 Dance Time,
ABC
7 Jack Gregson
Hour;
8 Town Meeting
Discussion.
MBS
7 Treasury '
Th,P ScEW-oh,.
pole-frame
cuts farm building costs
• You pen s*v» wp to h*M the cost cl
erecting an4 royfftflj" fog Voa* >WWi
ole-type
supported
Creosoted
CHILDREN* DRESSES.. $2.0(1
BROKEN SIZES AND COLORS LADIES
HANSEN GLOVES
I ONLY —SIZE 40
MAN S SUIT . . ,
X**^
.,wt'?
t
*> Hr-f*
; I'v^V^
- $y#
^m
u^!
• •
$8,95 RACK OF
Fall Cott
Reduced
LADIES DRESSES
MEN 5 NYLON SHORTS It
3 QNUY — $17,95 5T, MARYS
•], .
.,
ALL WOOL BLANKETS $1
i'1'IBIiKij^
I
5MAIL W)T
JEAN SETS
ItUE JIANS
*&'
1'-!','•
A'sf.'^y
«,#"*•
5k S&C ;•.
1*1:'^ £frj;
M O M S T A R ,
H O P E , A f t K A N S A S
I-JWMIM"- .;,}', .
fe>? #>
|C» '•/ ,
j.
<;,? • • • •
ire
™-fe\-
s
.™jtW \ < *
t. Credited with
SflejStfra
tnatch
__._lal'All«l
$7. ItnjttMrtl
m is Wtt.
MARKETS
Ho
\\\
elides
i fhe
tullding
# 3t M*' M&
tk£ outs'Md
W "1 jbre-
t An .an at-
tWWWtOlA'* K«S
• to
think
against lha
>'Ugh widows
|« at ,$100,000, said
s Had", Been afcumu-
iri6r,s>veral days,
structure
Me
?W»*
•f&sr
,r: "
smmmn^'^i
*
fe4^ * t"-,H> *,*
J
JAfc-B-Q
tT A jJJ',"'*S^. '. ( . *_^
Ff*^r°<
<"
W&ii
s 12,060; lower;
liSO-75; about a
hoke Nd. Is and 2s 19.85! ISO-
Ib Iflf&.SOOO; 225-240 Ih 1900-
); 246-260 Ib W.tS«i&.$${ sdWs 400
down
tt.2S-?3j
fdW at 18.00;
iei"* POV/S 15.50-17,2,'}!
b6ars
3XW-J5.00, ,
Cattle 6,000; calves 1,700: about
ady but little ddndj tltillty and
commercial cow* 85CM2.06; can-
and citttSfs e.00-d.5(5:
llsht
iitlly c a n ft e r s 1&0-?0; bulls
ItJtfdyJ
Utility
arid
commercial
l.OO'llOO; cfttlner and cutte* btilU
.OO-lO.SOi vpnldrs steady:
good
nd choice 17,06-23.00; few
at
500! commercial art dloW
good
2.00-IO.OO; slaughter calves slow;
orrtrnerclal arid goad 11,00-15.00;
Hilly and low commercial 8.00-
0.00,
heep 1,700; wool lambs weak to
I lower; icveral lots good
to
rime 1800-19.50; early top 19.50;
fend not fully established;
a«ed
hecp steady; ."laughter ewes 3.00
.00.
POULTRY AND PRODUCE
CHICAGO' W) Live
poul
tr
toady ort Hens; barely stendy on
•oung stock; receipts 971 coops
66,425 Ib; F O.B. paying prices un-
hangedt Hoavy hens 16-19; light
lens 12-14; fryers and broilers 23-
5! old roosters 12-12.5; caponette
young hert turkeys
34-5(5;
gecsc 23.
Butter firm;
receint s 017,814;
vholcsale buylrig prices I'A lower
o
1 "higher; 93 score AA 58.5;
92 A 68.25-5; 90 B 57.5; 89 C 56
cnrn 90 B-8; 89 C 6.
Eggs mixed;
receipt s
10,552
wholesale buying prices 1 lower to
higher; U.S. large white 34.5
mixed 35.5; U. S. mediums 27; US
ttandards 2 ;
current
receipts
none; dirties 20; checks 20
NEW YORK STOCKS
NEW YORJC 1<P) The sto ck m ar
<et developed a certain amount o
hesitancy today following its sen
satkmal post-qlection surge aheac
On .balance, , the market
w o
barely higher. Gains
of 1 to
points were found in several sec
tions of the list, but most advance
small. Losses appeared fre
guently, sometimes passing a poln*
1 ^Business maintained a swift par
at-'around the highest levels of th
.GRAIN
!
' Wheat: Noric. Corn:
No. 2 ye
low41.51; No. 3 yellow 1.47-1.49
No 4 137'/4-1.43'/2; No.. 5 129-135
M>; sa mole -grade yellow 1.2
Oats: Sample gr^'de white 87.
_
Bareley ,nomin,ai :MalJ>ng .ehoic
1.31-52; feed 1.10-22.
explosion," \.said Dale "Plunk, 18
year-old high school junior. "It wa
terrible."
j|y^H%«Mlay, November 11,1954
S^S:k4!iwfT-.i^i- • n A V
rmgti
jgitffirf? ;
/||^ill-'n9,t be ppen for business
feffife-above 'date, being a legal
jFj«3j(8fl •
'
,
J?$'v'; v
•
• •
'itizens National Bank
First National Bank
m&fk''*'
it^rr" -
®«v
' "*i~ -.''
HOPE
Three Mental
Escapees
Still ot Large
LITTLE
ates of
the
cfimiftal
i'ouf
ward
Governors of
South Divided
on Segregation
feOCA BATON, Fla. t*) Sdtilhern
states, divided as they are on their
approach to the explosive school
:sFiie, may find 9 'com-
either on the conference floor, or
away.
Three states
Gccrpia, Louisia-
na end South Caroline, have tak-
en action to put themselves in a
por.ition • to keep Negroes out of
white schools.
Georgia adopted a constitutional
rmendmeht Nov. 2 permitting the
legislature to abolish the public
system
tion.
Louisiana
rather than end segrega-
approved
an amend-
ap-
out-
Er-
,
-
,
,.
....
ftiori ground approach to the prob- mont at thc sam-^ time permitting
l«rr. at the annual Southern Cover- 1 'he state tc invoke police powers
afiod frcfn the State hdspital herd
st night .after threatening four
ttohdants.
Deitt Tatum, 27, of Parogould,
hargcd v/ith staying his wife, gaV<3
rhself up a few, minutes. after
he escape which occurred about
40 p. m.
The other
three
still were at
arge today.
State police Identified them as
ohnhie areen, 37, an ex-convict
ho was arrested at Fort Smith
n a charge of burglary; Char'es
rice, 23, Litild Rock, charged with
urglor, and L. B. Veach (address
nknown,) charged wilh l&rceny.
All but Veach Were undergoing 30-
ay sanity tests at the hospital,
Officers said Veach waa from
nother ward at the hospital and
nly recently had been transferred
i the criminal ward section.
Tntum told Little Rock detectives
hot Green and Price •"abandoned
s" (Tntum and Veach) after ctt-
isting their aid to oscapa. . •
Green and Price were'; believed
o be together with a third^person
n an automobile which
Tatum
aid was -waiting"' for them when
hey made the break.
Tatum told .officers, the braak
wan planned by Price..
It was the second escape of four
nrtiates of the ward sir.ce'. May.
t also was-the second time that
attendant C. H.: Ahart had' been
hreatened with a sharp instru-
ment.
' • - ' ' . -
Ahart said he was standing near
he door to Ihe fire escape when
3recn approached, 'drew, a knife,
arid ordered • him
to - unlock
the
dcor.
Ahavt said that 'another "atten-
dant, Charles Copeland, shouted to
him to stop scirffling with Green.
Other attendents, A. H. Williams
and W. N. .Leach,, were threatened
by Tatum and Veach, Ahart said.
Tatum told officers Price had
planned to head for Mexico
or
California.
Attendants said they didn't know
where Green .got the knife.
ftor's Conference
Thursday.
opening
h e r e to maintain segregation m the pub-
lic schools.
The
conference
meeting
date
falls less thfen a month from the
lime the IT. S.
Supreme
Court
cptns arguments Dec. 0 on how
end when it should order Into ef-
fect its May 17 edict that segre-
gated public shhools must end.
There's no mention of scgregrt-
tion matters as such on the official
conference program, but there's
South Carolina's Legislature al-
ready has authority to abolish t'rw
school system.
A fourth state, Mississippi, voles
Dec. 2l on a proposition to em-
power the Legislature to abolish
public schools ns a means of re-
taining segregation.
Some of the oth?r southern states
have indicated they thought
the
cient time.
A possible' middle ground
proach in the Florida plan
lined by Ally. Gen. Richard
v'in
of that state in a
Supreme
Court brief in' which he pleads for
time and for a large, degree of lo-
cal determination as to when seg-
regated schools should be ended.
The FloHd'a plan provides
that
in cases where suits are brought to
gain
admittance to
segregated
schools, thc trial courts should- be
given wide discretion to hold hear
ings, and to
determine
on the
basis of local conditions whether
the petition should be granted.
In cases where schools author-
ties and thn trial courts detcrmin
cd thc races shouldn't be integrat-
ed, new hearings could be held at
a later datd to determine whether
conditions may change.
little doubt the subject Will be one problem could
,
the most lively.'to come Up'the Supreme Court
Arkansans to
Arrive in U, S.
SEATTLE,
USS Gen. G-.
Wash. (UP)
Th-2
M. Randall will ar
Do: ado; SFC Boy E Schnarr,
tie Rock; Airman Will.am R. Sm-
ngton, Attica; Cpl. Ernest S. oul
Ivan; Rosiej
PFC Hartzell Wat-
son,
Gregory; ^and Pvt. Johnny
Whittle, Piggott.
Women have had a lower death
rive at the Army port of embarka
Sion here Wednesday
v/ith
2,269
pasrengers from the Far East.
Among them will be tire follow-
ing Arkansas servicemen:
Cpl. Collier
Anders. Jr.,
Au-
vergne; Sgt. John
R. Anthony
Bearden; S-Sgt. James L. Besly,
Hazen; PFC Rofus
Cobb, Jr. Au-
susta; Capt. John C.
Freeman,
Crt-ssett; Airman 3-. W.
Harper,
Wilmar; Cpl. Charles G. Harwell,
Okay;
Airman
Winsley
Henry,
Mar'ianna-; Cpl. Claudie- L. Higgins,
Fort Smith.
Cpl. Carl Hudson, Rudy; Air-
man Albert E.'Jankins,
Truman;
Cpl.
Willard
G. Lawson, Rogers;
Pvt. Melvir. C. Locke, Camdcn;
rale than men for many years andiCp!. Jessie M. Martin, Okean; Air-
since 1930 the lives of women have, Iman William J.'Moore, Jr., Wynne
Mr. Fulbrighf
Has Problems
WASHINGTON W)
If the Mc-
Carthy censure debate runs on to*
any great length, Sen. Fulbright
(D-Ark) may have 'to become A
New York commuter.
Fulbright while greatly
inter-
ested in the censure proceedings,
also is a U. S. delegate to the-Unit-
ed Nation's session now.; going on
in New York.
He said today he will stay in
Washington for a time to see how'
the censure matter proceeds in the
Senate but that he wants to return
to the U. N. Sessions.
.
•Fulbright'was1 one .of the origi-
nal group of senators urging adop-
tion of the
resolution
by , Sen.
Flanders (R-Vt) calling for cen-
sure of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis).
The Flanders resolution war sub-
mitted to •'• a
special
committee
which recommended censure.
Fulbright told a Reporter it 's.
his present inclination to take. little,
or no part in,the debate. It, would
appear better stratgey, he said, to
let the Watkins cprnmittee
pre-
sent the case and then permit Mc-
Carthy and his supporters to do
the talking.
»
, , . ' . . . -
• . . • . . •
Six European nations, Luxem-
bourg, Andorra, Liechtenstein, San j
Marino, Monaco arid Vatican City
have a total area smalled than that
o fthe King Ranch in Texas.
Fdom 1903 through 1014, more
than 750,000 immigrants come to
the United States and more than a
million, entered
in six of those
years.
•M,
$?'>.yl've waited years and
fv
gears /or power as exciting
;
^ as the '55 FORD'S new
BUGGER-TORQUE!/
i,
ON DISPLAY
FRIDAY
far move than those of men.
$19.95 NOW $14.95
Get them before the
season opens and save.
WESTERN AUTO
ASSOCIATE StORE
_
•
——
Bad
Colds
WICKS
WVAPORUB
RelieveSuffeting
SHOP
IGGLY WIGGLY
AND YOU GET
DOUBLE
S&H GREEN STAMP'S. WEDNESDAY
(ON PURCHASES OF $2.50 OR MORE)
Prices Effective Wed. Nov. 10th
Pineapple Juice 25c
ARMOURSMilk
&IOc
BEST MEAT IN TOWN
'
<>*^P .
1 *
I11
'
'
'
"
{
;
OMAHA BEEF — CHUCK
ROAST
MAPLECREST
FRYERS
Lb
UNCLE BEN'S CONVERTED
RICE
THE FOAMING CLEANSER
BABO
NABISCO RITZ
.VL
CRACKERS
NAB I SCO OREO CREAM
SANDWICH
PLANTERS COCKTAIL
PEANUTS
14 pz. OCr
Pkg.
JL*J\~
Giant TT-
Size
I-/ C
PALWOUIVE
SOAP
Reg..
Bars
17c
BAKE-RltE
_ •
SHORTENING
1 Lb-
ttr
Pkg.
O^C
4 Oz. 9Q
Pkg.
ZVC
8 Oz. OCr
Can
w«Jv«
73<
PALMOLIVE
SOAP
2 32 23c
IMPERIAL
SUPER SUDS
Large
Pkg.
29c
AIR WICK
UNDERWOOD DEVILEp
HAM
SALAD BOWL SALAD
DRESSING
CRYSTAL WHITE
SOAP
BEST PRODUCE IN TOWN!
Potatoes
IB .:^ipP W ^ ^^^B ^W^ ^^r-
5iOz- AOr
Bottle Q^C
Reg.
9| r
Can
<61C
1602.
-Oft-
Jar
4»TV
2
Large
1 "T-
Par5
I/C
Cashmere Bpyquet
SOAP
2
Reg-
17«
Bgrs
I /- V
W
Bouquet
SOAP
Large
Pkg.
29c
VEL
Tuetday, November 9, 1954
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
* IV SOCIETY
Phone 7-3431 Between 8 A. M. and 4 P. M.
ilendar
Tuesday
November 9
fhe
Business
Woman's Circle
I the First Baptist Chuhch will
sday, November 9,
at
. in the
home of Mrs.
|de Osburn, 405 S.
Greening.
members are urged to attend.
let Tuesd
E p. m. i
the Golden Circle Class of the
1st Baplist
Church will meet
1'sday, November 9, at 7:30 p.
(in the home of Mrs. Phinis Her-
320 East 13th, for their month-
Ibusiness and
social meeting.
Glen Seaver
It
will be co-hos
IriJtt
Same night wil! be held at tha
Ipe Country Club at 7:45 p. m.
jsday, Npvember 9. Hosts will
|jMr. and Mrs. George P. New-
and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ste-
h.
.
hapter AE of the P. E. O. Sis-
lood will meet Tuesday, Novem-
9, at 3 p. m. with Mrs. Mack
Stuart.
The Iris Garden Club meets at
2:30 Tuesday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. Claud Sutton, with Mrs.
C. M. Agee as associate hostess.
Arrangements for
the afternoon
will be chrysanthemums.
' Mrs. Claud Sutton will entertain
the
Builders Sunday School Class
of the First Baptist Church
on
Tuesday night at 7:30 at her home
on the Rosston road.
ference held in Prescott on Thurs-
day, October 28.
Reports were given by the Bod-
caw P. T. A. along with the reports
from other P. T. A.'s represented.
In the afternoon, a short skit on
"Leadership Training"
was pre*
sented by seven of the Bodcaw re*
presentatives: Mrs. Carl Lewis,
Mrs. Chester
Whittert, Mrs. Jr.
Goodwin, Mrs. Bill Jones, Mrs. J.
D. Allen, Mrs.
Ray
Martin and
Mrs. K. K. Mitchell.
Others from Bodcaw who attend-
ed the conference were Mrs. Her-
man May, Mrs. Teddy May, Mrs.
Otha Mullins, Mrs. Enoch Benson,
Mrs. Clarence Dunn, Mrs. E. D.
Downs, Mrs. Earl May, Mrs. Alex
Boswell, Mrs. Cliff Butler, Mrs.
Ben Trahan and Mrs. E, D. Spen.
cer.
._«-.i
The Ambassador Class of Gar-
rell Memorial Baplist Church will
meet Tuesday, November 9, at 7:30
p. m. in the home of Mrs. Wade
Warren, wilh Mrs. Clifton Billings
as co-hostess.
Wednesday November 10
The John 'Cain Chapter of the
D. A. R. will meet in Ihe home of
Mrs. B. L. Reltig, 420 Wesl Avenue
ndia, Ceylon and Pakistan. U was
nnouneed that "Korea Day" would
16 Sunday, November 14,
The meeting was closed with the
V. S. C. S. benediction.
Refreshments were served to 50
members and two guests, the Rev.
and Mrs. Doss.
Hope Jr.-Sr. High
P. T. A. To Meet
"Team Work for Better Schools"
will be the theme of the program
when the Hope Junior-Senior High
School P. T. A. meets
Thursday,
November 11, at 3:30 p. m. in the
auditorium of the Junior High Scho-
ol. "What do we want of our scho-
ols" and "Is Yours a Good School"
discussed by Mrs. P. L. Perkins,
ei faculty member, and Mrs. Dick
jviia. u, oj. jn.i:LLi£, i^v vvtiM- rtvuuut: , ~ ------- "
,,, ,
t 11 ,«^
B .on Wednesday, November 10, at1 Watkins, a parent, will be followed
12 noon. Mrs. R. L. Searcy of
,
a buzz session. Ihe Glee Club
* SAENGER
*
LAST DAY •
•
•
FEATURE TIMES •
.
.
. .
-
wisville. Mrs. Dick Watkins and ' "nder the direction of Mrs. B. C.
Hyatt will sing, and n speech stu-
'dent w111 brm8 the natlonal Presl'
dent's message.
The aim of the National Congress
of Parents and Teachers is to give
Garland P. T. A. will meet Wed- every generation a chance to serve
esday, November 10, at 3 p. m. children and youth and the aim of
2:56
- 7:11
! FULL LENGTH
-'
l O SllMI'S
'
il U1U1H HIOUl'S !i,f,ii»ioui>nii~;
OgNE WITHJHE WIND :
GUUBIE • VIVIQUtlGH • lESUEHOWRO
OUVlAdeHAVIlUND
•
.TECHNICOLOR!
1. "DROOPY" CARTOON
2. LATE NEWS EVENTS
e guest speaker. Executive com-
mittee will meet at 2:30.
t WED.-THURS. •
Up Front on the West's
deadly Twenty-Mile run!
to show their appreciation for this
fine spirit by enlisting and working
in this important organization whi
Wednesday November 10
ch tends to bring closer togethe
Patmos P. T. A. will have a sup- the home, the school and the chur
er in the school lunchroom Wed- ch.
esday night, November 10, at 7:30. [ Believing that fathers and emplo-
Each family is asked to bring a yed mothers are interested in be-
overed dish.
coming better
acquainted
with
their child's school and teachers
the P. T. A. had a very successful
SHOKRIN
A WAINIKIIOS. PICTUIE
avneMORRIS
^PRESCRIPTION'
MEANS
PROTECTION1
Wore often than you might sup-
)se,
we hear the question:
Vhy do I need a prescription to
ly the medicine the doctor has
dered to make me well? It
st seems to make the cost go
i,"
It's easy to see why some
ople ask this, and the answer
just as 'simple. Your doctor's
•escription is written for y9ur
p'im.
It is his explicit
der by us, your pharmacists.,
e are'trained by years of col-
ge and practical experience to
low his scientific instructions
the letter.
We are also the final check-
int
before
the
medicine
aches you. We double-check
1 prescriptions. It's our duty
see that there are no mistakes
id to call the doctor if there is
y question about his orders.
[So,
"prescription" r e a l l y
earif ^"protection" . . . your
•otec'flon. We're happy to pro-
de it.
!
IWard & Son
DRUGGIST
Phone 7-2292
102 W. Second St.
Irs. Richard Howards of Hope
•c associate hostesses. Members
lease note
change in
meeting
,
, a
.
.
he executive board will meet at1 the Hope school unit is to have
15. The meeting will be dismissed | every mother and father or guar
. • ..
°
.
.
..
- ' j:««
rtf
T,,Mir*»._C!e,«ir»t' TTicrVi Rr»hnn
n time for the members to attend
ic Fire Prevention Parade.
Hope Federation of Garden Clubs
ill meet in the home of Mds. Ha£-
Id M. Brents, Oakhaven, on Wed-
esday,' November 10, at 10 a. m.
dian of Junior-Senior High Schoo:
students belonging to and attend
ing when possible the Parent Tea-
cher Association. If parents expect
their children to be interested
in
their books, then they should show
an interest in the school the chil
ed.
-au.a.y, iiuveiiiucj.
au, at AU ct. in-
*
-.
.
acn club is urged to be represen- dren attend, and the teachers who
train them. Never in a school P
T. A. have the teachers been more
congenial
and cooperative
than
those in the Hope
Junior-Senioi
Paisley P. T. A. will meet Wed-
esclay, November 10, at 3 p. m.
cauetj, .i.'iu vtuuuti j . u , c i i . u p . iii.
-
_
.
„,
i j
t the school. Charles Gough will High School, so parents are asked
Mrs. Bob MasslngUI
Entertains Business
Womans Circle No. 2
The Business
Woman's
Circle
No. 2 of the First Baptist Church
met Monday evening in the home
of Mrs. Bob Massingill.
After a brief business
session,
Mrs. P. J, Holt gave the devotional.
The program was presented by
he following special guests, Mrs.
Basil York,
Mrs. C. C. Collins,
VIrs. Frank Douglas, Mrs. W. H.
Gurtter, Sr., and Mrs. A .D. Bran-
nan, Sr. The title of the program
was "African Missions".
Senior Ladles
Auxiliary Has
Thanksgiving Program
Court Docket
Municipal Court of Hope, Arkan-
sas, November 8, 1954.
City Docket
Herman
Williams,
improper
lights on car, Forfeited $1.00 cash
bond.
Herman Williams. No State Car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Herman Williams, Fictitious car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Arthur Jackson.
Running Stop
sign, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond
Daniel Huddleston, Frank Adams,
Speeding, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond,
Kennie Atkins, Berlin Fuller, Ha-
zardous driving,
Forfeited $10.00
cash bond,
Charlie Lee Howard,
No driv-
ers license, Forfeited $5.00 cash
bond.
B. M. Mouser, Robert E. Lee,
Failure to yield right of way, Plea
gulity, fined $5.00.
Lela Bell Jones, Hershel Ward,
Shirk Conway, Drunkenness, For-
feited $10.00 cash bond.
Thn QO«;«,. T n ^ '
A, -r
*
Calvin McPherson, Assault & Bat-
The Senior Ladies Auxiliary of torv Vnrfou^
«.ln'nn „„„*, ,—A
the Unity Baptist Church met Mon-
day afternoon, November 8, at 2
o'clock, in the home of Mrs. E. L.
Lane.
Songs were led'by Elder White,
who also led in prayer.
Mrs. Barney Gaines, president
of the
auxiliary, presented
the
Thanksgiving program, assisted by
Mrs.
Tom Anderson, Mrs. Lane and
Mrs. Howard Collier. Mrs. Jesse
Sinclair gave the devotional from
the 100th Psalm.
A report of the previous meeting
was given by Mrs. Sinclair, and
Mrs. Anderson dismissed the group.
The hostess served refreshments
to 11 members.
tery, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Eugene Gill, Clarence
Chipps,
Gaming, Plea guilty, fined $10.00.
James Wilbert, W. L. Holbert,
Willie Malone, Gaming, Forfeited
$10.00 cash bond.
State Docket
James D. Welch, Operating a mo-
tor vehicle vvthout a driver's licen-
se, Plea guilty, fined $5.00.
E. F. Simmons, Passing in a "No
Passing" zone, Plea guilty,
JEined
$5.00.
Continued from *»flge Ofl*
Mayfair
quivered
with
gossip.
Margaret had been to church. And
because
it
was
Remembrance
Sunday, she had been dowri
in
Whitehall to stand by reverently
while her sister, Queen Elizabeth,
honored the men and women who
had lost their lives in wars. Then
in the afternoon she went to thc
movies.
Theater managers Were
inter-
viewed, and they 'said: "Tradition-
shattering," "what
a
surprise,"
it must have been unofficial" and
"tut-tut and tch-tchl"
The objection to royalty's going
to movies on Sunday is inspired
largely by the conservative ele-
ments among English churchmen,
Whose influence Is great. The pop-
ulation
is being
reminded con-
stantly that the sovereign is the
defender of the faith, and that the
Lord's Day must be respected.
But curiously while Margaret is
being talked about lor
breaking
tradition, thc Church of England
itself is being sniped at by per-
sons whose moral indignation gets
stirred up
easily. The
church,
which lately turned its financial
affairs over to a committee
of
experts, made a handsome clean-
ing in the stock exchange.
It's
gambling, say critics, and
natibn simmers.
Louis and Ernest Wyndor of New
York, and by Dr. Mortoti L. Lev-
in and associates of Albany. N.Y.
A British study just a bit later
Some folks think they are a s6-
ctol success when they master the
art of sayf ng nasty things th a hke
way.
'
J^Mi F. JtjSnkfel,
Robert W. Hansetl that m
itt a false fkc fiiilrM
wanted to be Wcked.lip
Arrives."
/
* -
Hansen said "I -*ould
punish you most by
case and letting you „_.
ydu another chance* I'll
t months in the '
ion."
'
' • " . '
by
Dr. Richard Doll and Prof.
A. Bradford Hill, ptjinling to
an
association between cigarettes and
lung cancer, also was published by
American newspapers.
But these and other reports com-
ing still
loiter seemed to
find
l'tt.1
Deaths Over
the Nation
Brookvvood P. T. A. will meet
Wednesday in the school auditorium j night meeting in October and will
t 3 p. m. The executive board will have another such meeting in the
All members are spring.
Yard of Month
Winners Announced
The Hope Garden Clubs announce
the following
as
"Yard-of-the-
Month" winners for November:
Ward 1-Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hane-
gan, 606 East Second;
Ward 2-Mr. and Mrs. Sam War-
mack, 616 South Washington;
Ward 3-Mr. and Mrs. J. M. O'-
Neal, 621 West Avenue C;
Ward 4-Mr. and
Mrs. Elbert
Jones,, 420 North Elm;
Oakhaven and Beverly Hills-Mr,
and Mrs. Jack Carnahan, Oak-
naven.
Notice
The party planned for the Inter-
mediate MYF of the First Metl>
dist Church will not be held as
lanned. The date will be announc-
d later.
By. The Associated Press
San Francisco
Charles
B.
Henderson, 81, U.S. senator from
Nebada from 191? to 1921 and . a
former chairman of' the Board of
the Reconstruction Finance Corp.
Died Monday.
•
Glen
Head,'
N.
Y.
' Julian
Starkweather Ma'spn, 78, .'former
edito'r-in-chief of the New
York
Evening Post, who held ..editorial
posts on several Chicago newspa-
pers before
becoming managing
editor of the Naw York Herald
Tribune in 1922. Born in Chicago.
DiedMonday.
!
Baltimore
Dr. Francis
S.
neet at 2:15.
urged to attend.
Oglesby P. T. A. will meet Wed-
nesday, November 10, at 3 p._m.
.'he executive meeting will be held
at 2:30. '
Planned projects for this year
include a donation to the Junior
and Senior libraries, records and
films for visual education, supplies
for first aid rooms for both schools,
and contributions to the school ca-
feteria, Girl Scouts, and the youth
The Bodcaw P. T. A. will meet at center. The only methods of raising
he high school at 7 p. m. on Wed- j funds to carry out these projects
nesday, November 10. After the are the annual membership drive
•egular program, a short skit will' and talent
program.
The talent
be presented and then coffee and program will not be given until
doughnuts will be served in
chool cafeteria.
tfce
Thursday November 11
Hope Junior-Senior High School
sometime
in December
but the
membership drive has been in full
sway for four weeks now and will
close this week. The goal for this
year is 850 members but to date
P. T. A. will meet Thursday at 3:30 I there are only 300. Parents who
D. m. in the Junior High auditor-1 haven't sent their dues of only fif-
Him. The executive board will meet ty cents per member per year, to
'
at 3 p. m.
school by their child are asked to
do so tomorrow. Or, contact the
Ladies of the Eastern Star will membership
chairmen, Mrs.
sponsor a spaghetti supper Thurs-j Franklin
Horton
or
Mrs. ' Jim
day,
November 11, at 6:30 at the. Cole. In the definite pageant of the
Masonic H^ll. The public is invit- parent-teacher movement there is
ed. Adults, $1.00; children, 50 cents.;need for all: there is work for all.
Parents, teachers and all communi-
ty citizens interested in the Junior-
Senior High School are invited to
Thursday November 11
The Adult Fellowship of the First
Methodist Church will meet Thurs-j join the P. T. A. to make this the
day at 7 o. m. for a pot luck sup-1 best year it has ever had.
per. Guest speaker will be the Rev. | All members
and prospective
~~
" •
~ '
""— members are urged to make a spe-
cial effort to attend the meeting
Thursday and all interested persons
are extended a cordial invitation to
visit.
Edmund Pendleton. Baby
will be provided.
sitters
The Blevins P. T. A. will meet
in Ihe high school auditorium Thur-
sday, November 11, at 7 p. m. A
special program is planned and all
parents and patrons are urged to
be present.
Beacon Sunday School
Class Meets Monday
On Monday evening, November 8
, ,
,
members of the
Beacon Sunday
Hope B & PW Club will celebrate School class of the First Baptis
its 30th birthday anniversary
on church.met in the home of Mrs
Thursday
November 11, ^ 7 Russell McClain for a" combination
p. m. with a ban(lue^___a^kejlotel business and social meeting.
Moving pictures
were taken o
those
present,
following a shot-
business session. Mrs, Fred Bar
Barlow. Every member is urged to
be present.
Bodcaw P. T. A. Members
Attend District Conference
The Bodcaw P. T. A. was
represented
at the
District Con-
gave the devotional.
Refreshments
were
served t
Red Hot Wednesday
SPECIALS
IXTRA SPECIAL
All I ET Cf*^C
ULLtT EGGS
Doz, 29c
Births
The Rev. and Mrs. Joe W. Hun-
er of Emmet, announce the birth
)f a daughter, Vicki Lynne, on
Dctober 29, at the Cora Donnell
lospital in Prescott.
Cigarette
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bales of
Stamps, Announced the arrival of a
on, John Robert, on Saturday,
November 6. The paternal grand-
>arents are Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Jales. The maternal grand par-
ents' are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harri-
on of Locksborg.
Coming and Going
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Hasky,
VIr. and Mrs. Bob Magness, and
. and Mrs. W. E. McFarland of
Smmet, attended
the Arkansas-
Rice game in Little Rock on Sat-
urday afternoon.
Schwentker, 50, •, nationally known
child specialist,"professor"of pedi-
atrics at Johnss;Hopkins
Medical
School and pediamciah:in' chief at
Johns Hopkins''Hospital. Born
in
Schenectady, N . y . Died Monday.
Elizabeth N. J.
John
J. Mc-
Gbvvan, 7, G, press representative
for the late
President Woodrow
Wilron, treasurer of the Democrat-
ic State Committee and
former
newspaperman rBorh iri Charlottes-
town, P.E.I., Canada. Died Sunday.
JTt
Be?voir, Va
Maj
Gen
Arthur W. Penqje, 56, commanding
general of the Army Engineer Cen-
ter at Ft. Belvoir. Died Monday.
Great Falls, Mont.
George W.
Hey, 79, who made his violin de-
but at 3 with the Syracuse, N Y.,
symphony orchestra, 'former man-
ager of a Billings, Mont, opera
house orphestra, and founder
of
Ihe Great Falls Conservatory
of
Music. Died Monday.
' Saginaw, Mich.
Chelsea Cur-
tis Fraser, 78, violin maker and au-
thor. Born in New Sarum,
Died Sunday.
Continued rrom Page One
mo'st big
public issues,
didn't
spring forth overnight.
Some 15 years ago, Dr. Alton
Ochsner, famous New Orleans sur-
geon, was reporting
observations
which led him to :believe that cig-
arette smoking .was a cause of
lung cancer. Just yesterday
Dr.
Ochsner published a bo'ok, "Smok-
ing and Cancer, a Doctor's
Re-
port" Julian messner, Inc.) which
reviews all the evidence used to
indict cigarettes as a cause cf
lung cancer and heart disease.
In 1939, an Argentine physician
Dr. A. H. Rcffo; reported that tars
obtained from tobacco often could
produce cancer in the:skin of rab-
bits.
the American public only mildly
interested.
Perhaps
many m i s s e d 'the
rtories. Perhaps it takes time and
repetition
in the
absence
of
rtark drama
to
get
rapt at-
tention. Or perhaps many people
wanted stronger evidence.
No doubt some dismissed the re-
ports as another instance of cry-
ing "wolf" at cigarettes. For to-
bacco has been accused of many
Sins in the past
of leading to
poverty, of creating mustaches on
women, making men sterile, pois-
oning the,unborn babies of smok-
ing mothers, contributing to tuber-
culosis.
Smoking has been banned
at
some times in a lew countries. In
Denmark
smokers and
snuffers
Help Wa
2 waitresses, penw
ent empoy
income. Apply" i
^
son*
f
.
- -
Barlow HolSl
Ho Phone Colls/ Please
DODGE
has
done1
it
t jv*
>•*•
These and other reports were
mentioned in the news through the
were once publicly whipped.
In
Turkey, King Amuralh once de-
creed beheading for anyone, who
smoked.
Not until about two years
ai?o
did the long-smouldering
contro-
versy over cigarettes really start
to build up
into the public con-
sciousness.
Evidence was being discovered
and rediscovered to blame' ciga-
rettes for sickness and
untimely
death.- ,So also was evidence
to
question that evidence, or to blame
dther
factors
for
the
troubles
being attribxited to cigarettes.
The public was to become > the
jury. As such, the public was to
hear a good deal,
from
' both
newspapers
headlined
years.,
In 1D50,
stories from a cancer;
congress
in Paris reporting three separate
studies, mostly statistical,-
which
linked cigarettes with at least part
betted
wait!
Flair-
Fashionefi
of
increase in lung
amoh{< Americans. ,, The
cancer
studies
were made by ; Dr. Ochsner,
by
Doctors Evarts Graham
of
St.
Out.
Mrs. Katherine Webb of Harbor
Seach, Michigan, is visiting her
sister, Mrs, E. G. Coop, and other
relatives.
Mrs. Anna Judson
hs returned
from a week's visit with her dau-
ghter, Mrs. Jewel Tolley, Mr. Tol-
ley and family in Beaumont, Texas.
Mrs. E. G. Coop and Mrs. Ka-
Harmony in
Congress Hits
a Sour Note
By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON
WASHINGTON (ff)
. The post-
election theme
of harmony be-
tween President
Eisenhower and
the Democratic
4th
Congresse
echoed some dissonant notes tpday
in the wake of. an exchange be-
therine Webb have returned from! tween party chairmen and new
a visit with Mrs. Coop's daughter,
sibie;'-public interest" coming at a
time when, Hall said, responsible
leaders in Congress, are pledging
cooperation.
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas
who will be majority floor leader
when the .Democrats organize the
new Senate in January publicly
criticized some of President Eisen-
hower's campaign remarks at a
news conference Saturday. He also
set out certain, conditions for coop
eration on democratic congression-
al leaders during the next
two
years.
:
.
.
-
-
.
U. S. mints have turned out 4^4
billion nichols since 1866 when the
coin was first issued,
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS WASTE
NnwtinB backache, loss ot pep and energy,
headaches and dizziness may be due to slow-
down of kidney function. Doctors say good
kidney function Is very important tp cottd
health. When some everyday condition, such
us stress and strain, causes this Important
function to slow down,many folka suffer non-
Sing backache—feel miserable, Minor blad-
der irritations due to cold or wrong diet may
cause Betting up nights orf requentpassaged.
Don't neglect your kidneys If these condi-
tions bother you. Try Doan's Pills—a mild
diuretic, Used successfully by millions for
over 60 years. It's amazing how many time*
Doan's give happy relief from these discom-
forts— help thelSmUcsof kidney tubes and fil-
ters flush out waste. Get Doan'a Fills todayl
207-E. Secbni
Hope/ Ark;,
;?4 ^ ^t
, i f«r,
Mrs. V. A. Keth and Mr. Keith in
Dallas, Texas.
Mrs. George Sundstrom and son,
George A., of Phoenix, Ariz., are
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J, A. Davis, and other relatives.
^oodard Cox, Mrs. A. D. Glass, Ji
Mrs. William Groves. Mrs. Horac
Hubbard, Mrs,
Jim James, Mrs
Lloyd Leverett, Mrs. Orval Tayloi
Mrs.' George Thompson; Mrs. Win
die Thompson,
the teacher; as-
sociate members, Mrs. C. M. Ro-
gers, Jr., and Mrs. J. B. Martin.
and the. special guest, Mrs. Fred
Barr.
ELICIOUS ROUND
Lb.
, WHITI, YELLOW SWANS DOWN
Box
AKE MIX
The Rev. and Mrs. Doss
Guest Speakers at
W. S. C. S. Meeting
The Woman's Society of Christian
Service of the First Methodist Churi.
ch met Monday, November 8, at'
2 p. m.
church,.
in the sanctuary of the
The worship service opened with
a song, "Happy the Home", and
Mrs. J. C. Carlton gave the de-
votional using as her subject "The
Dawn of a Soul", Mrs. C. D. Les-
ter closed with prayer.
Mrs. Johnny McCabe, a member
of Circle Three, presented the Rev
and Mrs. Alfred Doss of DeQueen,
who gave reports of the National
Family Life Conference held in
Cleveland, Ohio, which they attend-
ed in October.
Mrs. Albert Graves,
president,
presided over the business meet-
ing. Repovts were made, and the
circle count taken.
Circle
Five
winning wjtlj 15 members present
Hospital Notes
Julia Chester
Admitted: Mrs. Annie Madlock,
Hope, Mrs. Homer C. Gaines, Hope.
Mr. Clyde Zinn, Hope, Mrs. Lucy
Sipes, Columbus, Mrs. Sallie Col-
lier, Hope, Mr.
Edgar Lafferty,
Patmos, Mrs. Nettie Butler, Hope,
Paul
Rawson,
Cape Giradeau,
Mo., Ruby Lee Briggs, Hope.
Discharged:
Mrs. Dan
Green,
Hope, Mrs. Tom Gathright, Sara-
toga, Mr. Steve Atkins, Hope, Mrs.
John S.
Matthews, Hope, Mrs.
Wendell Sowards and son, McCas-
kill, Sarah Jones, Fulton, Dorothy
Powell and son, Hope.
Mr .and Mrs. Homer C, Gaines.
Hope, have a daughter, Mary Loui-
se, born at 10:02 p. m. Friday.
Branch
Admitted: ,Mrs. W. A. Powell,
Patmos, Mr. Steve Bader, Hope,
Mrs. Inez Tefteller, Hope.
Discharged: Ruby Lee Fleming,
Hope, Mrs. Mpnrpe Samuels, Rt.
3, Hope, Mrs. H, L. Levins, Wash-
ington.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Tefteller of
Hope, announce the arrival of a
baby boy on November 6, 1954.
statements by Democratic leaders.
Democratic National Chairman
Stpehen A. Mitchell said yesterday
in a statement that Vice Presi-
dent Nixon snould "retract
and
apologize for his campaign excess-
es." If Nixon continues, Mitchell
added, "I hope that the President
will take the opportunity to dis-,
associate himself from such char-
acter assassination by public dis-
avowal."
Republican National
Chairman
Leonard W. Hall replied of Mitch-
ell's remarks: "This is in the worst
possible taste and In the worst pos-
LOOK YOUR LOVELIEST
THE BEAUTY BOX
Open 6 days a week
After 5 appointments for
the \yorking girls
Latest Hair Styling
Phone 7-5850
112 S. Main
Ruth Hoelscher Janell Roberts
ON SALE
CLEAN UP MERCHANDISE FROM OUR
HARVEST
'; >
l»r>
;.*m
3 ONLY
MEN S TOPCOATS • •
SMALL LOT -- BROKEN SIZES
Program!
YORK M
Selected radio
NE
programs tonight:
NBC
7 People
Are Funny;
7:30
Dragnet;
8 Radio Theater,
"My Man Godfrey."
CBS — 7 Stop The Music; 3:30
Amos And Andy: 9:15 Dance Time,
ABC
7 Jack Gregson
Hour;
8 Town Meeting
Discussion.
MBS
7 Treasury '
Th,P ScEW-oh,.
pole-frame
cuts farm building costs
• You pen s*v» wp to h*M the cost cl
erecting an4 royfftflj" fog Voa* >WWi
ole-type
supported
Creosoted
CHILDREN* DRESSES.. $2.0(1
BROKEN SIZES AND COLORS LADIES
HANSEN GLOVES
I ONLY —SIZE 40
MAN S SUIT . . ,
X**^
.,wt'?
t
*> Hr-f*
; I'v^V^
- $y#
^m
u^!
• •
$8,95 RACK OF
Fall Cott
Reduced
LADIES DRESSES
MEN 5 NYLON SHORTS It
3 QNUY — $17,95 5T, MARYS
•], .
.,
ALL WOOL BLANKETS $1
i'1'IBIiKij^
I
5MAIL W)T
JEAN SETS
ItUE JIANS
*&'
1'-!','•
A'sf.'^y
«,#"*•
5k S&C ;•.
1*1:'^ £frj;
M O M S T A R ,
H O P E , A f t K A N S A S
I-JWMIM"- .;,}', .
fe>? #>
|C» '•/ ,
j.
<;,? • • • •
ire
™-fe\-
s
.™jtW \ < *
t. Credited with
SflejStfra
tnatch
__._lal'All«l
$7. ItnjttMrtl
m is Wtt.
MARKETS
Ho
\\\
elides
i fhe
tullding
# 3t M*' M&
tk£ outs'Md
W "1 jbre-
t An .an at-
tWWWtOlA'* K«S
• to
think
against lha
>'Ugh widows
|« at ,$100,000, said
s Had", Been afcumu-
iri6r,s>veral days,
structure
Me
?W»*
•f&sr
,r: "
smmmn^'^i
*
fe4^ * t"-,H> *,*
J
JAfc-B-Q
tT A jJJ',"'*S^. '. ( . *_^
Ff*^r°<
<"
W&ii
s 12,060; lower;
liSO-75; about a
hoke Nd. Is and 2s 19.85! ISO-
Ib Iflf&.SOOO; 225-240 Ih 1900-
); 246-260 Ib W.tS«i&.$${ sdWs 400
down
tt.2S-?3j
fdW at 18.00;
iei"* POV/S 15.50-17,2,'}!
b6ars
3XW-J5.00, ,
Cattle 6,000; calves 1,700: about
ady but little ddndj tltillty and
commercial cow* 85CM2.06; can-
and citttSfs e.00-d.5(5:
llsht
iitlly c a n ft e r s 1&0-?0; bulls
ItJtfdyJ
Utility
arid
commercial
l.OO'llOO; cfttlner and cutte* btilU
.OO-lO.SOi vpnldrs steady:
good
nd choice 17,06-23.00; few
at
500! commercial art dloW
good
2.00-IO.OO; slaughter calves slow;
orrtrnerclal arid goad 11,00-15.00;
Hilly and low commercial 8.00-
0.00,
heep 1,700; wool lambs weak to
I lower; icveral lots good
to
rime 1800-19.50; early top 19.50;
fend not fully established;
a«ed
hecp steady; ."laughter ewes 3.00
.00.
POULTRY AND PRODUCE
CHICAGO' W) Live
poul
tr
toady ort Hens; barely stendy on
•oung stock; receipts 971 coops
66,425 Ib; F O.B. paying prices un-
hangedt Hoavy hens 16-19; light
lens 12-14; fryers and broilers 23-
5! old roosters 12-12.5; caponette
young hert turkeys
34-5(5;
gecsc 23.
Butter firm;
receint s 017,814;
vholcsale buylrig prices I'A lower
o
1 "higher; 93 score AA 58.5;
92 A 68.25-5; 90 B 57.5; 89 C 56
cnrn 90 B-8; 89 C 6.
Eggs mixed;
receipt s
10,552
wholesale buying prices 1 lower to
higher; U.S. large white 34.5
mixed 35.5; U. S. mediums 27; US
ttandards 2 ;
current
receipts
none; dirties 20; checks 20
NEW YORK STOCKS
NEW YORJC 1<P) The sto ck m ar
<et developed a certain amount o
hesitancy today following its sen
satkmal post-qlection surge aheac
On .balance, , the market
w o
barely higher. Gains
of 1 to
points were found in several sec
tions of the list, but most advance
small. Losses appeared fre
guently, sometimes passing a poln*
1 ^Business maintained a swift par
at-'around the highest levels of th
.GRAIN
!
' Wheat: Noric. Corn:
No. 2 ye
low41.51; No. 3 yellow 1.47-1.49
No 4 137'/4-1.43'/2; No.. 5 129-135
M>; sa mole -grade yellow 1.2
Oats: Sample gr^'de white 87.
_
Bareley ,nomin,ai :MalJ>ng .ehoic
1.31-52; feed 1.10-22.
explosion," \.said Dale "Plunk, 18
year-old high school junior. "It wa
terrible."
j|y^H%«Mlay, November 11,1954
S^S:k4!iwfT-.i^i- • n A V
rmgti
jgitffirf? ;
/||^ill-'n9,t be ppen for business
feffife-above 'date, being a legal
jFj«3j(8fl •
'
,
J?$'v'; v
•
• •
'itizens National Bank
First National Bank
m&fk''*'
it^rr" -
®«v
' "*i~ -.''
HOPE
Three Mental
Escapees
Still ot Large
LITTLE
ates of
the
cfimiftal
i'ouf
ward
Governors of
South Divided
on Segregation
feOCA BATON, Fla. t*) Sdtilhern
states, divided as they are on their
approach to the explosive school
:sFiie, may find 9 'com-
either on the conference floor, or
away.
Three states
Gccrpia, Louisia-
na end South Caroline, have tak-
en action to put themselves in a
por.ition • to keep Negroes out of
white schools.
Georgia adopted a constitutional
rmendmeht Nov. 2 permitting the
legislature to abolish the public
system
tion.
Louisiana
rather than end segrega-
approved
an amend-
ap-
out-
Er-
,
-
,
,.
....
ftiori ground approach to the prob- mont at thc sam-^ time permitting
l«rr. at the annual Southern Cover- 1 'he state tc invoke police powers
afiod frcfn the State hdspital herd
st night .after threatening four
ttohdants.
Deitt Tatum, 27, of Parogould,
hargcd v/ith staying his wife, gaV<3
rhself up a few, minutes. after
he escape which occurred about
40 p. m.
The other
three
still were at
arge today.
State police Identified them as
ohnhie areen, 37, an ex-convict
ho was arrested at Fort Smith
n a charge of burglary; Char'es
rice, 23, Litild Rock, charged with
urglor, and L. B. Veach (address
nknown,) charged wilh l&rceny.
All but Veach Were undergoing 30-
ay sanity tests at the hospital,
Officers said Veach waa from
nother ward at the hospital and
nly recently had been transferred
i the criminal ward section.
Tntum told Little Rock detectives
hot Green and Price •"abandoned
s" (Tntum and Veach) after ctt-
isting their aid to oscapa. . •
Green and Price were'; believed
o be together with a third^person
n an automobile which
Tatum
aid was -waiting"' for them when
hey made the break.
Tatum told .officers, the braak
wan planned by Price..
It was the second escape of four
nrtiates of the ward sir.ce'. May.
t also was-the second time that
attendant C. H.: Ahart had' been
hreatened with a sharp instru-
ment.
' • - ' ' . -
Ahart said he was standing near
he door to Ihe fire escape when
3recn approached, 'drew, a knife,
arid ordered • him
to - unlock
the
dcor.
Ahavt said that 'another "atten-
dant, Charles Copeland, shouted to
him to stop scirffling with Green.
Other attendents, A. H. Williams
and W. N. .Leach,, were threatened
by Tatum and Veach, Ahart said.
Tatum told officers Price had
planned to head for Mexico
or
California.
Attendants said they didn't know
where Green .got the knife.
ftor's Conference
Thursday.
opening
h e r e to maintain segregation m the pub-
lic schools.
The
conference
meeting
date
falls less thfen a month from the
lime the IT. S.
Supreme
Court
cptns arguments Dec. 0 on how
end when it should order Into ef-
fect its May 17 edict that segre-
gated public shhools must end.
There's no mention of scgregrt-
tion matters as such on the official
conference program, but there's
South Carolina's Legislature al-
ready has authority to abolish t'rw
school system.
A fourth state, Mississippi, voles
Dec. 2l on a proposition to em-
power the Legislature to abolish
public schools ns a means of re-
taining segregation.
Some of the oth?r southern states
have indicated they thought
the
cient time.
A possible' middle ground
proach in the Florida plan
lined by Ally. Gen. Richard
v'in
of that state in a
Supreme
Court brief in' which he pleads for
time and for a large, degree of lo-
cal determination as to when seg-
regated schools should be ended.
The FloHd'a plan provides
that
in cases where suits are brought to
gain
admittance to
segregated
schools, thc trial courts should- be
given wide discretion to hold hear
ings, and to
determine
on the
basis of local conditions whether
the petition should be granted.
In cases where schools author-
ties and thn trial courts detcrmin
cd thc races shouldn't be integrat-
ed, new hearings could be held at
a later datd to determine whether
conditions may change.
little doubt the subject Will be one problem could
,
the most lively.'to come Up'the Supreme Court
Arkansans to
Arrive in U, S.
SEATTLE,
USS Gen. G-.
Wash. (UP)
Th-2
M. Randall will ar
Do: ado; SFC Boy E Schnarr,
tie Rock; Airman Will.am R. Sm-
ngton, Attica; Cpl. Ernest S. oul
Ivan; Rosiej
PFC Hartzell Wat-
son,
Gregory; ^and Pvt. Johnny
Whittle, Piggott.
Women have had a lower death
rive at the Army port of embarka
Sion here Wednesday
v/ith
2,269
pasrengers from the Far East.
Among them will be tire follow-
ing Arkansas servicemen:
Cpl. Collier
Anders. Jr.,
Au-
vergne; Sgt. John
R. Anthony
Bearden; S-Sgt. James L. Besly,
Hazen; PFC Rofus
Cobb, Jr. Au-
susta; Capt. John C.
Freeman,
Crt-ssett; Airman 3-. W.
Harper,
Wilmar; Cpl. Charles G. Harwell,
Okay;
Airman
Winsley
Henry,
Mar'ianna-; Cpl. Claudie- L. Higgins,
Fort Smith.
Cpl. Carl Hudson, Rudy; Air-
man Albert E.'Jankins,
Truman;
Cpl.
Willard
G. Lawson, Rogers;
Pvt. Melvir. C. Locke, Camdcn;
rale than men for many years andiCp!. Jessie M. Martin, Okean; Air-
since 1930 the lives of women have, Iman William J.'Moore, Jr., Wynne
Mr. Fulbrighf
Has Problems
WASHINGTON W)
If the Mc-
Carthy censure debate runs on to*
any great length, Sen. Fulbright
(D-Ark) may have 'to become A
New York commuter.
Fulbright while greatly
inter-
ested in the censure proceedings,
also is a U. S. delegate to the-Unit-
ed Nation's session now.; going on
in New York.
He said today he will stay in
Washington for a time to see how'
the censure matter proceeds in the
Senate but that he wants to return
to the U. N. Sessions.
.
•Fulbright'was1 one .of the origi-
nal group of senators urging adop-
tion of the
resolution
by , Sen.
Flanders (R-Vt) calling for cen-
sure of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis).
The Flanders resolution war sub-
mitted to •'• a
special
committee
which recommended censure.
Fulbright told a Reporter it 's.
his present inclination to take. little,
or no part in,the debate. It, would
appear better stratgey, he said, to
let the Watkins cprnmittee
pre-
sent the case and then permit Mc-
Carthy and his supporters to do
the talking.
»
, , . ' . . . -
• . . • . . •
Six European nations, Luxem-
bourg, Andorra, Liechtenstein, San j
Marino, Monaco arid Vatican City
have a total area smalled than that
o fthe King Ranch in Texas.
Fdom 1903 through 1014, more
than 750,000 immigrants come to
the United States and more than a
million, entered
in six of those
years.
•M,
$?'>.yl've waited years and
fv
gears /or power as exciting
;
^ as the '55 FORD'S new
BUGGER-TORQUE!/
i,
ON DISPLAY
FRIDAY
far move than those of men.
$19.95 NOW $14.95
Get them before the
season opens and save.
WESTERN AUTO
ASSOCIATE StORE
_
•
——
Bad
Colds
WICKS
WVAPORUB
RelieveSuffeting
SHOP
IGGLY WIGGLY
AND YOU GET
DOUBLE
S&H GREEN STAMP'S. WEDNESDAY
(ON PURCHASES OF $2.50 OR MORE)
Prices Effective Wed. Nov. 10th
Pineapple Juice 25c
ARMOURSMilk
&IOc
BEST MEAT IN TOWN
'
<>*^P .
1 *
I11
'
'
'
"
{
;
OMAHA BEEF — CHUCK
ROAST
MAPLECREST
FRYERS
Lb
UNCLE BEN'S CONVERTED
RICE
THE FOAMING CLEANSER
BABO
NABISCO RITZ
.VL
CRACKERS
NAB I SCO OREO CREAM
SANDWICH
PLANTERS COCKTAIL
PEANUTS
14 pz. OCr
Pkg.
JL*J\~
Giant TT-
Size
I-/ C
PALWOUIVE
SOAP
Reg..
Bars
17c
BAKE-RltE
_ •
SHORTENING
1 Lb-
ttr
Pkg.
O^C
4 Oz. 9Q
Pkg.
ZVC
8 Oz. OCr
Can
w«Jv«
73<
PALMOLIVE
SOAP
2 32 23c
IMPERIAL
SUPER SUDS
Large
Pkg.
29c
AIR WICK
UNDERWOOD DEVILEp
HAM
SALAD BOWL SALAD
DRESSING
CRYSTAL WHITE
SOAP
BEST PRODUCE IN TOWN!
Potatoes
IB .:^ipP W ^ ^^^B ^W^ ^^r-
5iOz- AOr
Bottle Q^C
Reg.
9| r
Can
<61C
1602.
-Oft-
Jar
4»TV
2
Large
1 "T-
Par5
I/C
Cashmere Bpyquet
SOAP
2
Reg-
17«
Bgrs
I /- V
W
Bouquet
SOAP
Large
Pkg.
29c
VEL
Tuetday, November 9, 1954
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
* IV SOCIETY
Phone 7-3431 Between 8 A. M. and 4 P. M.
ilendar
Tuesday
November 9
fhe
Business
Woman's Circle
I the First Baptist Chuhch will
sday, November 9,
at
. in the
home of Mrs.
|de Osburn, 405 S.
Greening.
members are urged to attend.
let Tuesd
E p. m. i
the Golden Circle Class of the
1st Baplist
Church will meet
1'sday, November 9, at 7:30 p.
(in the home of Mrs. Phinis Her-
320 East 13th, for their month-
Ibusiness and
social meeting.
Glen Seaver
It
will be co-hos
IriJtt
Same night wil! be held at tha
Ipe Country Club at 7:45 p. m.
jsday, Npvember 9. Hosts will
|jMr. and Mrs. George P. New-
and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ste-
h.
.
hapter AE of the P. E. O. Sis-
lood will meet Tuesday, Novem-
9, at 3 p. m. with Mrs. Mack
Stuart.
The Iris Garden Club meets at
2:30 Tuesday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. Claud Sutton, with Mrs.
C. M. Agee as associate hostess.
Arrangements for
the afternoon
will be chrysanthemums.
' Mrs. Claud Sutton will entertain
the
Builders Sunday School Class
of the First Baptist Church
on
Tuesday night at 7:30 at her home
on the Rosston road.
ference held in Prescott on Thurs-
day, October 28.
Reports were given by the Bod-
caw P. T. A. along with the reports
from other P. T. A.'s represented.
In the afternoon, a short skit on
"Leadership Training"
was pre*
sented by seven of the Bodcaw re*
presentatives: Mrs. Carl Lewis,
Mrs. Chester
Whittert, Mrs. Jr.
Goodwin, Mrs. Bill Jones, Mrs. J.
D. Allen, Mrs.
Ray
Martin and
Mrs. K. K. Mitchell.
Others from Bodcaw who attend-
ed the conference were Mrs. Her-
man May, Mrs. Teddy May, Mrs.
Otha Mullins, Mrs. Enoch Benson,
Mrs. Clarence Dunn, Mrs. E. D.
Downs, Mrs. Earl May, Mrs. Alex
Boswell, Mrs. Cliff Butler, Mrs.
Ben Trahan and Mrs. E, D. Spen.
cer.
._«-.i
The Ambassador Class of Gar-
rell Memorial Baplist Church will
meet Tuesday, November 9, at 7:30
p. m. in the home of Mrs. Wade
Warren, wilh Mrs. Clifton Billings
as co-hostess.
Wednesday November 10
The John 'Cain Chapter of the
D. A. R. will meet in Ihe home of
Mrs. B. L. Reltig, 420 Wesl Avenue
ndia, Ceylon and Pakistan. U was
nnouneed that "Korea Day" would
16 Sunday, November 14,
The meeting was closed with the
V. S. C. S. benediction.
Refreshments were served to 50
members and two guests, the Rev.
and Mrs. Doss.
Hope Jr.-Sr. High
P. T. A. To Meet
"Team Work for Better Schools"
will be the theme of the program
when the Hope Junior-Senior High
School P. T. A. meets
Thursday,
November 11, at 3:30 p. m. in the
auditorium of the Junior High Scho-
ol. "What do we want of our scho-
ols" and "Is Yours a Good School"
discussed by Mrs. P. L. Perkins,
ei faculty member, and Mrs. Dick
jviia. u, oj. jn.i:LLi£, i^v vvtiM- rtvuuut: , ~ ------- "
,,, ,
t 11 ,«^
B .on Wednesday, November 10, at1 Watkins, a parent, will be followed
12 noon. Mrs. R. L. Searcy of
,
a buzz session. Ihe Glee Club
* SAENGER
*
LAST DAY •
•
•
FEATURE TIMES •
.
.
. .
-
wisville. Mrs. Dick Watkins and ' "nder the direction of Mrs. B. C.
Hyatt will sing, and n speech stu-
'dent w111 brm8 the natlonal Presl'
dent's message.
The aim of the National Congress
of Parents and Teachers is to give
Garland P. T. A. will meet Wed- every generation a chance to serve
esday, November 10, at 3 p. m. children and youth and the aim of
2:56
- 7:11
! FULL LENGTH
-'
l O SllMI'S
'
il U1U1H HIOUl'S !i,f,ii»ioui>nii~;
OgNE WITHJHE WIND :
GUUBIE • VIVIQUtlGH • lESUEHOWRO
OUVlAdeHAVIlUND
•
.TECHNICOLOR!
1. "DROOPY" CARTOON
2. LATE NEWS EVENTS
e guest speaker. Executive com-
mittee will meet at 2:30.
t WED.-THURS. •
Up Front on the West's
deadly Twenty-Mile run!
to show their appreciation for this
fine spirit by enlisting and working
in this important organization whi
Wednesday November 10
ch tends to bring closer togethe
Patmos P. T. A. will have a sup- the home, the school and the chur
er in the school lunchroom Wed- ch.
esday night, November 10, at 7:30. [ Believing that fathers and emplo-
Each family is asked to bring a yed mothers are interested in be-
overed dish.
coming better
acquainted
with
their child's school and teachers
the P. T. A. had a very successful
SHOKRIN
A WAINIKIIOS. PICTUIE
avneMORRIS
^PRESCRIPTION'
MEANS
PROTECTION1
Wore often than you might sup-
)se,
we hear the question:
Vhy do I need a prescription to
ly the medicine the doctor has
dered to make me well? It
st seems to make the cost go
i,"
It's easy to see why some
ople ask this, and the answer
just as 'simple. Your doctor's
•escription is written for y9ur
p'im.
It is his explicit
der by us, your pharmacists.,
e are'trained by years of col-
ge and practical experience to
low his scientific instructions
the letter.
We are also the final check-
int
before
the
medicine
aches you. We double-check
1 prescriptions. It's our duty
see that there are no mistakes
id to call the doctor if there is
y question about his orders.
[So,
"prescription" r e a l l y
earif ^"protection" . . . your
•otec'flon. We're happy to pro-
de it.
!
IWard & Son
DRUGGIST
Phone 7-2292
102 W. Second St.
Irs. Richard Howards of Hope
•c associate hostesses. Members
lease note
change in
meeting
,
, a
.
.
he executive board will meet at1 the Hope school unit is to have
15. The meeting will be dismissed | every mother and father or guar
. • ..
°
.
.
..
- ' j:««
rtf
T,,Mir*»._C!e,«ir»t' TTicrVi Rr»hnn
n time for the members to attend
ic Fire Prevention Parade.
Hope Federation of Garden Clubs
ill meet in the home of Mds. Ha£-
Id M. Brents, Oakhaven, on Wed-
esday,' November 10, at 10 a. m.
dian of Junior-Senior High Schoo:
students belonging to and attend
ing when possible the Parent Tea-
cher Association. If parents expect
their children to be interested
in
their books, then they should show
an interest in the school the chil
ed.
-au.a.y, iiuveiiiucj.
au, at AU ct. in-
*
-.
.
acn club is urged to be represen- dren attend, and the teachers who
train them. Never in a school P
T. A. have the teachers been more
congenial
and cooperative
than
those in the Hope
Junior-Senioi
Paisley P. T. A. will meet Wed-
esclay, November 10, at 3 p. m.
cauetj, .i.'iu vtuuuti j . u , c i i . u p . iii.
-
_
.
„,
i j
t the school. Charles Gough will High School, so parents are asked
Mrs. Bob MasslngUI
Entertains Business
Womans Circle No. 2
The Business
Woman's
Circle
No. 2 of the First Baptist Church
met Monday evening in the home
of Mrs. Bob Massingill.
After a brief business
session,
Mrs. P. J, Holt gave the devotional.
The program was presented by
he following special guests, Mrs.
Basil York,
Mrs. C. C. Collins,
VIrs. Frank Douglas, Mrs. W. H.
Gurtter, Sr., and Mrs. A .D. Bran-
nan, Sr. The title of the program
was "African Missions".
Senior Ladles
Auxiliary Has
Thanksgiving Program
Court Docket
Municipal Court of Hope, Arkan-
sas, November 8, 1954.
City Docket
Herman
Williams,
improper
lights on car, Forfeited $1.00 cash
bond.
Herman Williams. No State Car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Herman Williams, Fictitious car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Arthur Jackson.
Running Stop
sign, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond
Daniel Huddleston, Frank Adams,
Speeding, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond,
Kennie Atkins, Berlin Fuller, Ha-
zardous driving,
Forfeited $10.00
cash bond,
Charlie Lee Howard,
No driv-
ers license, Forfeited $5.00 cash
bond.
B. M. Mouser, Robert E. Lee,
Failure to yield right of way, Plea
gulity, fined $5.00.
Lela Bell Jones, Hershel Ward,
Shirk Conway, Drunkenness, For-
feited $10.00 cash bond.
Thn QO«;«,. T n ^ '
A, -r
*
Calvin McPherson, Assault & Bat-
The Senior Ladies Auxiliary of torv Vnrfou^
«.ln'nn „„„*, ,—A
the Unity Baptist Church met Mon-
day afternoon, November 8, at 2
o'clock, in the home of Mrs. E. L.
Lane.
Songs were led'by Elder White,
who also led in prayer.
Mrs. Barney Gaines, president
of the
auxiliary, presented
the
Thanksgiving program, assisted by
Mrs.
Tom Anderson, Mrs. Lane and
Mrs. Howard Collier. Mrs. Jesse
Sinclair gave the devotional from
the 100th Psalm.
A report of the previous meeting
was given by Mrs. Sinclair, and
Mrs. Anderson dismissed the group.
The hostess served refreshments
to 11 members.
tery, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Eugene Gill, Clarence
Chipps,
Gaming, Plea guilty, fined $10.00.
James Wilbert, W. L. Holbert,
Willie Malone, Gaming, Forfeited
$10.00 cash bond.
State Docket
James D. Welch, Operating a mo-
tor vehicle vvthout a driver's licen-
se, Plea guilty, fined $5.00.
E. F. Simmons, Passing in a "No
Passing" zone, Plea guilty,
JEined
$5.00.
Continued from *»flge Ofl*
Mayfair
quivered
with
gossip.
Margaret had been to church. And
because
it
was
Remembrance
Sunday, she had been dowri
in
Whitehall to stand by reverently
while her sister, Queen Elizabeth,
honored the men and women who
had lost their lives in wars. Then
in the afternoon she went to thc
movies.
Theater managers Were
inter-
viewed, and they 'said: "Tradition-
shattering," "what
a
surprise,"
it must have been unofficial" and
"tut-tut and tch-tchl"
The objection to royalty's going
to movies on Sunday is inspired
largely by the conservative ele-
ments among English churchmen,
Whose influence Is great. The pop-
ulation
is being
reminded con-
stantly that the sovereign is the
defender of the faith, and that the
Lord's Day must be respected.
But curiously while Margaret is
being talked about lor
breaking
tradition, thc Church of England
itself is being sniped at by per-
sons whose moral indignation gets
stirred up
easily. The
church,
which lately turned its financial
affairs over to a committee
of
experts, made a handsome clean-
ing in the stock exchange.
It's
gambling, say critics, and
natibn simmers.
Louis and Ernest Wyndor of New
York, and by Dr. Mortoti L. Lev-
in and associates of Albany. N.Y.
A British study just a bit later
Some folks think they are a s6-
ctol success when they master the
art of sayf ng nasty things th a hke
way.
'
J^Mi F. JtjSnkfel,
Robert W. Hansetl that m
itt a false fkc fiiilrM
wanted to be Wcked.lip
Arrives."
/
* -
Hansen said "I -*ould
punish you most by
case and letting you „_.
ydu another chance* I'll
t months in the '
ion."
'
' • " . '
by
Dr. Richard Doll and Prof.
A. Bradford Hill, ptjinling to
an
association between cigarettes and
lung cancer, also was published by
American newspapers.
But these and other reports com-
ing still
loiter seemed to
find
l'tt.1
Deaths Over
the Nation
Brookvvood P. T. A. will meet
Wednesday in the school auditorium j night meeting in October and will
t 3 p. m. The executive board will have another such meeting in the
All members are spring.
Yard of Month
Winners Announced
The Hope Garden Clubs announce
the following
as
"Yard-of-the-
Month" winners for November:
Ward 1-Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hane-
gan, 606 East Second;
Ward 2-Mr. and Mrs. Sam War-
mack, 616 South Washington;
Ward 3-Mr. and Mrs. J. M. O'-
Neal, 621 West Avenue C;
Ward 4-Mr. and
Mrs. Elbert
Jones,, 420 North Elm;
Oakhaven and Beverly Hills-Mr,
and Mrs. Jack Carnahan, Oak-
naven.
Notice
The party planned for the Inter-
mediate MYF of the First Metl>
dist Church will not be held as
lanned. The date will be announc-
d later.
By. The Associated Press
San Francisco
Charles
B.
Henderson, 81, U.S. senator from
Nebada from 191? to 1921 and . a
former chairman of' the Board of
the Reconstruction Finance Corp.
Died Monday.
•
Glen
Head,'
N.
Y.
' Julian
Starkweather Ma'spn, 78, .'former
edito'r-in-chief of the New
York
Evening Post, who held ..editorial
posts on several Chicago newspa-
pers before
becoming managing
editor of the Naw York Herald
Tribune in 1922. Born in Chicago.
DiedMonday.
!
Baltimore
Dr. Francis
S.
neet at 2:15.
urged to attend.
Oglesby P. T. A. will meet Wed-
nesday, November 10, at 3 p._m.
.'he executive meeting will be held
at 2:30. '
Planned projects for this year
include a donation to the Junior
and Senior libraries, records and
films for visual education, supplies
for first aid rooms for both schools,
and contributions to the school ca-
feteria, Girl Scouts, and the youth
The Bodcaw P. T. A. will meet at center. The only methods of raising
he high school at 7 p. m. on Wed- j funds to carry out these projects
nesday, November 10. After the are the annual membership drive
•egular program, a short skit will' and talent
program.
The talent
be presented and then coffee and program will not be given until
doughnuts will be served in
chool cafeteria.
tfce
Thursday November 11
Hope Junior-Senior High School
sometime
in December
but the
membership drive has been in full
sway for four weeks now and will
close this week. The goal for this
year is 850 members but to date
P. T. A. will meet Thursday at 3:30 I there are only 300. Parents who
D. m. in the Junior High auditor-1 haven't sent their dues of only fif-
Him. The executive board will meet ty cents per member per year, to
'
at 3 p. m.
school by their child are asked to
do so tomorrow. Or, contact the
Ladies of the Eastern Star will membership
chairmen, Mrs.
sponsor a spaghetti supper Thurs-j Franklin
Horton
or
Mrs. ' Jim
day,
November 11, at 6:30 at the. Cole. In the definite pageant of the
Masonic H^ll. The public is invit- parent-teacher movement there is
ed. Adults, $1.00; children, 50 cents.;need for all: there is work for all.
Parents, teachers and all communi-
ty citizens interested in the Junior-
Senior High School are invited to
Thursday November 11
The Adult Fellowship of the First
Methodist Church will meet Thurs-j join the P. T. A. to make this the
day at 7 o. m. for a pot luck sup-1 best year it has ever had.
per. Guest speaker will be the Rev. | All members
and prospective
~~
" •
~ '
""— members are urged to make a spe-
cial effort to attend the meeting
Thursday and all interested persons
are extended a cordial invitation to
visit.
Edmund Pendleton. Baby
will be provided.
sitters
The Blevins P. T. A. will meet
in Ihe high school auditorium Thur-
sday, November 11, at 7 p. m. A
special program is planned and all
parents and patrons are urged to
be present.
Beacon Sunday School
Class Meets Monday
On Monday evening, November 8
, ,
,
members of the
Beacon Sunday
Hope B & PW Club will celebrate School class of the First Baptis
its 30th birthday anniversary
on church.met in the home of Mrs
Thursday
November 11, ^ 7 Russell McClain for a" combination
p. m. with a ban(lue^___a^kejlotel business and social meeting.
Moving pictures
were taken o
those
present,
following a shot-
business session. Mrs, Fred Bar
Barlow. Every member is urged to
be present.
Bodcaw P. T. A. Members
Attend District Conference
The Bodcaw P. T. A. was
represented
at the
District Con-
gave the devotional.
Refreshments
were
served t
Red Hot Wednesday
SPECIALS
IXTRA SPECIAL
All I ET Cf*^C
ULLtT EGGS
Doz, 29c
Births
The Rev. and Mrs. Joe W. Hun-
er of Emmet, announce the birth
)f a daughter, Vicki Lynne, on
Dctober 29, at the Cora Donnell
lospital in Prescott.
Cigarette
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bales of
Stamps, Announced the arrival of a
on, John Robert, on Saturday,
November 6. The paternal grand-
>arents are Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Jales. The maternal grand par-
ents' are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harri-
on of Locksborg.
Coming and Going
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Hasky,
VIr. and Mrs. Bob Magness, and
. and Mrs. W. E. McFarland of
Smmet, attended
the Arkansas-
Rice game in Little Rock on Sat-
urday afternoon.
Schwentker, 50, •, nationally known
child specialist,"professor"of pedi-
atrics at Johnss;Hopkins
Medical
School and pediamciah:in' chief at
Johns Hopkins''Hospital. Born
in
Schenectady, N . y . Died Monday.
Elizabeth N. J.
John
J. Mc-
Gbvvan, 7, G, press representative
for the late
President Woodrow
Wilron, treasurer of the Democrat-
ic State Committee and
former
newspaperman rBorh iri Charlottes-
town, P.E.I., Canada. Died Sunday.
JTt
Be?voir, Va
Maj
Gen
Arthur W. Penqje, 56, commanding
general of the Army Engineer Cen-
ter at Ft. Belvoir. Died Monday.
Great Falls, Mont.
George W.
Hey, 79, who made his violin de-
but at 3 with the Syracuse, N Y.,
symphony orchestra, 'former man-
ager of a Billings, Mont, opera
house orphestra, and founder
of
Ihe Great Falls Conservatory
of
Music. Died Monday.
' Saginaw, Mich.
Chelsea Cur-
tis Fraser, 78, violin maker and au-
thor. Born in New Sarum,
Died Sunday.
Continued rrom Page One
mo'st big
public issues,
didn't
spring forth overnight.
Some 15 years ago, Dr. Alton
Ochsner, famous New Orleans sur-
geon, was reporting
observations
which led him to :believe that cig-
arette smoking .was a cause of
lung cancer. Just yesterday
Dr.
Ochsner published a bo'ok, "Smok-
ing and Cancer, a Doctor's
Re-
port" Julian messner, Inc.) which
reviews all the evidence used to
indict cigarettes as a cause cf
lung cancer and heart disease.
In 1939, an Argentine physician
Dr. A. H. Rcffo; reported that tars
obtained from tobacco often could
produce cancer in the:skin of rab-
bits.
the American public only mildly
interested.
Perhaps
many m i s s e d 'the
rtories. Perhaps it takes time and
repetition
in the
absence
of
rtark drama
to
get
rapt at-
tention. Or perhaps many people
wanted stronger evidence.
No doubt some dismissed the re-
ports as another instance of cry-
ing "wolf" at cigarettes. For to-
bacco has been accused of many
Sins in the past
of leading to
poverty, of creating mustaches on
women, making men sterile, pois-
oning the,unborn babies of smok-
ing mothers, contributing to tuber-
culosis.
Smoking has been banned
at
some times in a lew countries. In
Denmark
smokers and
snuffers
Help Wa
2 waitresses, penw
ent empoy
income. Apply" i
^
son*
f
.
- -
Barlow HolSl
Ho Phone Colls/ Please
DODGE
has
done1
it
t jv*
>•*•
These and other reports were
mentioned in the news through the
were once publicly whipped.
In
Turkey, King Amuralh once de-
creed beheading for anyone, who
smoked.
Not until about two years
ai?o
did the long-smouldering
contro-
versy over cigarettes really start
to build up
into the public con-
sciousness.
Evidence was being discovered
and rediscovered to blame' ciga-
rettes for sickness and
untimely
death.- ,So also was evidence
to
question that evidence, or to blame
dther
factors
for
the
troubles
being attribxited to cigarettes.
The public was to become > the
jury. As such, the public was to
hear a good deal,
from
' both
newspapers
headlined
years.,
In 1D50,
stories from a cancer;
congress
in Paris reporting three separate
studies, mostly statistical,-
which
linked cigarettes with at least part
betted
wait!
Flair-
Fashionefi
of
increase in lung
amoh{< Americans. ,, The
cancer
studies
were made by ; Dr. Ochsner,
by
Doctors Evarts Graham
of
St.
Out.
Mrs. Katherine Webb of Harbor
Seach, Michigan, is visiting her
sister, Mrs, E. G. Coop, and other
relatives.
Mrs. Anna Judson
hs returned
from a week's visit with her dau-
ghter, Mrs. Jewel Tolley, Mr. Tol-
ley and family in Beaumont, Texas.
Mrs. E. G. Coop and Mrs. Ka-
Harmony in
Congress Hits
a Sour Note
By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON
WASHINGTON (ff)
. The post-
election theme
of harmony be-
tween President
Eisenhower and
the Democratic
4th
Congresse
echoed some dissonant notes tpday
in the wake of. an exchange be-
therine Webb have returned from! tween party chairmen and new
a visit with Mrs. Coop's daughter,
sibie;'-public interest" coming at a
time when, Hall said, responsible
leaders in Congress, are pledging
cooperation.
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas
who will be majority floor leader
when the .Democrats organize the
new Senate in January publicly
criticized some of President Eisen-
hower's campaign remarks at a
news conference Saturday. He also
set out certain, conditions for coop
eration on democratic congression-
al leaders during the next
two
years.
:
.
.
-
-
.
U. S. mints have turned out 4^4
billion nichols since 1866 when the
coin was first issued,
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS WASTE
NnwtinB backache, loss ot pep and energy,
headaches and dizziness may be due to slow-
down of kidney function. Doctors say good
kidney function Is very important tp cottd
health. When some everyday condition, such
us stress and strain, causes this Important
function to slow down,many folka suffer non-
Sing backache—feel miserable, Minor blad-
der irritations due to cold or wrong diet may
cause Betting up nights orf requentpassaged.
Don't neglect your kidneys If these condi-
tions bother you. Try Doan's Pills—a mild
diuretic, Used successfully by millions for
over 60 years. It's amazing how many time*
Doan's give happy relief from these discom-
forts— help thelSmUcsof kidney tubes and fil-
ters flush out waste. Get Doan'a Fills todayl
207-E. Secbni
Hope/ Ark;,
;?4 ^ ^t
, i f«r,
Mrs. V. A. Keth and Mr. Keith in
Dallas, Texas.
Mrs. George Sundstrom and son,
George A., of Phoenix, Ariz., are
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J, A. Davis, and other relatives.
^oodard Cox, Mrs. A. D. Glass, Ji
Mrs. William Groves. Mrs. Horac
Hubbard, Mrs,
Jim James, Mrs
Lloyd Leverett, Mrs. Orval Tayloi
Mrs.' George Thompson; Mrs. Win
die Thompson,
the teacher; as-
sociate members, Mrs. C. M. Ro-
gers, Jr., and Mrs. J. B. Martin.
and the. special guest, Mrs. Fred
Barr.
ELICIOUS ROUND
Lb.
, WHITI, YELLOW SWANS DOWN
Box
AKE MIX
The Rev. and Mrs. Doss
Guest Speakers at
W. S. C. S. Meeting
The Woman's Society of Christian
Service of the First Methodist Churi.
ch met Monday, November 8, at'
2 p. m.
church,.
in the sanctuary of the
The worship service opened with
a song, "Happy the Home", and
Mrs. J. C. Carlton gave the de-
votional using as her subject "The
Dawn of a Soul", Mrs. C. D. Les-
ter closed with prayer.
Mrs. Johnny McCabe, a member
of Circle Three, presented the Rev
and Mrs. Alfred Doss of DeQueen,
who gave reports of the National
Family Life Conference held in
Cleveland, Ohio, which they attend-
ed in October.
Mrs. Albert Graves,
president,
presided over the business meet-
ing. Repovts were made, and the
circle count taken.
Circle
Five
winning wjtlj 15 members present
Hospital Notes
Julia Chester
Admitted: Mrs. Annie Madlock,
Hope, Mrs. Homer C. Gaines, Hope.
Mr. Clyde Zinn, Hope, Mrs. Lucy
Sipes, Columbus, Mrs. Sallie Col-
lier, Hope, Mr.
Edgar Lafferty,
Patmos, Mrs. Nettie Butler, Hope,
Paul
Rawson,
Cape Giradeau,
Mo., Ruby Lee Briggs, Hope.
Discharged:
Mrs. Dan
Green,
Hope, Mrs. Tom Gathright, Sara-
toga, Mr. Steve Atkins, Hope, Mrs.
John S.
Matthews, Hope, Mrs.
Wendell Sowards and son, McCas-
kill, Sarah Jones, Fulton, Dorothy
Powell and son, Hope.
Mr .and Mrs. Homer C, Gaines.
Hope, have a daughter, Mary Loui-
se, born at 10:02 p. m. Friday.
Branch
Admitted: ,Mrs. W. A. Powell,
Patmos, Mr. Steve Bader, Hope,
Mrs. Inez Tefteller, Hope.
Discharged: Ruby Lee Fleming,
Hope, Mrs. Mpnrpe Samuels, Rt.
3, Hope, Mrs. H, L. Levins, Wash-
ington.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Tefteller of
Hope, announce the arrival of a
baby boy on November 6, 1954.
statements by Democratic leaders.
Democratic National Chairman
Stpehen A. Mitchell said yesterday
in a statement that Vice Presi-
dent Nixon snould "retract
and
apologize for his campaign excess-
es." If Nixon continues, Mitchell
added, "I hope that the President
will take the opportunity to dis-,
associate himself from such char-
acter assassination by public dis-
avowal."
Republican National
Chairman
Leonard W. Hall replied of Mitch-
ell's remarks: "This is in the worst
possible taste and In the worst pos-
LOOK YOUR LOVELIEST
THE BEAUTY BOX
Open 6 days a week
After 5 appointments for
the \yorking girls
Latest Hair Styling
Phone 7-5850
112 S. Main
Ruth Hoelscher Janell Roberts
ON SALE
CLEAN UP MERCHANDISE FROM OUR
HARVEST
'; >
l»r>
;.*m
3 ONLY
MEN S TOPCOATS • •
SMALL LOT -- BROKEN SIZES
Program!
YORK M
Selected radio
NE
programs tonight:
NBC
7 People
Are Funny;
7:30
Dragnet;
8 Radio Theater,
"My Man Godfrey."
CBS — 7 Stop The Music; 3:30
Amos And Andy: 9:15 Dance Time,
ABC
7 Jack Gregson
Hour;
8 Town Meeting
Discussion.
MBS
7 Treasury '
Th,P ScEW-oh,.
pole-frame
cuts farm building costs
• You pen s*v» wp to h*M the cost cl
erecting an4 royfftflj" fog Voa* >WWi
ole-type
supported
Creosoted
CHILDREN* DRESSES.. $2.0(1
BROKEN SIZES AND COLORS LADIES
HANSEN GLOVES
I ONLY —SIZE 40
MAN S SUIT . . ,
X**^
.,wt'?
t
*> Hr-f*
; I'v^V^
- $y#
^m
u^!
• •
$8,95 RACK OF
Fall Cott
Reduced
LADIES DRESSES
MEN 5 NYLON SHORTS It
3 QNUY — $17,95 5T, MARYS
•], .
.,
ALL WOOL BLANKETS $1
i'1'IBIiKij^
I
5MAIL W)T
JEAN SETS
ItUE JIANS
*&'
1'-!','•
A'sf.'^y
«,#"*•
5k S&C ;•.
1*1:'^ £frj;
M O M S T A R ,
H O P E , A f t K A N S A S
I-JWMIM"- .;,}', .
fe>? #>
|C» '•/ ,
j.
<;,? • • • •
ire
™-fe\-
s
.™jtW \ < *
t. Credited with
SflejStfra
tnatch
__._lal'All«l
$7. ItnjttMrtl
m is Wtt.
MARKETS
Ho
\\\
elides
i fhe
tullding
# 3t M*' M&
tk£ outs'Md
W "1 jbre-
t An .an at-
tWWWtOlA'* K«S
• to
think
against lha
>'Ugh widows
|« at ,$100,000, said
s Had", Been afcumu-
iri6r,s>veral days,
structure
Me
?W»*
•f&sr
,r: "
smmmn^'^i
*
fe4^ * t"-,H> *,*
J
JAfc-B-Q
tT A jJJ',"'*S^. '. ( . *_^
Ff*^r°<
<"
W&ii
s 12,060; lower;
liSO-75; about a
hoke Nd. Is and 2s 19.85! ISO-
Ib Iflf&.SOOO; 225-240 Ih 1900-
); 246-260 Ib W.tS«i&.$${ sdWs 400
down
tt.2S-?3j
fdW at 18.00;
iei"* POV/S 15.50-17,2,'}!
b6ars
3XW-J5.00, ,
Cattle 6,000; calves 1,700: about
ady but little ddndj tltillty and
commercial cow* 85CM2.06; can-
and citttSfs e.00-d.5(5:
llsht
iitlly c a n ft e r s 1&0-?0; bulls
ItJtfdyJ
Utility
arid
commercial
l.OO'llOO; cfttlner and cutte* btilU
.OO-lO.SOi vpnldrs steady:
good
nd choice 17,06-23.00; few
at
500! commercial art dloW
good
2.00-IO.OO; slaughter calves slow;
orrtrnerclal arid goad 11,00-15.00;
Hilly and low commercial 8.00-
0.00,
heep 1,700; wool lambs weak to
I lower; icveral lots good
to
rime 1800-19.50; early top 19.50;
fend not fully established;
a«ed
hecp steady; ."laughter ewes 3.00
.00.
POULTRY AND PRODUCE
CHICAGO' W) Live
poul
tr
toady ort Hens; barely stendy on
•oung stock; receipts 971 coops
66,425 Ib; F O.B. paying prices un-
hangedt Hoavy hens 16-19; light
lens 12-14; fryers and broilers 23-
5! old roosters 12-12.5; caponette
young hert turkeys
34-5(5;
gecsc 23.
Butter firm;
receint s 017,814;
vholcsale buylrig prices I'A lower
o
1 "higher; 93 score AA 58.5;
92 A 68.25-5; 90 B 57.5; 89 C 56
cnrn 90 B-8; 89 C 6.
Eggs mixed;
receipt s
10,552
wholesale buying prices 1 lower to
higher; U.S. large white 34.5
mixed 35.5; U. S. mediums 27; US
ttandards 2 ;
current
receipts
none; dirties 20; checks 20
NEW YORK STOCKS
NEW YORJC 1<P) The sto ck m ar
<et developed a certain amount o
hesitancy today following its sen
satkmal post-qlection surge aheac
On .balance, , the market
w o
barely higher. Gains
of 1 to
points were found in several sec
tions of the list, but most advance
small. Losses appeared fre
guently, sometimes passing a poln*
1 ^Business maintained a swift par
at-'around the highest levels of th
.GRAIN
!
' Wheat: Noric. Corn:
No. 2 ye
low41.51; No. 3 yellow 1.47-1.49
No 4 137'/4-1.43'/2; No.. 5 129-135
M>; sa mole -grade yellow 1.2
Oats: Sample gr^'de white 87.
_
Bareley ,nomin,ai :MalJ>ng .ehoic
1.31-52; feed 1.10-22.
explosion," \.said Dale "Plunk, 18
year-old high school junior. "It wa
terrible."
j|y^H%«Mlay, November 11,1954
S^S:k4!iwfT-.i^i- • n A V
rmgti
jgitffirf? ;
/||^ill-'n9,t be ppen for business
feffife-above 'date, being a legal
jFj«3j(8fl •
'
,
J?$'v'; v
•
• •
'itizens National Bank
First National Bank
m&fk''*'
it^rr" -
®«v
' "*i~ -.''
HOPE
Three Mental
Escapees
Still ot Large
LITTLE
ates of
the
cfimiftal
i'ouf
ward
Governors of
South Divided
on Segregation
feOCA BATON, Fla. t*) Sdtilhern
states, divided as they are on their
approach to the explosive school
:sFiie, may find 9 'com-
either on the conference floor, or
away.
Three states
Gccrpia, Louisia-
na end South Caroline, have tak-
en action to put themselves in a
por.ition • to keep Negroes out of
white schools.
Georgia adopted a constitutional
rmendmeht Nov. 2 permitting the
legislature to abolish the public
system
tion.
Louisiana
rather than end segrega-
approved
an amend-
ap-
out-
Er-
,
-
,
,.
....
ftiori ground approach to the prob- mont at thc sam-^ time permitting
l«rr. at the annual Southern Cover- 1 'he state tc invoke police powers
afiod frcfn the State hdspital herd
st night .after threatening four
ttohdants.
Deitt Tatum, 27, of Parogould,
hargcd v/ith staying his wife, gaV<3
rhself up a few, minutes. after
he escape which occurred about
40 p. m.
The other
three
still were at
arge today.
State police Identified them as
ohnhie areen, 37, an ex-convict
ho was arrested at Fort Smith
n a charge of burglary; Char'es
rice, 23, Litild Rock, charged with
urglor, and L. B. Veach (address
nknown,) charged wilh l&rceny.
All but Veach Were undergoing 30-
ay sanity tests at the hospital,
Officers said Veach waa from
nother ward at the hospital and
nly recently had been transferred
i the criminal ward section.
Tntum told Little Rock detectives
hot Green and Price •"abandoned
s" (Tntum and Veach) after ctt-
isting their aid to oscapa. . •
Green and Price were'; believed
o be together with a third^person
n an automobile which
Tatum
aid was -waiting"' for them when
hey made the break.
Tatum told .officers, the braak
wan planned by Price..
It was the second escape of four
nrtiates of the ward sir.ce'. May.
t also was-the second time that
attendant C. H.: Ahart had' been
hreatened with a sharp instru-
ment.
' • - ' ' . -
Ahart said he was standing near
he door to Ihe fire escape when
3recn approached, 'drew, a knife,
arid ordered • him
to - unlock
the
dcor.
Ahavt said that 'another "atten-
dant, Charles Copeland, shouted to
him to stop scirffling with Green.
Other attendents, A. H. Williams
and W. N. .Leach,, were threatened
by Tatum and Veach, Ahart said.
Tatum told officers Price had
planned to head for Mexico
or
California.
Attendants said they didn't know
where Green .got the knife.
ftor's Conference
Thursday.
opening
h e r e to maintain segregation m the pub-
lic schools.
The
conference
meeting
date
falls less thfen a month from the
lime the IT. S.
Supreme
Court
cptns arguments Dec. 0 on how
end when it should order Into ef-
fect its May 17 edict that segre-
gated public shhools must end.
There's no mention of scgregrt-
tion matters as such on the official
conference program, but there's
South Carolina's Legislature al-
ready has authority to abolish t'rw
school system.
A fourth state, Mississippi, voles
Dec. 2l on a proposition to em-
power the Legislature to abolish
public schools ns a means of re-
taining segregation.
Some of the oth?r southern states
have indicated they thought
the
cient time.
A possible' middle ground
proach in the Florida plan
lined by Ally. Gen. Richard
v'in
of that state in a
Supreme
Court brief in' which he pleads for
time and for a large, degree of lo-
cal determination as to when seg-
regated schools should be ended.
The FloHd'a plan provides
that
in cases where suits are brought to
gain
admittance to
segregated
schools, thc trial courts should- be
given wide discretion to hold hear
ings, and to
determine
on the
basis of local conditions whether
the petition should be granted.
In cases where schools author-
ties and thn trial courts detcrmin
cd thc races shouldn't be integrat-
ed, new hearings could be held at
a later datd to determine whether
conditions may change.
little doubt the subject Will be one problem could
,
the most lively.'to come Up'the Supreme Court
Arkansans to
Arrive in U, S.
SEATTLE,
USS Gen. G-.
Wash. (UP)
Th-2
M. Randall will ar
Do: ado; SFC Boy E Schnarr,
tie Rock; Airman Will.am R. Sm-
ngton, Attica; Cpl. Ernest S. oul
Ivan; Rosiej
PFC Hartzell Wat-
son,
Gregory; ^and Pvt. Johnny
Whittle, Piggott.
Women have had a lower death
rive at the Army port of embarka
Sion here Wednesday
v/ith
2,269
pasrengers from the Far East.
Among them will be tire follow-
ing Arkansas servicemen:
Cpl. Collier
Anders. Jr.,
Au-
vergne; Sgt. John
R. Anthony
Bearden; S-Sgt. James L. Besly,
Hazen; PFC Rofus
Cobb, Jr. Au-
susta; Capt. John C.
Freeman,
Crt-ssett; Airman 3-. W.
Harper,
Wilmar; Cpl. Charles G. Harwell,
Okay;
Airman
Winsley
Henry,
Mar'ianna-; Cpl. Claudie- L. Higgins,
Fort Smith.
Cpl. Carl Hudson, Rudy; Air-
man Albert E.'Jankins,
Truman;
Cpl.
Willard
G. Lawson, Rogers;
Pvt. Melvir. C. Locke, Camdcn;
rale than men for many years andiCp!. Jessie M. Martin, Okean; Air-
since 1930 the lives of women have, Iman William J.'Moore, Jr., Wynne
Mr. Fulbrighf
Has Problems
WASHINGTON W)
If the Mc-
Carthy censure debate runs on to*
any great length, Sen. Fulbright
(D-Ark) may have 'to become A
New York commuter.
Fulbright while greatly
inter-
ested in the censure proceedings,
also is a U. S. delegate to the-Unit-
ed Nation's session now.; going on
in New York.
He said today he will stay in
Washington for a time to see how'
the censure matter proceeds in the
Senate but that he wants to return
to the U. N. Sessions.
.
•Fulbright'was1 one .of the origi-
nal group of senators urging adop-
tion of the
resolution
by , Sen.
Flanders (R-Vt) calling for cen-
sure of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis).
The Flanders resolution war sub-
mitted to •'• a
special
committee
which recommended censure.
Fulbright told a Reporter it 's.
his present inclination to take. little,
or no part in,the debate. It, would
appear better stratgey, he said, to
let the Watkins cprnmittee
pre-
sent the case and then permit Mc-
Carthy and his supporters to do
the talking.
»
, , . ' . . . -
• . . • . . •
Six European nations, Luxem-
bourg, Andorra, Liechtenstein, San j
Marino, Monaco arid Vatican City
have a total area smalled than that
o fthe King Ranch in Texas.
Fdom 1903 through 1014, more
than 750,000 immigrants come to
the United States and more than a
million, entered
in six of those
years.
•M,
$?'>.yl've waited years and
fv
gears /or power as exciting
;
^ as the '55 FORD'S new
BUGGER-TORQUE!/
i,
ON DISPLAY
FRIDAY
far move than those of men.
$19.95 NOW $14.95
Get them before the
season opens and save.
WESTERN AUTO
ASSOCIATE StORE
_
•
——
Bad
Colds
WICKS
WVAPORUB
RelieveSuffeting
SHOP
IGGLY WIGGLY
AND YOU GET
DOUBLE
S&H GREEN STAMP'S. WEDNESDAY
(ON PURCHASES OF $2.50 OR MORE)
Prices Effective Wed. Nov. 10th
Pineapple Juice 25c
ARMOURSMilk
&IOc
BEST MEAT IN TOWN
'
<>*^P .
1 *
I11
'
'
'
"
{
;
OMAHA BEEF — CHUCK
ROAST
MAPLECREST
FRYERS
Lb
UNCLE BEN'S CONVERTED
RICE
THE FOAMING CLEANSER
BABO
NABISCO RITZ
.VL
CRACKERS
NAB I SCO OREO CREAM
SANDWICH
PLANTERS COCKTAIL
PEANUTS
14 pz. OCr
Pkg.
JL*J\~
Giant TT-
Size
I-/ C
PALWOUIVE
SOAP
Reg..
Bars
17c
BAKE-RltE
_ •
SHORTENING
1 Lb-
ttr
Pkg.
O^C
4 Oz. 9Q
Pkg.
ZVC
8 Oz. OCr
Can
w«Jv«
73<
PALMOLIVE
SOAP
2 32 23c
IMPERIAL
SUPER SUDS
Large
Pkg.
29c
AIR WICK
UNDERWOOD DEVILEp
HAM
SALAD BOWL SALAD
DRESSING
CRYSTAL WHITE
SOAP
BEST PRODUCE IN TOWN!
Potatoes
IB .:^ipP W ^ ^^^B ^W^ ^^r-
5iOz- AOr
Bottle Q^C
Reg.
9| r
Can
<61C
1602.
-Oft-
Jar
4»TV
2
Large
1 "T-
Par5
I/C
Cashmere Bpyquet
SOAP
2
Reg-
17«
Bgrs
I /- V
W
Bouquet
SOAP
Large
Pkg.
29c
VEL
Tuetday, November 9, 1954
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
* IV SOCIETY
Phone 7-3431 Between 8 A. M. and 4 P. M.
ilendar
Tuesday
November 9
fhe
Business
Woman's Circle
I the First Baptist Chuhch will
sday, November 9,
at
. in the
home of Mrs.
|de Osburn, 405 S.
Greening.
members are urged to attend.
let Tuesd
E p. m. i
the Golden Circle Class of the
1st Baplist
Church will meet
1'sday, November 9, at 7:30 p.
(in the home of Mrs. Phinis Her-
320 East 13th, for their month-
Ibusiness and
social meeting.
Glen Seaver
It
will be co-hos
IriJtt
Same night wil! be held at tha
Ipe Country Club at 7:45 p. m.
jsday, Npvember 9. Hosts will
|jMr. and Mrs. George P. New-
and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ste-
h.
.
hapter AE of the P. E. O. Sis-
lood will meet Tuesday, Novem-
9, at 3 p. m. with Mrs. Mack
Stuart.
The Iris Garden Club meets at
2:30 Tuesday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. Claud Sutton, with Mrs.
C. M. Agee as associate hostess.
Arrangements for
the afternoon
will be chrysanthemums.
' Mrs. Claud Sutton will entertain
the
Builders Sunday School Class
of the First Baptist Church
on
Tuesday night at 7:30 at her home
on the Rosston road.
ference held in Prescott on Thurs-
day, October 28.
Reports were given by the Bod-
caw P. T. A. along with the reports
from other P. T. A.'s represented.
In the afternoon, a short skit on
"Leadership Training"
was pre*
sented by seven of the Bodcaw re*
presentatives: Mrs. Carl Lewis,
Mrs. Chester
Whittert, Mrs. Jr.
Goodwin, Mrs. Bill Jones, Mrs. J.
D. Allen, Mrs.
Ray
Martin and
Mrs. K. K. Mitchell.
Others from Bodcaw who attend-
ed the conference were Mrs. Her-
man May, Mrs. Teddy May, Mrs.
Otha Mullins, Mrs. Enoch Benson,
Mrs. Clarence Dunn, Mrs. E. D.
Downs, Mrs. Earl May, Mrs. Alex
Boswell, Mrs. Cliff Butler, Mrs.
Ben Trahan and Mrs. E, D. Spen.
cer.
._«-.i
The Ambassador Class of Gar-
rell Memorial Baplist Church will
meet Tuesday, November 9, at 7:30
p. m. in the home of Mrs. Wade
Warren, wilh Mrs. Clifton Billings
as co-hostess.
Wednesday November 10
The John 'Cain Chapter of the
D. A. R. will meet in Ihe home of
Mrs. B. L. Reltig, 420 Wesl Avenue
ndia, Ceylon and Pakistan. U was
nnouneed that "Korea Day" would
16 Sunday, November 14,
The meeting was closed with the
V. S. C. S. benediction.
Refreshments were served to 50
members and two guests, the Rev.
and Mrs. Doss.
Hope Jr.-Sr. High
P. T. A. To Meet
"Team Work for Better Schools"
will be the theme of the program
when the Hope Junior-Senior High
School P. T. A. meets
Thursday,
November 11, at 3:30 p. m. in the
auditorium of the Junior High Scho-
ol. "What do we want of our scho-
ols" and "Is Yours a Good School"
discussed by Mrs. P. L. Perkins,
ei faculty member, and Mrs. Dick
jviia. u, oj. jn.i:LLi£, i^v vvtiM- rtvuuut: , ~ ------- "
,,, ,
t 11 ,«^
B .on Wednesday, November 10, at1 Watkins, a parent, will be followed
12 noon. Mrs. R. L. Searcy of
,
a buzz session. Ihe Glee Club
* SAENGER
*
LAST DAY •
•
•
FEATURE TIMES •
.
.
. .
-
wisville. Mrs. Dick Watkins and ' "nder the direction of Mrs. B. C.
Hyatt will sing, and n speech stu-
'dent w111 brm8 the natlonal Presl'
dent's message.
The aim of the National Congress
of Parents and Teachers is to give
Garland P. T. A. will meet Wed- every generation a chance to serve
esday, November 10, at 3 p. m. children and youth and the aim of
2:56
- 7:11
! FULL LENGTH
-'
l O SllMI'S
'
il U1U1H HIOUl'S !i,f,ii»ioui>nii~;
OgNE WITHJHE WIND :
GUUBIE • VIVIQUtlGH • lESUEHOWRO
OUVlAdeHAVIlUND
•
.TECHNICOLOR!
1. "DROOPY" CARTOON
2. LATE NEWS EVENTS
e guest speaker. Executive com-
mittee will meet at 2:30.
t WED.-THURS. •
Up Front on the West's
deadly Twenty-Mile run!
to show their appreciation for this
fine spirit by enlisting and working
in this important organization whi
Wednesday November 10
ch tends to bring closer togethe
Patmos P. T. A. will have a sup- the home, the school and the chur
er in the school lunchroom Wed- ch.
esday night, November 10, at 7:30. [ Believing that fathers and emplo-
Each family is asked to bring a yed mothers are interested in be-
overed dish.
coming better
acquainted
with
their child's school and teachers
the P. T. A. had a very successful
SHOKRIN
A WAINIKIIOS. PICTUIE
avneMORRIS
^PRESCRIPTION'
MEANS
PROTECTION1
Wore often than you might sup-
)se,
we hear the question:
Vhy do I need a prescription to
ly the medicine the doctor has
dered to make me well? It
st seems to make the cost go
i,"
It's easy to see why some
ople ask this, and the answer
just as 'simple. Your doctor's
•escription is written for y9ur
p'im.
It is his explicit
der by us, your pharmacists.,
e are'trained by years of col-
ge and practical experience to
low his scientific instructions
the letter.
We are also the final check-
int
before
the
medicine
aches you. We double-check
1 prescriptions. It's our duty
see that there are no mistakes
id to call the doctor if there is
y question about his orders.
[So,
"prescription" r e a l l y
earif ^"protection" . . . your
•otec'flon. We're happy to pro-
de it.
!
IWard & Son
DRUGGIST
Phone 7-2292
102 W. Second St.
Irs. Richard Howards of Hope
•c associate hostesses. Members
lease note
change in
meeting
,
, a
.
.
he executive board will meet at1 the Hope school unit is to have
15. The meeting will be dismissed | every mother and father or guar
. • ..
°
.
.
..
- ' j:««
rtf
T,,Mir*»._C!e,«ir»t' TTicrVi Rr»hnn
n time for the members to attend
ic Fire Prevention Parade.
Hope Federation of Garden Clubs
ill meet in the home of Mds. Ha£-
Id M. Brents, Oakhaven, on Wed-
esday,' November 10, at 10 a. m.
dian of Junior-Senior High Schoo:
students belonging to and attend
ing when possible the Parent Tea-
cher Association. If parents expect
their children to be interested
in
their books, then they should show
an interest in the school the chil
ed.
-au.a.y, iiuveiiiucj.
au, at AU ct. in-
*
-.
.
acn club is urged to be represen- dren attend, and the teachers who
train them. Never in a school P
T. A. have the teachers been more
congenial
and cooperative
than
those in the Hope
Junior-Senioi
Paisley P. T. A. will meet Wed-
esclay, November 10, at 3 p. m.
cauetj, .i.'iu vtuuuti j . u , c i i . u p . iii.
-
_
.
„,
i j
t the school. Charles Gough will High School, so parents are asked
Mrs. Bob MasslngUI
Entertains Business
Womans Circle No. 2
The Business
Woman's
Circle
No. 2 of the First Baptist Church
met Monday evening in the home
of Mrs. Bob Massingill.
After a brief business
session,
Mrs. P. J, Holt gave the devotional.
The program was presented by
he following special guests, Mrs.
Basil York,
Mrs. C. C. Collins,
VIrs. Frank Douglas, Mrs. W. H.
Gurtter, Sr., and Mrs. A .D. Bran-
nan, Sr. The title of the program
was "African Missions".
Senior Ladles
Auxiliary Has
Thanksgiving Program
Court Docket
Municipal Court of Hope, Arkan-
sas, November 8, 1954.
City Docket
Herman
Williams,
improper
lights on car, Forfeited $1.00 cash
bond.
Herman Williams. No State Car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Herman Williams, Fictitious car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Arthur Jackson.
Running Stop
sign, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond
Daniel Huddleston, Frank Adams,
Speeding, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond,
Kennie Atkins, Berlin Fuller, Ha-
zardous driving,
Forfeited $10.00
cash bond,
Charlie Lee Howard,
No driv-
ers license, Forfeited $5.00 cash
bond.
B. M. Mouser, Robert E. Lee,
Failure to yield right of way, Plea
gulity, fined $5.00.
Lela Bell Jones, Hershel Ward,
Shirk Conway, Drunkenness, For-
feited $10.00 cash bond.
Thn QO«;«,. T n ^ '
A, -r
*
Calvin McPherson, Assault & Bat-
The Senior Ladies Auxiliary of torv Vnrfou^
«.ln'nn „„„*, ,—A
the Unity Baptist Church met Mon-
day afternoon, November 8, at 2
o'clock, in the home of Mrs. E. L.
Lane.
Songs were led'by Elder White,
who also led in prayer.
Mrs. Barney Gaines, president
of the
auxiliary, presented
the
Thanksgiving program, assisted by
Mrs.
Tom Anderson, Mrs. Lane and
Mrs. Howard Collier. Mrs. Jesse
Sinclair gave the devotional from
the 100th Psalm.
A report of the previous meeting
was given by Mrs. Sinclair, and
Mrs. Anderson dismissed the group.
The hostess served refreshments
to 11 members.
tery, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Eugene Gill, Clarence
Chipps,
Gaming, Plea guilty, fined $10.00.
James Wilbert, W. L. Holbert,
Willie Malone, Gaming, Forfeited
$10.00 cash bond.
State Docket
James D. Welch, Operating a mo-
tor vehicle vvthout a driver's licen-
se, Plea guilty, fined $5.00.
E. F. Simmons, Passing in a "No
Passing" zone, Plea guilty,
JEined
$5.00.
Continued from *»flge Ofl*
Mayfair
quivered
with
gossip.
Margaret had been to church. And
because
it
was
Remembrance
Sunday, she had been dowri
in
Whitehall to stand by reverently
while her sister, Queen Elizabeth,
honored the men and women who
had lost their lives in wars. Then
in the afternoon she went to thc
movies.
Theater managers Were
inter-
viewed, and they 'said: "Tradition-
shattering," "what
a
surprise,"
it must have been unofficial" and
"tut-tut and tch-tchl"
The objection to royalty's going
to movies on Sunday is inspired
largely by the conservative ele-
ments among English churchmen,
Whose influence Is great. The pop-
ulation
is being
reminded con-
stantly that the sovereign is the
defender of the faith, and that the
Lord's Day must be respected.
But curiously while Margaret is
being talked about lor
breaking
tradition, thc Church of England
itself is being sniped at by per-
sons whose moral indignation gets
stirred up
easily. The
church,
which lately turned its financial
affairs over to a committee
of
experts, made a handsome clean-
ing in the stock exchange.
It's
gambling, say critics, and
natibn simmers.
Louis and Ernest Wyndor of New
York, and by Dr. Mortoti L. Lev-
in and associates of Albany. N.Y.
A British study just a bit later
Some folks think they are a s6-
ctol success when they master the
art of sayf ng nasty things th a hke
way.
'
J^Mi F. JtjSnkfel,
Robert W. Hansetl that m
itt a false fkc fiiilrM
wanted to be Wcked.lip
Arrives."
/
* -
Hansen said "I -*ould
punish you most by
case and letting you „_.
ydu another chance* I'll
t months in the '
ion."
'
' • " . '
by
Dr. Richard Doll and Prof.
A. Bradford Hill, ptjinling to
an
association between cigarettes and
lung cancer, also was published by
American newspapers.
But these and other reports com-
ing still
loiter seemed to
find
l'tt.1
Deaths Over
the Nation
Brookvvood P. T. A. will meet
Wednesday in the school auditorium j night meeting in October and will
t 3 p. m. The executive board will have another such meeting in the
All members are spring.
Yard of Month
Winners Announced
The Hope Garden Clubs announce
the following
as
"Yard-of-the-
Month" winners for November:
Ward 1-Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hane-
gan, 606 East Second;
Ward 2-Mr. and Mrs. Sam War-
mack, 616 South Washington;
Ward 3-Mr. and Mrs. J. M. O'-
Neal, 621 West Avenue C;
Ward 4-Mr. and
Mrs. Elbert
Jones,, 420 North Elm;
Oakhaven and Beverly Hills-Mr,
and Mrs. Jack Carnahan, Oak-
naven.
Notice
The party planned for the Inter-
mediate MYF of the First Metl>
dist Church will not be held as
lanned. The date will be announc-
d later.
By. The Associated Press
San Francisco
Charles
B.
Henderson, 81, U.S. senator from
Nebada from 191? to 1921 and . a
former chairman of' the Board of
the Reconstruction Finance Corp.
Died Monday.
•
Glen
Head,'
N.
Y.
' Julian
Starkweather Ma'spn, 78, .'former
edito'r-in-chief of the New
York
Evening Post, who held ..editorial
posts on several Chicago newspa-
pers before
becoming managing
editor of the Naw York Herald
Tribune in 1922. Born in Chicago.
DiedMonday.
!
Baltimore
Dr. Francis
S.
neet at 2:15.
urged to attend.
Oglesby P. T. A. will meet Wed-
nesday, November 10, at 3 p._m.
.'he executive meeting will be held
at 2:30. '
Planned projects for this year
include a donation to the Junior
and Senior libraries, records and
films for visual education, supplies
for first aid rooms for both schools,
and contributions to the school ca-
feteria, Girl Scouts, and the youth
The Bodcaw P. T. A. will meet at center. The only methods of raising
he high school at 7 p. m. on Wed- j funds to carry out these projects
nesday, November 10. After the are the annual membership drive
•egular program, a short skit will' and talent
program.
The talent
be presented and then coffee and program will not be given until
doughnuts will be served in
chool cafeteria.
tfce
Thursday November 11
Hope Junior-Senior High School
sometime
in December
but the
membership drive has been in full
sway for four weeks now and will
close this week. The goal for this
year is 850 members but to date
P. T. A. will meet Thursday at 3:30 I there are only 300. Parents who
D. m. in the Junior High auditor-1 haven't sent their dues of only fif-
Him. The executive board will meet ty cents per member per year, to
'
at 3 p. m.
school by their child are asked to
do so tomorrow. Or, contact the
Ladies of the Eastern Star will membership
chairmen, Mrs.
sponsor a spaghetti supper Thurs-j Franklin
Horton
or
Mrs. ' Jim
day,
November 11, at 6:30 at the. Cole. In the definite pageant of the
Masonic H^ll. The public is invit- parent-teacher movement there is
ed. Adults, $1.00; children, 50 cents.;need for all: there is work for all.
Parents, teachers and all communi-
ty citizens interested in the Junior-
Senior High School are invited to
Thursday November 11
The Adult Fellowship of the First
Methodist Church will meet Thurs-j join the P. T. A. to make this the
day at 7 o. m. for a pot luck sup-1 best year it has ever had.
per. Guest speaker will be the Rev. | All members
and prospective
~~
" •
~ '
""— members are urged to make a spe-
cial effort to attend the meeting
Thursday and all interested persons
are extended a cordial invitation to
visit.
Edmund Pendleton. Baby
will be provided.
sitters
The Blevins P. T. A. will meet
in Ihe high school auditorium Thur-
sday, November 11, at 7 p. m. A
special program is planned and all
parents and patrons are urged to
be present.
Beacon Sunday School
Class Meets Monday
On Monday evening, November 8
, ,
,
members of the
Beacon Sunday
Hope B & PW Club will celebrate School class of the First Baptis
its 30th birthday anniversary
on church.met in the home of Mrs
Thursday
November 11, ^ 7 Russell McClain for a" combination
p. m. with a ban(lue^___a^kejlotel business and social meeting.
Moving pictures
were taken o
those
present,
following a shot-
business session. Mrs, Fred Bar
Barlow. Every member is urged to
be present.
Bodcaw P. T. A. Members
Attend District Conference
The Bodcaw P. T. A. was
represented
at the
District Con-
gave the devotional.
Refreshments
were
served t
Red Hot Wednesday
SPECIALS
IXTRA SPECIAL
All I ET Cf*^C
ULLtT EGGS
Doz, 29c
Births
The Rev. and Mrs. Joe W. Hun-
er of Emmet, announce the birth
)f a daughter, Vicki Lynne, on
Dctober 29, at the Cora Donnell
lospital in Prescott.
Cigarette
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bales of
Stamps, Announced the arrival of a
on, John Robert, on Saturday,
November 6. The paternal grand-
>arents are Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Jales. The maternal grand par-
ents' are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harri-
on of Locksborg.
Coming and Going
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Hasky,
VIr. and Mrs. Bob Magness, and
. and Mrs. W. E. McFarland of
Smmet, attended
the Arkansas-
Rice game in Little Rock on Sat-
urday afternoon.
Schwentker, 50, •, nationally known
child specialist,"professor"of pedi-
atrics at Johnss;Hopkins
Medical
School and pediamciah:in' chief at
Johns Hopkins''Hospital. Born
in
Schenectady, N . y . Died Monday.
Elizabeth N. J.
John
J. Mc-
Gbvvan, 7, G, press representative
for the late
President Woodrow
Wilron, treasurer of the Democrat-
ic State Committee and
former
newspaperman rBorh iri Charlottes-
town, P.E.I., Canada. Died Sunday.
JTt
Be?voir, Va
Maj
Gen
Arthur W. Penqje, 56, commanding
general of the Army Engineer Cen-
ter at Ft. Belvoir. Died Monday.
Great Falls, Mont.
George W.
Hey, 79, who made his violin de-
but at 3 with the Syracuse, N Y.,
symphony orchestra, 'former man-
ager of a Billings, Mont, opera
house orphestra, and founder
of
Ihe Great Falls Conservatory
of
Music. Died Monday.
' Saginaw, Mich.
Chelsea Cur-
tis Fraser, 78, violin maker and au-
thor. Born in New Sarum,
Died Sunday.
Continued rrom Page One
mo'st big
public issues,
didn't
spring forth overnight.
Some 15 years ago, Dr. Alton
Ochsner, famous New Orleans sur-
geon, was reporting
observations
which led him to :believe that cig-
arette smoking .was a cause of
lung cancer. Just yesterday
Dr.
Ochsner published a bo'ok, "Smok-
ing and Cancer, a Doctor's
Re-
port" Julian messner, Inc.) which
reviews all the evidence used to
indict cigarettes as a cause cf
lung cancer and heart disease.
In 1939, an Argentine physician
Dr. A. H. Rcffo; reported that tars
obtained from tobacco often could
produce cancer in the:skin of rab-
bits.
the American public only mildly
interested.
Perhaps
many m i s s e d 'the
rtories. Perhaps it takes time and
repetition
in the
absence
of
rtark drama
to
get
rapt at-
tention. Or perhaps many people
wanted stronger evidence.
No doubt some dismissed the re-
ports as another instance of cry-
ing "wolf" at cigarettes. For to-
bacco has been accused of many
Sins in the past
of leading to
poverty, of creating mustaches on
women, making men sterile, pois-
oning the,unborn babies of smok-
ing mothers, contributing to tuber-
culosis.
Smoking has been banned
at
some times in a lew countries. In
Denmark
smokers and
snuffers
Help Wa
2 waitresses, penw
ent empoy
income. Apply" i
^
son*
f
.
- -
Barlow HolSl
Ho Phone Colls/ Please
DODGE
has
done1
it
t jv*
>•*•
These and other reports were
mentioned in the news through the
were once publicly whipped.
In
Turkey, King Amuralh once de-
creed beheading for anyone, who
smoked.
Not until about two years
ai?o
did the long-smouldering
contro-
versy over cigarettes really start
to build up
into the public con-
sciousness.
Evidence was being discovered
and rediscovered to blame' ciga-
rettes for sickness and
untimely
death.- ,So also was evidence
to
question that evidence, or to blame
dther
factors
for
the
troubles
being attribxited to cigarettes.
The public was to become > the
jury. As such, the public was to
hear a good deal,
from
' both
newspapers
headlined
years.,
In 1D50,
stories from a cancer;
congress
in Paris reporting three separate
studies, mostly statistical,-
which
linked cigarettes with at least part
betted
wait!
Flair-
Fashionefi
of
increase in lung
amoh{< Americans. ,, The
cancer
studies
were made by ; Dr. Ochsner,
by
Doctors Evarts Graham
of
St.
Out.
Mrs. Katherine Webb of Harbor
Seach, Michigan, is visiting her
sister, Mrs, E. G. Coop, and other
relatives.
Mrs. Anna Judson
hs returned
from a week's visit with her dau-
ghter, Mrs. Jewel Tolley, Mr. Tol-
ley and family in Beaumont, Texas.
Mrs. E. G. Coop and Mrs. Ka-
Harmony in
Congress Hits
a Sour Note
By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON
WASHINGTON (ff)
. The post-
election theme
of harmony be-
tween President
Eisenhower and
the Democratic
4th
Congresse
echoed some dissonant notes tpday
in the wake of. an exchange be-
therine Webb have returned from! tween party chairmen and new
a visit with Mrs. Coop's daughter,
sibie;'-public interest" coming at a
time when, Hall said, responsible
leaders in Congress, are pledging
cooperation.
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas
who will be majority floor leader
when the .Democrats organize the
new Senate in January publicly
criticized some of President Eisen-
hower's campaign remarks at a
news conference Saturday. He also
set out certain, conditions for coop
eration on democratic congression-
al leaders during the next
two
years.
:
.
.
-
-
.
U. S. mints have turned out 4^4
billion nichols since 1866 when the
coin was first issued,
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS WASTE
NnwtinB backache, loss ot pep and energy,
headaches and dizziness may be due to slow-
down of kidney function. Doctors say good
kidney function Is very important tp cottd
health. When some everyday condition, such
us stress and strain, causes this Important
function to slow down,many folka suffer non-
Sing backache—feel miserable, Minor blad-
der irritations due to cold or wrong diet may
cause Betting up nights orf requentpassaged.
Don't neglect your kidneys If these condi-
tions bother you. Try Doan's Pills—a mild
diuretic, Used successfully by millions for
over 60 years. It's amazing how many time*
Doan's give happy relief from these discom-
forts— help thelSmUcsof kidney tubes and fil-
ters flush out waste. Get Doan'a Fills todayl
207-E. Secbni
Hope/ Ark;,
;?4 ^ ^t
, i f«r,
Mrs. V. A. Keth and Mr. Keith in
Dallas, Texas.
Mrs. George Sundstrom and son,
George A., of Phoenix, Ariz., are
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J, A. Davis, and other relatives.
^oodard Cox, Mrs. A. D. Glass, Ji
Mrs. William Groves. Mrs. Horac
Hubbard, Mrs,
Jim James, Mrs
Lloyd Leverett, Mrs. Orval Tayloi
Mrs.' George Thompson; Mrs. Win
die Thompson,
the teacher; as-
sociate members, Mrs. C. M. Ro-
gers, Jr., and Mrs. J. B. Martin.
and the. special guest, Mrs. Fred
Barr.
ELICIOUS ROUND
Lb.
, WHITI, YELLOW SWANS DOWN
Box
AKE MIX
The Rev. and Mrs. Doss
Guest Speakers at
W. S. C. S. Meeting
The Woman's Society of Christian
Service of the First Methodist Churi.
ch met Monday, November 8, at'
2 p. m.
church,.
in the sanctuary of the
The worship service opened with
a song, "Happy the Home", and
Mrs. J. C. Carlton gave the de-
votional using as her subject "The
Dawn of a Soul", Mrs. C. D. Les-
ter closed with prayer.
Mrs. Johnny McCabe, a member
of Circle Three, presented the Rev
and Mrs. Alfred Doss of DeQueen,
who gave reports of the National
Family Life Conference held in
Cleveland, Ohio, which they attend-
ed in October.
Mrs. Albert Graves,
president,
presided over the business meet-
ing. Repovts were made, and the
circle count taken.
Circle
Five
winning wjtlj 15 members present
Hospital Notes
Julia Chester
Admitted: Mrs. Annie Madlock,
Hope, Mrs. Homer C. Gaines, Hope.
Mr. Clyde Zinn, Hope, Mrs. Lucy
Sipes, Columbus, Mrs. Sallie Col-
lier, Hope, Mr.
Edgar Lafferty,
Patmos, Mrs. Nettie Butler, Hope,
Paul
Rawson,
Cape Giradeau,
Mo., Ruby Lee Briggs, Hope.
Discharged:
Mrs. Dan
Green,
Hope, Mrs. Tom Gathright, Sara-
toga, Mr. Steve Atkins, Hope, Mrs.
John S.
Matthews, Hope, Mrs.
Wendell Sowards and son, McCas-
kill, Sarah Jones, Fulton, Dorothy
Powell and son, Hope.
Mr .and Mrs. Homer C, Gaines.
Hope, have a daughter, Mary Loui-
se, born at 10:02 p. m. Friday.
Branch
Admitted: ,Mrs. W. A. Powell,
Patmos, Mr. Steve Bader, Hope,
Mrs. Inez Tefteller, Hope.
Discharged: Ruby Lee Fleming,
Hope, Mrs. Mpnrpe Samuels, Rt.
3, Hope, Mrs. H, L. Levins, Wash-
ington.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Tefteller of
Hope, announce the arrival of a
baby boy on November 6, 1954.
statements by Democratic leaders.
Democratic National Chairman
Stpehen A. Mitchell said yesterday
in a statement that Vice Presi-
dent Nixon snould "retract
and
apologize for his campaign excess-
es." If Nixon continues, Mitchell
added, "I hope that the President
will take the opportunity to dis-,
associate himself from such char-
acter assassination by public dis-
avowal."
Republican National
Chairman
Leonard W. Hall replied of Mitch-
ell's remarks: "This is in the worst
possible taste and In the worst pos-
LOOK YOUR LOVELIEST
THE BEAUTY BOX
Open 6 days a week
After 5 appointments for
the \yorking girls
Latest Hair Styling
Phone 7-5850
112 S. Main
Ruth Hoelscher Janell Roberts
ON SALE
CLEAN UP MERCHANDISE FROM OUR
HARVEST
'; >
l»r>
;.*m
3 ONLY
MEN S TOPCOATS • •
SMALL LOT -- BROKEN SIZES
Program!
YORK M
Selected radio
NE
programs tonight:
NBC
7 People
Are Funny;
7:30
Dragnet;
8 Radio Theater,
"My Man Godfrey."
CBS — 7 Stop The Music; 3:30
Amos And Andy: 9:15 Dance Time,
ABC
7 Jack Gregson
Hour;
8 Town Meeting
Discussion.
MBS
7 Treasury '
Th,P ScEW-oh,.
pole-frame
cuts farm building costs
• You pen s*v» wp to h*M the cost cl
erecting an4 royfftflj" fog Voa* >WWi
ole-type
supported
Creosoted
CHILDREN* DRESSES.. $2.0(1
BROKEN SIZES AND COLORS LADIES
HANSEN GLOVES
I ONLY —SIZE 40
MAN S SUIT . . ,
X**^
.,wt'?
t
*> Hr-f*
; I'v^V^
- $y#
^m
u^!
• •
$8,95 RACK OF
Fall Cott
Reduced
LADIES DRESSES
MEN 5 NYLON SHORTS It
3 QNUY — $17,95 5T, MARYS
•], .
.,
ALL WOOL BLANKETS $1
i'1'IBIiKij^
I
5MAIL W)T
JEAN SETS
ItUE JIANS
*&'
1'-!','•
A'sf.'^y
«,#"*•
5k S&C ;•.
1*1:'^ £frj;
M O M S T A R ,
H O P E , A f t K A N S A S
I-JWMIM"- .;,}', .
fe>? #>
|C» '•/ ,
j.
<;,? • • • •
ire
™-fe\-
s
.™jtW \ < *
t. Credited with
SflejStfra
tnatch
__._lal'All«l
$7. ItnjttMrtl
m is Wtt.
MARKETS
Ho
\\\
elides
i fhe
tullding
# 3t M*' M&
tk£ outs'Md
W "1 jbre-
t An .an at-
tWWWtOlA'* K«S
• to
think
against lha
>'Ugh widows
|« at ,$100,000, said
s Had", Been afcumu-
iri6r,s>veral days,
structure
Me
?W»*
•f&sr
,r: "
smmmn^'^i
*
fe4^ * t"-,H> *,*
J
JAfc-B-Q
tT A jJJ',"'*S^. '. ( . *_^
Ff*^r°<
<"
W&ii
s 12,060; lower;
liSO-75; about a
hoke Nd. Is and 2s 19.85! ISO-
Ib Iflf&.SOOO; 225-240 Ih 1900-
); 246-260 Ib W.tS«i&.$${ sdWs 400
down
tt.2S-?3j
fdW at 18.00;
iei"* POV/S 15.50-17,2,'}!
b6ars
3XW-J5.00, ,
Cattle 6,000; calves 1,700: about
ady but little ddndj tltillty and
commercial cow* 85CM2.06; can-
and citttSfs e.00-d.5(5:
llsht
iitlly c a n ft e r s 1&0-?0; bulls
ItJtfdyJ
Utility
arid
commercial
l.OO'llOO; cfttlner and cutte* btilU
.OO-lO.SOi vpnldrs steady:
good
nd choice 17,06-23.00; few
at
500! commercial art dloW
good
2.00-IO.OO; slaughter calves slow;
orrtrnerclal arid goad 11,00-15.00;
Hilly and low commercial 8.00-
0.00,
heep 1,700; wool lambs weak to
I lower; icveral lots good
to
rime 1800-19.50; early top 19.50;
fend not fully established;
a«ed
hecp steady; ."laughter ewes 3.00
.00.
POULTRY AND PRODUCE
CHICAGO' W) Live
poul
tr
toady ort Hens; barely stendy on
•oung stock; receipts 971 coops
66,425 Ib; F O.B. paying prices un-
hangedt Hoavy hens 16-19; light
lens 12-14; fryers and broilers 23-
5! old roosters 12-12.5; caponette
young hert turkeys
34-5(5;
gecsc 23.
Butter firm;
receint s 017,814;
vholcsale buylrig prices I'A lower
o
1 "higher; 93 score AA 58.5;
92 A 68.25-5; 90 B 57.5; 89 C 56
cnrn 90 B-8; 89 C 6.
Eggs mixed;
receipt s
10,552
wholesale buying prices 1 lower to
higher; U.S. large white 34.5
mixed 35.5; U. S. mediums 27; US
ttandards 2 ;
current
receipts
none; dirties 20; checks 20
NEW YORK STOCKS
NEW YORJC 1<P) The sto ck m ar
<et developed a certain amount o
hesitancy today following its sen
satkmal post-qlection surge aheac
On .balance, , the market
w o
barely higher. Gains
of 1 to
points were found in several sec
tions of the list, but most advance
small. Losses appeared fre
guently, sometimes passing a poln*
1 ^Business maintained a swift par
at-'around the highest levels of th
.GRAIN
!
' Wheat: Noric. Corn:
No. 2 ye
low41.51; No. 3 yellow 1.47-1.49
No 4 137'/4-1.43'/2; No.. 5 129-135
M>; sa mole -grade yellow 1.2
Oats: Sample gr^'de white 87.
_
Bareley ,nomin,ai :MalJ>ng .ehoic
1.31-52; feed 1.10-22.
explosion," \.said Dale "Plunk, 18
year-old high school junior. "It wa
terrible."
j|y^H%«Mlay, November 11,1954
S^S:k4!iwfT-.i^i- • n A V
rmgti
jgitffirf? ;
/||^ill-'n9,t be ppen for business
feffife-above 'date, being a legal
jFj«3j(8fl •
'
,
J?$'v'; v
•
• •
'itizens National Bank
First National Bank
m&fk''*'
it^rr" -
®«v
' "*i~ -.''
HOPE
Three Mental
Escapees
Still ot Large
LITTLE
ates of
the
cfimiftal
i'ouf
ward
Governors of
South Divided
on Segregation
feOCA BATON, Fla. t*) Sdtilhern
states, divided as they are on their
approach to the explosive school
:sFiie, may find 9 'com-
either on the conference floor, or
away.
Three states
Gccrpia, Louisia-
na end South Caroline, have tak-
en action to put themselves in a
por.ition • to keep Negroes out of
white schools.
Georgia adopted a constitutional
rmendmeht Nov. 2 permitting the
legislature to abolish the public
system
tion.
Louisiana
rather than end segrega-
approved
an amend-
ap-
out-
Er-
,
-
,
,.
....
ftiori ground approach to the prob- mont at thc sam-^ time permitting
l«rr. at the annual Southern Cover- 1 'he state tc invoke police powers
afiod frcfn the State hdspital herd
st night .after threatening four
ttohdants.
Deitt Tatum, 27, of Parogould,
hargcd v/ith staying his wife, gaV<3
rhself up a few, minutes. after
he escape which occurred about
40 p. m.
The other
three
still were at
arge today.
State police Identified them as
ohnhie areen, 37, an ex-convict
ho was arrested at Fort Smith
n a charge of burglary; Char'es
rice, 23, Litild Rock, charged with
urglor, and L. B. Veach (address
nknown,) charged wilh l&rceny.
All but Veach Were undergoing 30-
ay sanity tests at the hospital,
Officers said Veach waa from
nother ward at the hospital and
nly recently had been transferred
i the criminal ward section.
Tntum told Little Rock detectives
hot Green and Price •"abandoned
s" (Tntum and Veach) after ctt-
isting their aid to oscapa. . •
Green and Price were'; believed
o be together with a third^person
n an automobile which
Tatum
aid was -waiting"' for them when
hey made the break.
Tatum told .officers, the braak
wan planned by Price..
It was the second escape of four
nrtiates of the ward sir.ce'. May.
t also was-the second time that
attendant C. H.: Ahart had' been
hreatened with a sharp instru-
ment.
' • - ' ' . -
Ahart said he was standing near
he door to Ihe fire escape when
3recn approached, 'drew, a knife,
arid ordered • him
to - unlock
the
dcor.
Ahavt said that 'another "atten-
dant, Charles Copeland, shouted to
him to stop scirffling with Green.
Other attendents, A. H. Williams
and W. N. .Leach,, were threatened
by Tatum and Veach, Ahart said.
Tatum told officers Price had
planned to head for Mexico
or
California.
Attendants said they didn't know
where Green .got the knife.
ftor's Conference
Thursday.
opening
h e r e to maintain segregation m the pub-
lic schools.
The
conference
meeting
date
falls less thfen a month from the
lime the IT. S.
Supreme
Court
cptns arguments Dec. 0 on how
end when it should order Into ef-
fect its May 17 edict that segre-
gated public shhools must end.
There's no mention of scgregrt-
tion matters as such on the official
conference program, but there's
South Carolina's Legislature al-
ready has authority to abolish t'rw
school system.
A fourth state, Mississippi, voles
Dec. 2l on a proposition to em-
power the Legislature to abolish
public schools ns a means of re-
taining segregation.
Some of the oth?r southern states
have indicated they thought
the
cient time.
A possible' middle ground
proach in the Florida plan
lined by Ally. Gen. Richard
v'in
of that state in a
Supreme
Court brief in' which he pleads for
time and for a large, degree of lo-
cal determination as to when seg-
regated schools should be ended.
The FloHd'a plan provides
that
in cases where suits are brought to
gain
admittance to
segregated
schools, thc trial courts should- be
given wide discretion to hold hear
ings, and to
determine
on the
basis of local conditions whether
the petition should be granted.
In cases where schools author-
ties and thn trial courts detcrmin
cd thc races shouldn't be integrat-
ed, new hearings could be held at
a later datd to determine whether
conditions may change.
little doubt the subject Will be one problem could
,
the most lively.'to come Up'the Supreme Court
Arkansans to
Arrive in U, S.
SEATTLE,
USS Gen. G-.
Wash. (UP)
Th-2
M. Randall will ar
Do: ado; SFC Boy E Schnarr,
tie Rock; Airman Will.am R. Sm-
ngton, Attica; Cpl. Ernest S. oul
Ivan; Rosiej
PFC Hartzell Wat-
son,
Gregory; ^and Pvt. Johnny
Whittle, Piggott.
Women have had a lower death
rive at the Army port of embarka
Sion here Wednesday
v/ith
2,269
pasrengers from the Far East.
Among them will be tire follow-
ing Arkansas servicemen:
Cpl. Collier
Anders. Jr.,
Au-
vergne; Sgt. John
R. Anthony
Bearden; S-Sgt. James L. Besly,
Hazen; PFC Rofus
Cobb, Jr. Au-
susta; Capt. John C.
Freeman,
Crt-ssett; Airman 3-. W.
Harper,
Wilmar; Cpl. Charles G. Harwell,
Okay;
Airman
Winsley
Henry,
Mar'ianna-; Cpl. Claudie- L. Higgins,
Fort Smith.
Cpl. Carl Hudson, Rudy; Air-
man Albert E.'Jankins,
Truman;
Cpl.
Willard
G. Lawson, Rogers;
Pvt. Melvir. C. Locke, Camdcn;
rale than men for many years andiCp!. Jessie M. Martin, Okean; Air-
since 1930 the lives of women have, Iman William J.'Moore, Jr., Wynne
Mr. Fulbrighf
Has Problems
WASHINGTON W)
If the Mc-
Carthy censure debate runs on to*
any great length, Sen. Fulbright
(D-Ark) may have 'to become A
New York commuter.
Fulbright while greatly
inter-
ested in the censure proceedings,
also is a U. S. delegate to the-Unit-
ed Nation's session now.; going on
in New York.
He said today he will stay in
Washington for a time to see how'
the censure matter proceeds in the
Senate but that he wants to return
to the U. N. Sessions.
.
•Fulbright'was1 one .of the origi-
nal group of senators urging adop-
tion of the
resolution
by , Sen.
Flanders (R-Vt) calling for cen-
sure of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis).
The Flanders resolution war sub-
mitted to •'• a
special
committee
which recommended censure.
Fulbright told a Reporter it 's.
his present inclination to take. little,
or no part in,the debate. It, would
appear better stratgey, he said, to
let the Watkins cprnmittee
pre-
sent the case and then permit Mc-
Carthy and his supporters to do
the talking.
»
, , . ' . . . -
• . . • . . •
Six European nations, Luxem-
bourg, Andorra, Liechtenstein, San j
Marino, Monaco arid Vatican City
have a total area smalled than that
o fthe King Ranch in Texas.
Fdom 1903 through 1014, more
than 750,000 immigrants come to
the United States and more than a
million, entered
in six of those
years.
•M,
$?'>.yl've waited years and
fv
gears /or power as exciting
;
^ as the '55 FORD'S new
BUGGER-TORQUE!/
i,
ON DISPLAY
FRIDAY
far move than those of men.
$19.95 NOW $14.95
Get them before the
season opens and save.
WESTERN AUTO
ASSOCIATE StORE
_
•
——
Bad
Colds
WICKS
WVAPORUB
RelieveSuffeting
SHOP
IGGLY WIGGLY
AND YOU GET
DOUBLE
S&H GREEN STAMP'S. WEDNESDAY
(ON PURCHASES OF $2.50 OR MORE)
Prices Effective Wed. Nov. 10th
Pineapple Juice 25c
ARMOURSMilk
&IOc
BEST MEAT IN TOWN
'
<>*^P .
1 *
I11
'
'
'
"
{
;
OMAHA BEEF — CHUCK
ROAST
MAPLECREST
FRYERS
Lb
UNCLE BEN'S CONVERTED
RICE
THE FOAMING CLEANSER
BABO
NABISCO RITZ
.VL
CRACKERS
NAB I SCO OREO CREAM
SANDWICH
PLANTERS COCKTAIL
PEANUTS
14 pz. OCr
Pkg.
JL*J\~
Giant TT-
Size
I-/ C
PALWOUIVE
SOAP
Reg..
Bars
17c
BAKE-RltE
_ •
SHORTENING
1 Lb-
ttr
Pkg.
O^C
4 Oz. 9Q
Pkg.
ZVC
8 Oz. OCr
Can
w«Jv«
73<
PALMOLIVE
SOAP
2 32 23c
IMPERIAL
SUPER SUDS
Large
Pkg.
29c
AIR WICK
UNDERWOOD DEVILEp
HAM
SALAD BOWL SALAD
DRESSING
CRYSTAL WHITE
SOAP
BEST PRODUCE IN TOWN!
Potatoes
IB .:^ipP W ^ ^^^B ^W^ ^^r-
5iOz- AOr
Bottle Q^C
Reg.
9| r
Can
<61C
1602.
-Oft-
Jar
4»TV
2
Large
1 "T-
Par5
I/C
Cashmere Bpyquet
SOAP
2
Reg-
17«
Bgrs
I /- V
W
Bouquet
SOAP
Large
Pkg.
29c
VEL
Tuetday, November 9, 1954
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
* IV SOCIETY
Phone 7-3431 Between 8 A. M. and 4 P. M.
ilendar
Tuesday
November 9
fhe
Business
Woman's Circle
I the First Baptist Chuhch will
sday, November 9,
at
. in the
home of Mrs.
|de Osburn, 405 S.
Greening.
members are urged to attend.
let Tuesd
E p. m. i
the Golden Circle Class of the
1st Baplist
Church will meet
1'sday, November 9, at 7:30 p.
(in the home of Mrs. Phinis Her-
320 East 13th, for their month-
Ibusiness and
social meeting.
Glen Seaver
It
will be co-hos
IriJtt
Same night wil! be held at tha
Ipe Country Club at 7:45 p. m.
jsday, Npvember 9. Hosts will
|jMr. and Mrs. George P. New-
and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ste-
h.
.
hapter AE of the P. E. O. Sis-
lood will meet Tuesday, Novem-
9, at 3 p. m. with Mrs. Mack
Stuart.
The Iris Garden Club meets at
2:30 Tuesday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. Claud Sutton, with Mrs.
C. M. Agee as associate hostess.
Arrangements for
the afternoon
will be chrysanthemums.
' Mrs. Claud Sutton will entertain
the
Builders Sunday School Class
of the First Baptist Church
on
Tuesday night at 7:30 at her home
on the Rosston road.
ference held in Prescott on Thurs-
day, October 28.
Reports were given by the Bod-
caw P. T. A. along with the reports
from other P. T. A.'s represented.
In the afternoon, a short skit on
"Leadership Training"
was pre*
sented by seven of the Bodcaw re*
presentatives: Mrs. Carl Lewis,
Mrs. Chester
Whittert, Mrs. Jr.
Goodwin, Mrs. Bill Jones, Mrs. J.
D. Allen, Mrs.
Ray
Martin and
Mrs. K. K. Mitchell.
Others from Bodcaw who attend-
ed the conference were Mrs. Her-
man May, Mrs. Teddy May, Mrs.
Otha Mullins, Mrs. Enoch Benson,
Mrs. Clarence Dunn, Mrs. E. D.
Downs, Mrs. Earl May, Mrs. Alex
Boswell, Mrs. Cliff Butler, Mrs.
Ben Trahan and Mrs. E, D. Spen.
cer.
._«-.i
The Ambassador Class of Gar-
rell Memorial Baplist Church will
meet Tuesday, November 9, at 7:30
p. m. in the home of Mrs. Wade
Warren, wilh Mrs. Clifton Billings
as co-hostess.
Wednesday November 10
The John 'Cain Chapter of the
D. A. R. will meet in Ihe home of
Mrs. B. L. Reltig, 420 Wesl Avenue
ndia, Ceylon and Pakistan. U was
nnouneed that "Korea Day" would
16 Sunday, November 14,
The meeting was closed with the
V. S. C. S. benediction.
Refreshments were served to 50
members and two guests, the Rev.
and Mrs. Doss.
Hope Jr.-Sr. High
P. T. A. To Meet
"Team Work for Better Schools"
will be the theme of the program
when the Hope Junior-Senior High
School P. T. A. meets
Thursday,
November 11, at 3:30 p. m. in the
auditorium of the Junior High Scho-
ol. "What do we want of our scho-
ols" and "Is Yours a Good School"
discussed by Mrs. P. L. Perkins,
ei faculty member, and Mrs. Dick
jviia. u, oj. jn.i:LLi£, i^v vvtiM- rtvuuut: , ~ ------- "
,,, ,
t 11 ,«^
B .on Wednesday, November 10, at1 Watkins, a parent, will be followed
12 noon. Mrs. R. L. Searcy of
,
a buzz session. Ihe Glee Club
* SAENGER
*
LAST DAY •
•
•
FEATURE TIMES •
.
.
. .
-
wisville. Mrs. Dick Watkins and ' "nder the direction of Mrs. B. C.
Hyatt will sing, and n speech stu-
'dent w111 brm8 the natlonal Presl'
dent's message.
The aim of the National Congress
of Parents and Teachers is to give
Garland P. T. A. will meet Wed- every generation a chance to serve
esday, November 10, at 3 p. m. children and youth and the aim of
2:56
- 7:11
! FULL LENGTH
-'
l O SllMI'S
'
il U1U1H HIOUl'S !i,f,ii»ioui>nii~;
OgNE WITHJHE WIND :
GUUBIE • VIVIQUtlGH • lESUEHOWRO
OUVlAdeHAVIlUND
•
.TECHNICOLOR!
1. "DROOPY" CARTOON
2. LATE NEWS EVENTS
e guest speaker. Executive com-
mittee will meet at 2:30.
t WED.-THURS. •
Up Front on the West's
deadly Twenty-Mile run!
to show their appreciation for this
fine spirit by enlisting and working
in this important organization whi
Wednesday November 10
ch tends to bring closer togethe
Patmos P. T. A. will have a sup- the home, the school and the chur
er in the school lunchroom Wed- ch.
esday night, November 10, at 7:30. [ Believing that fathers and emplo-
Each family is asked to bring a yed mothers are interested in be-
overed dish.
coming better
acquainted
with
their child's school and teachers
the P. T. A. had a very successful
SHOKRIN
A WAINIKIIOS. PICTUIE
avneMORRIS
^PRESCRIPTION'
MEANS
PROTECTION1
Wore often than you might sup-
)se,
we hear the question:
Vhy do I need a prescription to
ly the medicine the doctor has
dered to make me well? It
st seems to make the cost go
i,"
It's easy to see why some
ople ask this, and the answer
just as 'simple. Your doctor's
•escription is written for y9ur
p'im.
It is his explicit
der by us, your pharmacists.,
e are'trained by years of col-
ge and practical experience to
low his scientific instructions
the letter.
We are also the final check-
int
before
the
medicine
aches you. We double-check
1 prescriptions. It's our duty
see that there are no mistakes
id to call the doctor if there is
y question about his orders.
[So,
"prescription" r e a l l y
earif ^"protection" . . . your
•otec'flon. We're happy to pro-
de it.
!
IWard & Son
DRUGGIST
Phone 7-2292
102 W. Second St.
Irs. Richard Howards of Hope
•c associate hostesses. Members
lease note
change in
meeting
,
, a
.
.
he executive board will meet at1 the Hope school unit is to have
15. The meeting will be dismissed | every mother and father or guar
. • ..
°
.
.
..
- ' j:««
rtf
T,,Mir*»._C!e,«ir»t' TTicrVi Rr»hnn
n time for the members to attend
ic Fire Prevention Parade.
Hope Federation of Garden Clubs
ill meet in the home of Mds. Ha£-
Id M. Brents, Oakhaven, on Wed-
esday,' November 10, at 10 a. m.
dian of Junior-Senior High Schoo:
students belonging to and attend
ing when possible the Parent Tea-
cher Association. If parents expect
their children to be interested
in
their books, then they should show
an interest in the school the chil
ed.
-au.a.y, iiuveiiiucj.
au, at AU ct. in-
*
-.
.
acn club is urged to be represen- dren attend, and the teachers who
train them. Never in a school P
T. A. have the teachers been more
congenial
and cooperative
than
those in the Hope
Junior-Senioi
Paisley P. T. A. will meet Wed-
esclay, November 10, at 3 p. m.
cauetj, .i.'iu vtuuuti j . u , c i i . u p . iii.
-
_
.
„,
i j
t the school. Charles Gough will High School, so parents are asked
Mrs. Bob MasslngUI
Entertains Business
Womans Circle No. 2
The Business
Woman's
Circle
No. 2 of the First Baptist Church
met Monday evening in the home
of Mrs. Bob Massingill.
After a brief business
session,
Mrs. P. J, Holt gave the devotional.
The program was presented by
he following special guests, Mrs.
Basil York,
Mrs. C. C. Collins,
VIrs. Frank Douglas, Mrs. W. H.
Gurtter, Sr., and Mrs. A .D. Bran-
nan, Sr. The title of the program
was "African Missions".
Senior Ladles
Auxiliary Has
Thanksgiving Program
Court Docket
Municipal Court of Hope, Arkan-
sas, November 8, 1954.
City Docket
Herman
Williams,
improper
lights on car, Forfeited $1.00 cash
bond.
Herman Williams. No State Car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Herman Williams, Fictitious car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Arthur Jackson.
Running Stop
sign, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond
Daniel Huddleston, Frank Adams,
Speeding, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond,
Kennie Atkins, Berlin Fuller, Ha-
zardous driving,
Forfeited $10.00
cash bond,
Charlie Lee Howard,
No driv-
ers license, Forfeited $5.00 cash
bond.
B. M. Mouser, Robert E. Lee,
Failure to yield right of way, Plea
gulity, fined $5.00.
Lela Bell Jones, Hershel Ward,
Shirk Conway, Drunkenness, For-
feited $10.00 cash bond.
Thn QO«;«,. T n ^ '
A, -r
*
Calvin McPherson, Assault & Bat-
The Senior Ladies Auxiliary of torv Vnrfou^
«.ln'nn „„„*, ,—A
the Unity Baptist Church met Mon-
day afternoon, November 8, at 2
o'clock, in the home of Mrs. E. L.
Lane.
Songs were led'by Elder White,
who also led in prayer.
Mrs. Barney Gaines, president
of the
auxiliary, presented
the
Thanksgiving program, assisted by
Mrs.
Tom Anderson, Mrs. Lane and
Mrs. Howard Collier. Mrs. Jesse
Sinclair gave the devotional from
the 100th Psalm.
A report of the previous meeting
was given by Mrs. Sinclair, and
Mrs. Anderson dismissed the group.
The hostess served refreshments
to 11 members.
tery, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Eugene Gill, Clarence
Chipps,
Gaming, Plea guilty, fined $10.00.
James Wilbert, W. L. Holbert,
Willie Malone, Gaming, Forfeited
$10.00 cash bond.
State Docket
James D. Welch, Operating a mo-
tor vehicle vvthout a driver's licen-
se, Plea guilty, fined $5.00.
E. F. Simmons, Passing in a "No
Passing" zone, Plea guilty,
JEined
$5.00.
Continued from *»flge Ofl*
Mayfair
quivered
with
gossip.
Margaret had been to church. And
because
it
was
Remembrance
Sunday, she had been dowri
in
Whitehall to stand by reverently
while her sister, Queen Elizabeth,
honored the men and women who
had lost their lives in wars. Then
in the afternoon she went to thc
movies.
Theater managers Were
inter-
viewed, and they 'said: "Tradition-
shattering," "what
a
surprise,"
it must have been unofficial" and
"tut-tut and tch-tchl"
The objection to royalty's going
to movies on Sunday is inspired
largely by the conservative ele-
ments among English churchmen,
Whose influence Is great. The pop-
ulation
is being
reminded con-
stantly that the sovereign is the
defender of the faith, and that the
Lord's Day must be respected.
But curiously while Margaret is
being talked about lor
breaking
tradition, thc Church of England
itself is being sniped at by per-
sons whose moral indignation gets
stirred up
easily. The
church,
which lately turned its financial
affairs over to a committee
of
experts, made a handsome clean-
ing in the stock exchange.
It's
gambling, say critics, and
natibn simmers.
Louis and Ernest Wyndor of New
York, and by Dr. Mortoti L. Lev-
in and associates of Albany. N.Y.
A British study just a bit later
Some folks think they are a s6-
ctol success when they master the
art of sayf ng nasty things th a hke
way.
'
J^Mi F. JtjSnkfel,
Robert W. Hansetl that m
itt a false fkc fiiilrM
wanted to be Wcked.lip
Arrives."
/
* -
Hansen said "I -*ould
punish you most by
case and letting you „_.
ydu another chance* I'll
t months in the '
ion."
'
' • " . '
by
Dr. Richard Doll and Prof.
A. Bradford Hill, ptjinling to
an
association between cigarettes and
lung cancer, also was published by
American newspapers.
But these and other reports com-
ing still
loiter seemed to
find
l'tt.1
Deaths Over
the Nation
Brookvvood P. T. A. will meet
Wednesday in the school auditorium j night meeting in October and will
t 3 p. m. The executive board will have another such meeting in the
All members are spring.
Yard of Month
Winners Announced
The Hope Garden Clubs announce
the following
as
"Yard-of-the-
Month" winners for November:
Ward 1-Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hane-
gan, 606 East Second;
Ward 2-Mr. and Mrs. Sam War-
mack, 616 South Washington;
Ward 3-Mr. and Mrs. J. M. O'-
Neal, 621 West Avenue C;
Ward 4-Mr. and
Mrs. Elbert
Jones,, 420 North Elm;
Oakhaven and Beverly Hills-Mr,
and Mrs. Jack Carnahan, Oak-
naven.
Notice
The party planned for the Inter-
mediate MYF of the First Metl>
dist Church will not be held as
lanned. The date will be announc-
d later.
By. The Associated Press
San Francisco
Charles
B.
Henderson, 81, U.S. senator from
Nebada from 191? to 1921 and . a
former chairman of' the Board of
the Reconstruction Finance Corp.
Died Monday.
•
Glen
Head,'
N.
Y.
' Julian
Starkweather Ma'spn, 78, .'former
edito'r-in-chief of the New
York
Evening Post, who held ..editorial
posts on several Chicago newspa-
pers before
becoming managing
editor of the Naw York Herald
Tribune in 1922. Born in Chicago.
DiedMonday.
!
Baltimore
Dr. Francis
S.
neet at 2:15.
urged to attend.
Oglesby P. T. A. will meet Wed-
nesday, November 10, at 3 p._m.
.'he executive meeting will be held
at 2:30. '
Planned projects for this year
include a donation to the Junior
and Senior libraries, records and
films for visual education, supplies
for first aid rooms for both schools,
and contributions to the school ca-
feteria, Girl Scouts, and the youth
The Bodcaw P. T. A. will meet at center. The only methods of raising
he high school at 7 p. m. on Wed- j funds to carry out these projects
nesday, November 10. After the are the annual membership drive
•egular program, a short skit will' and talent
program.
The talent
be presented and then coffee and program will not be given until
doughnuts will be served in
chool cafeteria.
tfce
Thursday November 11
Hope Junior-Senior High School
sometime
in December
but the
membership drive has been in full
sway for four weeks now and will
close this week. The goal for this
year is 850 members but to date
P. T. A. will meet Thursday at 3:30 I there are only 300. Parents who
D. m. in the Junior High auditor-1 haven't sent their dues of only fif-
Him. The executive board will meet ty cents per member per year, to
'
at 3 p. m.
school by their child are asked to
do so tomorrow. Or, contact the
Ladies of the Eastern Star will membership
chairmen, Mrs.
sponsor a spaghetti supper Thurs-j Franklin
Horton
or
Mrs. ' Jim
day,
November 11, at 6:30 at the. Cole. In the definite pageant of the
Masonic H^ll. The public is invit- parent-teacher movement there is
ed. Adults, $1.00; children, 50 cents.;need for all: there is work for all.
Parents, teachers and all communi-
ty citizens interested in the Junior-
Senior High School are invited to
Thursday November 11
The Adult Fellowship of the First
Methodist Church will meet Thurs-j join the P. T. A. to make this the
day at 7 o. m. for a pot luck sup-1 best year it has ever had.
per. Guest speaker will be the Rev. | All members
and prospective
~~
" •
~ '
""— members are urged to make a spe-
cial effort to attend the meeting
Thursday and all interested persons
are extended a cordial invitation to
visit.
Edmund Pendleton. Baby
will be provided.
sitters
The Blevins P. T. A. will meet
in Ihe high school auditorium Thur-
sday, November 11, at 7 p. m. A
special program is planned and all
parents and patrons are urged to
be present.
Beacon Sunday School
Class Meets Monday
On Monday evening, November 8
, ,
,
members of the
Beacon Sunday
Hope B & PW Club will celebrate School class of the First Baptis
its 30th birthday anniversary
on church.met in the home of Mrs
Thursday
November 11, ^ 7 Russell McClain for a" combination
p. m. with a ban(lue^___a^kejlotel business and social meeting.
Moving pictures
were taken o
those
present,
following a shot-
business session. Mrs, Fred Bar
Barlow. Every member is urged to
be present.
Bodcaw P. T. A. Members
Attend District Conference
The Bodcaw P. T. A. was
represented
at the
District Con-
gave the devotional.
Refreshments
were
served t
Red Hot Wednesday
SPECIALS
IXTRA SPECIAL
All I ET Cf*^C
ULLtT EGGS
Doz, 29c
Births
The Rev. and Mrs. Joe W. Hun-
er of Emmet, announce the birth
)f a daughter, Vicki Lynne, on
Dctober 29, at the Cora Donnell
lospital in Prescott.
Cigarette
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bales of
Stamps, Announced the arrival of a
on, John Robert, on Saturday,
November 6. The paternal grand-
>arents are Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Jales. The maternal grand par-
ents' are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harri-
on of Locksborg.
Coming and Going
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Hasky,
VIr. and Mrs. Bob Magness, and
. and Mrs. W. E. McFarland of
Smmet, attended
the Arkansas-
Rice game in Little Rock on Sat-
urday afternoon.
Schwentker, 50, •, nationally known
child specialist,"professor"of pedi-
atrics at Johnss;Hopkins
Medical
School and pediamciah:in' chief at
Johns Hopkins''Hospital. Born
in
Schenectady, N . y . Died Monday.
Elizabeth N. J.
John
J. Mc-
Gbvvan, 7, G, press representative
for the late
President Woodrow
Wilron, treasurer of the Democrat-
ic State Committee and
former
newspaperman rBorh iri Charlottes-
town, P.E.I., Canada. Died Sunday.
JTt
Be?voir, Va
Maj
Gen
Arthur W. Penqje, 56, commanding
general of the Army Engineer Cen-
ter at Ft. Belvoir. Died Monday.
Great Falls, Mont.
George W.
Hey, 79, who made his violin de-
but at 3 with the Syracuse, N Y.,
symphony orchestra, 'former man-
ager of a Billings, Mont, opera
house orphestra, and founder
of
Ihe Great Falls Conservatory
of
Music. Died Monday.
' Saginaw, Mich.
Chelsea Cur-
tis Fraser, 78, violin maker and au-
thor. Born in New Sarum,
Died Sunday.
Continued rrom Page One
mo'st big
public issues,
didn't
spring forth overnight.
Some 15 years ago, Dr. Alton
Ochsner, famous New Orleans sur-
geon, was reporting
observations
which led him to :believe that cig-
arette smoking .was a cause of
lung cancer. Just yesterday
Dr.
Ochsner published a bo'ok, "Smok-
ing and Cancer, a Doctor's
Re-
port" Julian messner, Inc.) which
reviews all the evidence used to
indict cigarettes as a cause cf
lung cancer and heart disease.
In 1939, an Argentine physician
Dr. A. H. Rcffo; reported that tars
obtained from tobacco often could
produce cancer in the:skin of rab-
bits.
the American public only mildly
interested.
Perhaps
many m i s s e d 'the
rtories. Perhaps it takes time and
repetition
in the
absence
of
rtark drama
to
get
rapt at-
tention. Or perhaps many people
wanted stronger evidence.
No doubt some dismissed the re-
ports as another instance of cry-
ing "wolf" at cigarettes. For to-
bacco has been accused of many
Sins in the past
of leading to
poverty, of creating mustaches on
women, making men sterile, pois-
oning the,unborn babies of smok-
ing mothers, contributing to tuber-
culosis.
Smoking has been banned
at
some times in a lew countries. In
Denmark
smokers and
snuffers
Help Wa
2 waitresses, penw
ent empoy
income. Apply" i
^
son*
f
.
- -
Barlow HolSl
Ho Phone Colls/ Please
DODGE
has
done1
it
t jv*
>•*•
These and other reports were
mentioned in the news through the
were once publicly whipped.
In
Turkey, King Amuralh once de-
creed beheading for anyone, who
smoked.
Not until about two years
ai?o
did the long-smouldering
contro-
versy over cigarettes really start
to build up
into the public con-
sciousness.
Evidence was being discovered
and rediscovered to blame' ciga-
rettes for sickness and
untimely
death.- ,So also was evidence
to
question that evidence, or to blame
dther
factors
for
the
troubles
being attribxited to cigarettes.
The public was to become > the
jury. As such, the public was to
hear a good deal,
from
' both
newspapers
headlined
years.,
In 1D50,
stories from a cancer;
congress
in Paris reporting three separate
studies, mostly statistical,-
which
linked cigarettes with at least part
betted
wait!
Flair-
Fashionefi
of
increase in lung
amoh{< Americans. ,, The
cancer
studies
were made by ; Dr. Ochsner,
by
Doctors Evarts Graham
of
St.
Out.
Mrs. Katherine Webb of Harbor
Seach, Michigan, is visiting her
sister, Mrs, E. G. Coop, and other
relatives.
Mrs. Anna Judson
hs returned
from a week's visit with her dau-
ghter, Mrs. Jewel Tolley, Mr. Tol-
ley and family in Beaumont, Texas.
Mrs. E. G. Coop and Mrs. Ka-
Harmony in
Congress Hits
a Sour Note
By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON
WASHINGTON (ff)
. The post-
election theme
of harmony be-
tween President
Eisenhower and
the Democratic
4th
Congresse
echoed some dissonant notes tpday
in the wake of. an exchange be-
therine Webb have returned from! tween party chairmen and new
a visit with Mrs. Coop's daughter,
sibie;'-public interest" coming at a
time when, Hall said, responsible
leaders in Congress, are pledging
cooperation.
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas
who will be majority floor leader
when the .Democrats organize the
new Senate in January publicly
criticized some of President Eisen-
hower's campaign remarks at a
news conference Saturday. He also
set out certain, conditions for coop
eration on democratic congression-
al leaders during the next
two
years.
:
.
.
-
-
.
U. S. mints have turned out 4^4
billion nichols since 1866 when the
coin was first issued,
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS WASTE
NnwtinB backache, loss ot pep and energy,
headaches and dizziness may be due to slow-
down of kidney function. Doctors say good
kidney function Is very important tp cottd
health. When some everyday condition, such
us stress and strain, causes this Important
function to slow down,many folka suffer non-
Sing backache—feel miserable, Minor blad-
der irritations due to cold or wrong diet may
cause Betting up nights orf requentpassaged.
Don't neglect your kidneys If these condi-
tions bother you. Try Doan's Pills—a mild
diuretic, Used successfully by millions for
over 60 years. It's amazing how many time*
Doan's give happy relief from these discom-
forts— help thelSmUcsof kidney tubes and fil-
ters flush out waste. Get Doan'a Fills todayl
207-E. Secbni
Hope/ Ark;,
;?4 ^ ^t
, i f«r,
Mrs. V. A. Keth and Mr. Keith in
Dallas, Texas.
Mrs. George Sundstrom and son,
George A., of Phoenix, Ariz., are
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J, A. Davis, and other relatives.
^oodard Cox, Mrs. A. D. Glass, Ji
Mrs. William Groves. Mrs. Horac
Hubbard, Mrs,
Jim James, Mrs
Lloyd Leverett, Mrs. Orval Tayloi
Mrs.' George Thompson; Mrs. Win
die Thompson,
the teacher; as-
sociate members, Mrs. C. M. Ro-
gers, Jr., and Mrs. J. B. Martin.
and the. special guest, Mrs. Fred
Barr.
ELICIOUS ROUND
Lb.
, WHITI, YELLOW SWANS DOWN
Box
AKE MIX
The Rev. and Mrs. Doss
Guest Speakers at
W. S. C. S. Meeting
The Woman's Society of Christian
Service of the First Methodist Churi.
ch met Monday, November 8, at'
2 p. m.
church,.
in the sanctuary of the
The worship service opened with
a song, "Happy the Home", and
Mrs. J. C. Carlton gave the de-
votional using as her subject "The
Dawn of a Soul", Mrs. C. D. Les-
ter closed with prayer.
Mrs. Johnny McCabe, a member
of Circle Three, presented the Rev
and Mrs. Alfred Doss of DeQueen,
who gave reports of the National
Family Life Conference held in
Cleveland, Ohio, which they attend-
ed in October.
Mrs. Albert Graves,
president,
presided over the business meet-
ing. Repovts were made, and the
circle count taken.
Circle
Five
winning wjtlj 15 members present
Hospital Notes
Julia Chester
Admitted: Mrs. Annie Madlock,
Hope, Mrs. Homer C. Gaines, Hope.
Mr. Clyde Zinn, Hope, Mrs. Lucy
Sipes, Columbus, Mrs. Sallie Col-
lier, Hope, Mr.
Edgar Lafferty,
Patmos, Mrs. Nettie Butler, Hope,
Paul
Rawson,
Cape Giradeau,
Mo., Ruby Lee Briggs, Hope.
Discharged:
Mrs. Dan
Green,
Hope, Mrs. Tom Gathright, Sara-
toga, Mr. Steve Atkins, Hope, Mrs.
John S.
Matthews, Hope, Mrs.
Wendell Sowards and son, McCas-
kill, Sarah Jones, Fulton, Dorothy
Powell and son, Hope.
Mr .and Mrs. Homer C, Gaines.
Hope, have a daughter, Mary Loui-
se, born at 10:02 p. m. Friday.
Branch
Admitted: ,Mrs. W. A. Powell,
Patmos, Mr. Steve Bader, Hope,
Mrs. Inez Tefteller, Hope.
Discharged: Ruby Lee Fleming,
Hope, Mrs. Mpnrpe Samuels, Rt.
3, Hope, Mrs. H, L. Levins, Wash-
ington.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Tefteller of
Hope, announce the arrival of a
baby boy on November 6, 1954.
statements by Democratic leaders.
Democratic National Chairman
Stpehen A. Mitchell said yesterday
in a statement that Vice Presi-
dent Nixon snould "retract
and
apologize for his campaign excess-
es." If Nixon continues, Mitchell
added, "I hope that the President
will take the opportunity to dis-,
associate himself from such char-
acter assassination by public dis-
avowal."
Republican National
Chairman
Leonard W. Hall replied of Mitch-
ell's remarks: "This is in the worst
possible taste and In the worst pos-
LOOK YOUR LOVELIEST
THE BEAUTY BOX
Open 6 days a week
After 5 appointments for
the \yorking girls
Latest Hair Styling
Phone 7-5850
112 S. Main
Ruth Hoelscher Janell Roberts
ON SALE
CLEAN UP MERCHANDISE FROM OUR
HARVEST
'; >
l»r>
;.*m
3 ONLY
MEN S TOPCOATS • •
SMALL LOT -- BROKEN SIZES
Program!
YORK M
Selected radio
NE
programs tonight:
NBC
7 People
Are Funny;
7:30
Dragnet;
8 Radio Theater,
"My Man Godfrey."
CBS — 7 Stop The Music; 3:30
Amos And Andy: 9:15 Dance Time,
ABC
7 Jack Gregson
Hour;
8 Town Meeting
Discussion.
MBS
7 Treasury '
Th,P ScEW-oh,.
pole-frame
cuts farm building costs
• You pen s*v» wp to h*M the cost cl
erecting an4 royfftflj" fog Voa* >WWi
ole-type
supported
Creosoted
CHILDREN* DRESSES.. $2.0(1
BROKEN SIZES AND COLORS LADIES
HANSEN GLOVES
I ONLY —SIZE 40
MAN S SUIT . . ,
X**^
.,wt'?
t
*> Hr-f*
; I'v^V^
- $y#
^m
u^!
• •
$8,95 RACK OF
Fall Cott
Reduced
LADIES DRESSES
MEN 5 NYLON SHORTS It
3 QNUY — $17,95 5T, MARYS
•], .
.,
ALL WOOL BLANKETS $1
i'1'IBIiKij^
I
5MAIL W)T
JEAN SETS
ItUE JIANS
*&'
1'-!','•
A'sf.'^y
«,#"*•
5k S&C ;•.
1*1:'^ £frj;
M O M S T A R ,
H O P E , A f t K A N S A S
I-JWMIM"- .;,}', .
fe>? #>
|C» '•/ ,
j.
<;,? • • • •
ire
™-fe\-
s
.™jtW \ < *
t. Credited with
SflejStfra
tnatch
__._lal'All«l
$7. ItnjttMrtl
m is Wtt.
MARKETS
Ho
\\\
elides
i fhe
tullding
# 3t M*' M&
tk£ outs'Md
W "1 jbre-
t An .an at-
tWWWtOlA'* K«S
• to
think
against lha
>'Ugh widows
|« at ,$100,000, said
s Had", Been afcumu-
iri6r,s>veral days,
structure
Me
?W»*
•f&sr
,r: "
smmmn^'^i
*
fe4^ * t"-,H> *,*
J
JAfc-B-Q
tT A jJJ',"'*S^. '. ( . *_^
Ff*^r°<
<"
W&ii
s 12,060; lower;
liSO-75; about a
hoke Nd. Is and 2s 19.85! ISO-
Ib Iflf&.SOOO; 225-240 Ih 1900-
); 246-260 Ib W.tS«i&.$${ sdWs 400
down
tt.2S-?3j
fdW at 18.00;
iei"* POV/S 15.50-17,2,'}!
b6ars
3XW-J5.00, ,
Cattle 6,000; calves 1,700: about
ady but little ddndj tltillty and
commercial cow* 85CM2.06; can-
and citttSfs e.00-d.5(5:
llsht
iitlly c a n ft e r s 1&0-?0; bulls
ItJtfdyJ
Utility
arid
commercial
l.OO'llOO; cfttlner and cutte* btilU
.OO-lO.SOi vpnldrs steady:
good
nd choice 17,06-23.00; few
at
500! commercial art dloW
good
2.00-IO.OO; slaughter calves slow;
orrtrnerclal arid goad 11,00-15.00;
Hilly and low commercial 8.00-
0.00,
heep 1,700; wool lambs weak to
I lower; icveral lots good
to
rime 1800-19.50; early top 19.50;
fend not fully established;
a«ed
hecp steady; ."laughter ewes 3.00
.00.
POULTRY AND PRODUCE
CHICAGO' W) Live
poul
tr
toady ort Hens; barely stendy on
•oung stock; receipts 971 coops
66,425 Ib; F O.B. paying prices un-
hangedt Hoavy hens 16-19; light
lens 12-14; fryers and broilers 23-
5! old roosters 12-12.5; caponette
young hert turkeys
34-5(5;
gecsc 23.
Butter firm;
receint s 017,814;
vholcsale buylrig prices I'A lower
o
1 "higher; 93 score AA 58.5;
92 A 68.25-5; 90 B 57.5; 89 C 56
cnrn 90 B-8; 89 C 6.
Eggs mixed;
receipt s
10,552
wholesale buying prices 1 lower to
higher; U.S. large white 34.5
mixed 35.5; U. S. mediums 27; US
ttandards 2 ;
current
receipts
none; dirties 20; checks 20
NEW YORK STOCKS
NEW YORJC 1<P) The sto ck m ar
<et developed a certain amount o
hesitancy today following its sen
satkmal post-qlection surge aheac
On .balance, , the market
w o
barely higher. Gains
of 1 to
points were found in several sec
tions of the list, but most advance
small. Losses appeared fre
guently, sometimes passing a poln*
1 ^Business maintained a swift par
at-'around the highest levels of th
.GRAIN
!
' Wheat: Noric. Corn:
No. 2 ye
low41.51; No. 3 yellow 1.47-1.49
No 4 137'/4-1.43'/2; No.. 5 129-135
M>; sa mole -grade yellow 1.2
Oats: Sample gr^'de white 87.
_
Bareley ,nomin,ai :MalJ>ng .ehoic
1.31-52; feed 1.10-22.
explosion," \.said Dale "Plunk, 18
year-old high school junior. "It wa
terrible."
j|y^H%«Mlay, November 11,1954
S^S:k4!iwfT-.i^i- • n A V
rmgti
jgitffirf? ;
/||^ill-'n9,t be ppen for business
feffife-above 'date, being a legal
jFj«3j(8fl •
'
,
J?$'v'; v
•
• •
'itizens National Bank
First National Bank
m&fk''*'
it^rr" -
®«v
' "*i~ -.''
HOPE
Three Mental
Escapees
Still ot Large
LITTLE
ates of
the
cfimiftal
i'ouf
ward
Governors of
South Divided
on Segregation
feOCA BATON, Fla. t*) Sdtilhern
states, divided as they are on their
approach to the explosive school
:sFiie, may find 9 'com-
either on the conference floor, or
away.
Three states
Gccrpia, Louisia-
na end South Caroline, have tak-
en action to put themselves in a
por.ition • to keep Negroes out of
white schools.
Georgia adopted a constitutional
rmendmeht Nov. 2 permitting the
legislature to abolish the public
system
tion.
Louisiana
rather than end segrega-
approved
an amend-
ap-
out-
Er-
,
-
,
,.
....
ftiori ground approach to the prob- mont at thc sam-^ time permitting
l«rr. at the annual Southern Cover- 1 'he state tc invoke police powers
afiod frcfn the State hdspital herd
st night .after threatening four
ttohdants.
Deitt Tatum, 27, of Parogould,
hargcd v/ith staying his wife, gaV<3
rhself up a few, minutes. after
he escape which occurred about
40 p. m.
The other
three
still were at
arge today.
State police Identified them as
ohnhie areen, 37, an ex-convict
ho was arrested at Fort Smith
n a charge of burglary; Char'es
rice, 23, Litild Rock, charged with
urglor, and L. B. Veach (address
nknown,) charged wilh l&rceny.
All but Veach Were undergoing 30-
ay sanity tests at the hospital,
Officers said Veach waa from
nother ward at the hospital and
nly recently had been transferred
i the criminal ward section.
Tntum told Little Rock detectives
hot Green and Price •"abandoned
s" (Tntum and Veach) after ctt-
isting their aid to oscapa. . •
Green and Price were'; believed
o be together with a third^person
n an automobile which
Tatum
aid was -waiting"' for them when
hey made the break.
Tatum told .officers, the braak
wan planned by Price..
It was the second escape of four
nrtiates of the ward sir.ce'. May.
t also was-the second time that
attendant C. H.: Ahart had' been
hreatened with a sharp instru-
ment.
' • - ' ' . -
Ahart said he was standing near
he door to Ihe fire escape when
3recn approached, 'drew, a knife,
arid ordered • him
to - unlock
the
dcor.
Ahavt said that 'another "atten-
dant, Charles Copeland, shouted to
him to stop scirffling with Green.
Other attendents, A. H. Williams
and W. N. .Leach,, were threatened
by Tatum and Veach, Ahart said.
Tatum told officers Price had
planned to head for Mexico
or
California.
Attendants said they didn't know
where Green .got the knife.
ftor's Conference
Thursday.
opening
h e r e to maintain segregation m the pub-
lic schools.
The
conference
meeting
date
falls less thfen a month from the
lime the IT. S.
Supreme
Court
cptns arguments Dec. 0 on how
end when it should order Into ef-
fect its May 17 edict that segre-
gated public shhools must end.
There's no mention of scgregrt-
tion matters as such on the official
conference program, but there's
South Carolina's Legislature al-
ready has authority to abolish t'rw
school system.
A fourth state, Mississippi, voles
Dec. 2l on a proposition to em-
power the Legislature to abolish
public schools ns a means of re-
taining segregation.
Some of the oth?r southern states
have indicated they thought
the
cient time.
A possible' middle ground
proach in the Florida plan
lined by Ally. Gen. Richard
v'in
of that state in a
Supreme
Court brief in' which he pleads for
time and for a large, degree of lo-
cal determination as to when seg-
regated schools should be ended.
The FloHd'a plan provides
that
in cases where suits are brought to
gain
admittance to
segregated
schools, thc trial courts should- be
given wide discretion to hold hear
ings, and to
determine
on the
basis of local conditions whether
the petition should be granted.
In cases where schools author-
ties and thn trial courts detcrmin
cd thc races shouldn't be integrat-
ed, new hearings could be held at
a later datd to determine whether
conditions may change.
little doubt the subject Will be one problem could
,
the most lively.'to come Up'the Supreme Court
Arkansans to
Arrive in U, S.
SEATTLE,
USS Gen. G-.
Wash. (UP)
Th-2
M. Randall will ar
Do: ado; SFC Boy E Schnarr,
tie Rock; Airman Will.am R. Sm-
ngton, Attica; Cpl. Ernest S. oul
Ivan; Rosiej
PFC Hartzell Wat-
son,
Gregory; ^and Pvt. Johnny
Whittle, Piggott.
Women have had a lower death
rive at the Army port of embarka
Sion here Wednesday
v/ith
2,269
pasrengers from the Far East.
Among them will be tire follow-
ing Arkansas servicemen:
Cpl. Collier
Anders. Jr.,
Au-
vergne; Sgt. John
R. Anthony
Bearden; S-Sgt. James L. Besly,
Hazen; PFC Rofus
Cobb, Jr. Au-
susta; Capt. John C.
Freeman,
Crt-ssett; Airman 3-. W.
Harper,
Wilmar; Cpl. Charles G. Harwell,
Okay;
Airman
Winsley
Henry,
Mar'ianna-; Cpl. Claudie- L. Higgins,
Fort Smith.
Cpl. Carl Hudson, Rudy; Air-
man Albert E.'Jankins,
Truman;
Cpl.
Willard
G. Lawson, Rogers;
Pvt. Melvir. C. Locke, Camdcn;
rale than men for many years andiCp!. Jessie M. Martin, Okean; Air-
since 1930 the lives of women have, Iman William J.'Moore, Jr., Wynne
Mr. Fulbrighf
Has Problems
WASHINGTON W)
If the Mc-
Carthy censure debate runs on to*
any great length, Sen. Fulbright
(D-Ark) may have 'to become A
New York commuter.
Fulbright while greatly
inter-
ested in the censure proceedings,
also is a U. S. delegate to the-Unit-
ed Nation's session now.; going on
in New York.
He said today he will stay in
Washington for a time to see how'
the censure matter proceeds in the
Senate but that he wants to return
to the U. N. Sessions.
.
•Fulbright'was1 one .of the origi-
nal group of senators urging adop-
tion of the
resolution
by , Sen.
Flanders (R-Vt) calling for cen-
sure of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis).
The Flanders resolution war sub-
mitted to •'• a
special
committee
which recommended censure.
Fulbright told a Reporter it 's.
his present inclination to take. little,
or no part in,the debate. It, would
appear better stratgey, he said, to
let the Watkins cprnmittee
pre-
sent the case and then permit Mc-
Carthy and his supporters to do
the talking.
»
, , . ' . . . -
• . . • . . •
Six European nations, Luxem-
bourg, Andorra, Liechtenstein, San j
Marino, Monaco arid Vatican City
have a total area smalled than that
o fthe King Ranch in Texas.
Fdom 1903 through 1014, more
than 750,000 immigrants come to
the United States and more than a
million, entered
in six of those
years.
•M,
$?'>.yl've waited years and
fv
gears /or power as exciting
;
^ as the '55 FORD'S new
BUGGER-TORQUE!/
i,
ON DISPLAY
FRIDAY
far move than those of men.
$19.95 NOW $14.95
Get them before the
season opens and save.
WESTERN AUTO
ASSOCIATE StORE
_
•
——
Bad
Colds
WICKS
WVAPORUB
RelieveSuffeting
SHOP
IGGLY WIGGLY
AND YOU GET
DOUBLE
S&H GREEN STAMP'S. WEDNESDAY
(ON PURCHASES OF $2.50 OR MORE)
Prices Effective Wed. Nov. 10th
Pineapple Juice 25c
ARMOURSMilk
&IOc
BEST MEAT IN TOWN
'
<>*^P .
1 *
I11
'
'
'
"
{
;
OMAHA BEEF — CHUCK
ROAST
MAPLECREST
FRYERS
Lb
UNCLE BEN'S CONVERTED
RICE
THE FOAMING CLEANSER
BABO
NABISCO RITZ
.VL
CRACKERS
NAB I SCO OREO CREAM
SANDWICH
PLANTERS COCKTAIL
PEANUTS
14 pz. OCr
Pkg.
JL*J\~
Giant TT-
Size
I-/ C
PALWOUIVE
SOAP
Reg..
Bars
17c
BAKE-RltE
_ •
SHORTENING
1 Lb-
ttr
Pkg.
O^C
4 Oz. 9Q
Pkg.
ZVC
8 Oz. OCr
Can
w«Jv«
73<
PALMOLIVE
SOAP
2 32 23c
IMPERIAL
SUPER SUDS
Large
Pkg.
29c
AIR WICK
UNDERWOOD DEVILEp
HAM
SALAD BOWL SALAD
DRESSING
CRYSTAL WHITE
SOAP
BEST PRODUCE IN TOWN!
Potatoes
IB .:^ipP W ^ ^^^B ^W^ ^^r-
5iOz- AOr
Bottle Q^C
Reg.
9| r
Can
<61C
1602.
-Oft-
Jar
4»TV
2
Large
1 "T-
Par5
I/C
Cashmere Bpyquet
SOAP
2
Reg-
17«
Bgrs
I /- V
W
Bouquet
SOAP
Large
Pkg.
29c
VEL
Tuetday, November 9, 1954
H O P E S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
* IV SOCIETY
Phone 7-3431 Between 8 A. M. and 4 P. M.
ilendar
Tuesday
November 9
fhe
Business
Woman's Circle
I the First Baptist Chuhch will
sday, November 9,
at
. in the
home of Mrs.
|de Osburn, 405 S.
Greening.
members are urged to attend.
let Tuesd
E p. m. i
the Golden Circle Class of the
1st Baplist
Church will meet
1'sday, November 9, at 7:30 p.
(in the home of Mrs. Phinis Her-
320 East 13th, for their month-
Ibusiness and
social meeting.
Glen Seaver
It
will be co-hos
IriJtt
Same night wil! be held at tha
Ipe Country Club at 7:45 p. m.
jsday, Npvember 9. Hosts will
|jMr. and Mrs. George P. New-
and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ste-
h.
.
hapter AE of the P. E. O. Sis-
lood will meet Tuesday, Novem-
9, at 3 p. m. with Mrs. Mack
Stuart.
The Iris Garden Club meets at
2:30 Tuesday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. Claud Sutton, with Mrs.
C. M. Agee as associate hostess.
Arrangements for
the afternoon
will be chrysanthemums.
' Mrs. Claud Sutton will entertain
the
Builders Sunday School Class
of the First Baptist Church
on
Tuesday night at 7:30 at her home
on the Rosston road.
ference held in Prescott on Thurs-
day, October 28.
Reports were given by the Bod-
caw P. T. A. along with the reports
from other P. T. A.'s represented.
In the afternoon, a short skit on
"Leadership Training"
was pre*
sented by seven of the Bodcaw re*
presentatives: Mrs. Carl Lewis,
Mrs. Chester
Whittert, Mrs. Jr.
Goodwin, Mrs. Bill Jones, Mrs. J.
D. Allen, Mrs.
Ray
Martin and
Mrs. K. K. Mitchell.
Others from Bodcaw who attend-
ed the conference were Mrs. Her-
man May, Mrs. Teddy May, Mrs.
Otha Mullins, Mrs. Enoch Benson,
Mrs. Clarence Dunn, Mrs. E. D.
Downs, Mrs. Earl May, Mrs. Alex
Boswell, Mrs. Cliff Butler, Mrs.
Ben Trahan and Mrs. E, D. Spen.
cer.
._«-.i
The Ambassador Class of Gar-
rell Memorial Baplist Church will
meet Tuesday, November 9, at 7:30
p. m. in the home of Mrs. Wade
Warren, wilh Mrs. Clifton Billings
as co-hostess.
Wednesday November 10
The John 'Cain Chapter of the
D. A. R. will meet in Ihe home of
Mrs. B. L. Reltig, 420 Wesl Avenue
ndia, Ceylon and Pakistan. U was
nnouneed that "Korea Day" would
16 Sunday, November 14,
The meeting was closed with the
V. S. C. S. benediction.
Refreshments were served to 50
members and two guests, the Rev.
and Mrs. Doss.
Hope Jr.-Sr. High
P. T. A. To Meet
"Team Work for Better Schools"
will be the theme of the program
when the Hope Junior-Senior High
School P. T. A. meets
Thursday,
November 11, at 3:30 p. m. in the
auditorium of the Junior High Scho-
ol. "What do we want of our scho-
ols" and "Is Yours a Good School"
discussed by Mrs. P. L. Perkins,
ei faculty member, and Mrs. Dick
jviia. u, oj. jn.i:LLi£, i^v vvtiM- rtvuuut: , ~ ------- "
,,, ,
t 11 ,«^
B .on Wednesday, November 10, at1 Watkins, a parent, will be followed
12 noon. Mrs. R. L. Searcy of
,
a buzz session. Ihe Glee Club
* SAENGER
*
LAST DAY •
•
•
FEATURE TIMES •
.
.
. .
-
wisville. Mrs. Dick Watkins and ' "nder the direction of Mrs. B. C.
Hyatt will sing, and n speech stu-
'dent w111 brm8 the natlonal Presl'
dent's message.
The aim of the National Congress
of Parents and Teachers is to give
Garland P. T. A. will meet Wed- every generation a chance to serve
esday, November 10, at 3 p. m. children and youth and the aim of
2:56
- 7:11
! FULL LENGTH
-'
l O SllMI'S
'
il U1U1H HIOUl'S !i,f,ii»ioui>nii~;
OgNE WITHJHE WIND :
GUUBIE • VIVIQUtlGH • lESUEHOWRO
OUVlAdeHAVIlUND
•
.TECHNICOLOR!
1. "DROOPY" CARTOON
2. LATE NEWS EVENTS
e guest speaker. Executive com-
mittee will meet at 2:30.
t WED.-THURS. •
Up Front on the West's
deadly Twenty-Mile run!
to show their appreciation for this
fine spirit by enlisting and working
in this important organization whi
Wednesday November 10
ch tends to bring closer togethe
Patmos P. T. A. will have a sup- the home, the school and the chur
er in the school lunchroom Wed- ch.
esday night, November 10, at 7:30. [ Believing that fathers and emplo-
Each family is asked to bring a yed mothers are interested in be-
overed dish.
coming better
acquainted
with
their child's school and teachers
the P. T. A. had a very successful
SHOKRIN
A WAINIKIIOS. PICTUIE
avneMORRIS
^PRESCRIPTION'
MEANS
PROTECTION1
Wore often than you might sup-
)se,
we hear the question:
Vhy do I need a prescription to
ly the medicine the doctor has
dered to make me well? It
st seems to make the cost go
i,"
It's easy to see why some
ople ask this, and the answer
just as 'simple. Your doctor's
•escription is written for y9ur
p'im.
It is his explicit
der by us, your pharmacists.,
e are'trained by years of col-
ge and practical experience to
low his scientific instructions
the letter.
We are also the final check-
int
before
the
medicine
aches you. We double-check
1 prescriptions. It's our duty
see that there are no mistakes
id to call the doctor if there is
y question about his orders.
[So,
"prescription" r e a l l y
earif ^"protection" . . . your
•otec'flon. We're happy to pro-
de it.
!
IWard & Son
DRUGGIST
Phone 7-2292
102 W. Second St.
Irs. Richard Howards of Hope
•c associate hostesses. Members
lease note
change in
meeting
,
, a
.
.
he executive board will meet at1 the Hope school unit is to have
15. The meeting will be dismissed | every mother and father or guar
. • ..
°
.
.
..
- ' j:««
rtf
T,,Mir*»._C!e,«ir»t' TTicrVi Rr»hnn
n time for the members to attend
ic Fire Prevention Parade.
Hope Federation of Garden Clubs
ill meet in the home of Mds. Ha£-
Id M. Brents, Oakhaven, on Wed-
esday,' November 10, at 10 a. m.
dian of Junior-Senior High Schoo:
students belonging to and attend
ing when possible the Parent Tea-
cher Association. If parents expect
their children to be interested
in
their books, then they should show
an interest in the school the chil
ed.
-au.a.y, iiuveiiiucj.
au, at AU ct. in-
*
-.
.
acn club is urged to be represen- dren attend, and the teachers who
train them. Never in a school P
T. A. have the teachers been more
congenial
and cooperative
than
those in the Hope
Junior-Senioi
Paisley P. T. A. will meet Wed-
esclay, November 10, at 3 p. m.
cauetj, .i.'iu vtuuuti j . u , c i i . u p . iii.
-
_
.
„,
i j
t the school. Charles Gough will High School, so parents are asked
Mrs. Bob MasslngUI
Entertains Business
Womans Circle No. 2
The Business
Woman's
Circle
No. 2 of the First Baptist Church
met Monday evening in the home
of Mrs. Bob Massingill.
After a brief business
session,
Mrs. P. J, Holt gave the devotional.
The program was presented by
he following special guests, Mrs.
Basil York,
Mrs. C. C. Collins,
VIrs. Frank Douglas, Mrs. W. H.
Gurtter, Sr., and Mrs. A .D. Bran-
nan, Sr. The title of the program
was "African Missions".
Senior Ladles
Auxiliary Has
Thanksgiving Program
Court Docket
Municipal Court of Hope, Arkan-
sas, November 8, 1954.
City Docket
Herman
Williams,
improper
lights on car, Forfeited $1.00 cash
bond.
Herman Williams. No State Car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Herman Williams, Fictitious car
license, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Arthur Jackson.
Running Stop
sign, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond
Daniel Huddleston, Frank Adams,
Speeding, Forfeited $5.00 cash bond,
Kennie Atkins, Berlin Fuller, Ha-
zardous driving,
Forfeited $10.00
cash bond,
Charlie Lee Howard,
No driv-
ers license, Forfeited $5.00 cash
bond.
B. M. Mouser, Robert E. Lee,
Failure to yield right of way, Plea
gulity, fined $5.00.
Lela Bell Jones, Hershel Ward,
Shirk Conway, Drunkenness, For-
feited $10.00 cash bond.
Thn QO«;«,. T n ^ '
A, -r
*
Calvin McPherson, Assault & Bat-
The Senior Ladies Auxiliary of torv Vnrfou^
«.ln'nn „„„*, ,—A
the Unity Baptist Church met Mon-
day afternoon, November 8, at 2
o'clock, in the home of Mrs. E. L.
Lane.
Songs were led'by Elder White,
who also led in prayer.
Mrs. Barney Gaines, president
of the
auxiliary, presented
the
Thanksgiving program, assisted by
Mrs.
Tom Anderson, Mrs. Lane and
Mrs. Howard Collier. Mrs. Jesse
Sinclair gave the devotional from
the 100th Psalm.
A report of the previous meeting
was given by Mrs. Sinclair, and
Mrs. Anderson dismissed the group.
The hostess served refreshments
to 11 members.
tery, Forfeited $10.00 cash bond.
Eugene Gill, Clarence
Chipps,
Gaming, Plea guilty, fined $10.00.
James Wilbert, W. L. Holbert,
Willie Malone, Gaming, Forfeited
$10.00 cash bond.
State Docket
James D. Welch, Operating a mo-
tor vehicle vvthout a driver's licen-
se, Plea guilty, fined $5.00.
E. F. Simmons, Passing in a "No
Passing" zone, Plea guilty,
JEined
$5.00.
Continued from *»flge Ofl*
Mayfair
quivered
with
gossip.
Margaret had been to church. And
because
it
was
Remembrance
Sunday, she had been dowri
in
Whitehall to stand by reverently
while her sister, Queen Elizabeth,
honored the men and women who
had lost their lives in wars. Then
in the afternoon she went to thc
movies.
Theater managers Were
inter-
viewed, and they 'said: "Tradition-
shattering," "what
a
surprise,"
it must have been unofficial" and
"tut-tut and tch-tchl"
The objection to royalty's going
to movies on Sunday is inspired
largely by the conservative ele-
ments among English churchmen,
Whose influence Is great. The pop-
ulation
is being
reminded con-
stantly that the sovereign is the
defender of the faith, and that the
Lord's Day must be respected.
But curiously while Margaret is
being talked about lor
breaking
tradition, thc Church of England
itself is being sniped at by per-
sons whose moral indignation gets
stirred up
easily. The
church,
which lately turned its financial
affairs over to a committee
of
experts, made a handsome clean-
ing in the stock exchange.
It's
gambling, say critics, and
natibn simmers.
Louis and Ernest Wyndor of New
York, and by Dr. Mortoti L. Lev-
in and associates of Albany. N.Y.
A British study just a bit later
Some folks think they are a s6-
ctol success when they master the
art of sayf ng nasty things th a hke
way.
'
J^Mi F. JtjSnkfel,
Robert W. Hansetl that m
itt a false fkc fiiilrM
wanted to be Wcked.lip
Arrives."
/
* -
Hansen said "I -*ould
punish you most by
case and letting you „_.
ydu another chance* I'll
t months in the '
ion."
'
' • " . '
by
Dr. Richard Doll and Prof.
A. Bradford Hill, ptjinling to
an
association between cigarettes and
lung cancer, also was published by
American newspapers.
But these and other reports com-
ing still
loiter seemed to
find
l'tt.1
Deaths Over
the Nation
Brookvvood P. T. A. will meet
Wednesday in the school auditorium j night meeting in October and will
t 3 p. m. The executive board will have another such meeting in the
All members are spring.
Yard of Month
Winners Announced
The Hope Garden Clubs announce
the following
as
"Yard-of-the-
Month" winners for November:
Ward 1-Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hane-
gan, 606 East Second;
Ward 2-Mr. and Mrs. Sam War-
mack, 616 South Washington;
Ward 3-Mr. and Mrs. J. M. O'-
Neal, 621 West Avenue C;
Ward 4-Mr. and
Mrs. Elbert
Jones,, 420 North Elm;
Oakhaven and Beverly Hills-Mr,
and Mrs. Jack Carnahan, Oak-
naven.
Notice
The party planned for the Inter-
mediate MYF of the First Metl>
dist Church will not be held as
lanned. The date will be announc-
d later.
By. The Associated Press
San Francisco
Charles
B.
Henderson, 81, U.S. senator from
Nebada from 191? to 1921 and . a
former chairman of' the Board of
the Reconstruction Finance Corp.
Died Monday.
•
Glen
Head,'
N.
Y.
' Julian
Starkweather Ma'spn, 78, .'former
edito'r-in-chief of the New
York
Evening Post, who held ..editorial
posts on several Chicago newspa-
pers before
becoming managing
editor of the Naw York Herald
Tribune in 1922. Born in Chicago.
DiedMonday.
!
Baltimore
Dr. Francis
S.
neet at 2:15.
urged to attend.
Oglesby P. T. A. will meet Wed-
nesday, November 10, at 3 p._m.
.'he executive meeting will be held
at 2:30. '
Planned projects for this year
include a donation to the Junior
and Senior libraries, records and
films for visual education, supplies
for first aid rooms for both schools,
and contributions to the school ca-
feteria, Girl Scouts, and the youth
The Bodcaw P. T. A. will meet at center. The only methods of raising
he high school at 7 p. m. on Wed- j funds to carry out these projects
nesday, November 10. After the are the annual membership drive
•egular program, a short skit will' and talent
program.
The talent
be presented and then coffee and program will not be given until
doughnuts will be served in
chool cafeteria.
tfce
Thursday November 11
Hope Junior-Senior High School
sometime
in December
but the
membership drive has been in full
sway for four weeks now and will
close this week. The goal for this
year is 850 members but to date
P. T. A. will meet Thursday at 3:30 I there are only 300. Parents who
D. m. in the Junior High auditor-1 haven't sent their dues of only fif-
Him. The executive board will meet ty cents per member per year, to
'
at 3 p. m.
school by their child are asked to
do so tomorrow. Or, contact the
Ladies of the Eastern Star will membership
chairmen, Mrs.
sponsor a spaghetti supper Thurs-j Franklin
Horton
or
Mrs. ' Jim
day,
November 11, at 6:30 at the. Cole. In the definite pageant of the
Masonic H^ll. The public is invit- parent-teacher movement there is
ed. Adults, $1.00; children, 50 cents.;need for all: there is work for all.
Parents, teachers and all communi-
ty citizens interested in the Junior-
Senior High School are invited to
Thursday November 11
The Adult Fellowship of the First
Methodist Church will meet Thurs-j join the P. T. A. to make this the
day at 7 o. m. for a pot luck sup-1 best year it has ever had.
per. Guest speaker will be the Rev. | All members
and prospective
~~
" •
~ '
""— members are urged to make a spe-
cial effort to attend the meeting
Thursday and all interested persons
are extended a cordial invitation to
visit.
Edmund Pendleton. Baby
will be provided.
sitters
The Blevins P. T. A. will meet
in Ihe high school auditorium Thur-
sday, November 11, at 7 p. m. A
special program is planned and all
parents and patrons are urged to
be present.
Beacon Sunday School
Class Meets Monday
On Monday evening, November 8
, ,
,
members of the
Beacon Sunday
Hope B & PW Club will celebrate School class of the First Baptis
its 30th birthday anniversary
on church.met in the home of Mrs
Thursday
November 11, ^ 7 Russell McClain for a" combination
p. m. with a ban(lue^___a^kejlotel business and social meeting.
Moving pictures
were taken o
those
present,
following a shot-
business session. Mrs, Fred Bar
Barlow. Every member is urged to
be present.
Bodcaw P. T. A. Members
Attend District Conference
The Bodcaw P. T. A. was
represented
at the
District Con-
gave the devotional.
Refreshments
were
served t
Red Hot Wednesday
SPECIALS
IXTRA SPECIAL
All I ET Cf*^C
ULLtT EGGS
Doz, 29c
Births
The Rev. and Mrs. Joe W. Hun-
er of Emmet, announce the birth
)f a daughter, Vicki Lynne, on
Dctober 29, at the Cora Donnell
lospital in Prescott.
Cigarette
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bales of
Stamps, Announced the arrival of a
on, John Robert, on Saturday,
November 6. The paternal grand-
>arents are Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Jales. The maternal grand par-
ents' are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harri-
on of Locksborg.
Coming and Going
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Hasky,
VIr. and Mrs. Bob Magness, and
. and Mrs. W. E. McFarland of
Smmet, attended
the Arkansas-
Rice game in Little Rock on Sat-
urday afternoon.
Schwentker, 50, •, nationally known
child specialist,"professor"of pedi-
atrics at Johnss;Hopkins
Medical
School and pediamciah:in' chief at
Johns Hopkins''Hospital. Born
in
Schenectady, N . y . Died Monday.
Elizabeth N. J.
John
J. Mc-
Gbvvan, 7, G, press representative
for the late
President Woodrow
Wilron, treasurer of the Democrat-
ic State Committee and
former
newspaperman rBorh iri Charlottes-
town, P.E.I., Canada. Died Sunday.
JTt
Be?voir, Va
Maj
Gen
Arthur W. Penqje, 56, commanding
general of the Army Engineer Cen-
ter at Ft. Belvoir. Died Monday.
Great Falls, Mont.
George W.
Hey, 79, who made his violin de-
but at 3 with the Syracuse, N Y.,
symphony orchestra, 'former man-
ager of a Billings, Mont, opera
house orphestra, and founder
of
Ihe Great Falls Conservatory
of
Music. Died Monday.
' Saginaw, Mich.
Chelsea Cur-
tis Fraser, 78, violin maker and au-
thor. Born in New Sarum,
Died Sunday.
Continued rrom Page One
mo'st big
public issues,
didn't
spring forth overnight.
Some 15 years ago, Dr. Alton
Ochsner, famous New Orleans sur-
geon, was reporting
observations
which led him to :believe that cig-
arette smoking .was a cause of
lung cancer. Just yesterday
Dr.
Ochsner published a bo'ok, "Smok-
ing and Cancer, a Doctor's
Re-
port" Julian messner, Inc.) which
reviews all the evidence used to
indict cigarettes as a cause cf
lung cancer and heart disease.
In 1939, an Argentine physician
Dr. A. H. Rcffo; reported that tars
obtained from tobacco often could
produce cancer in the:skin of rab-
bits.
the American public only mildly
interested.
Perhaps
many m i s s e d 'the
rtories. Perhaps it takes time and
repetition
in the
absence
of
rtark drama
to
get
rapt at-
tention. Or perhaps many people
wanted stronger evidence.
No doubt some dismissed the re-
ports as another instance of cry-
ing "wolf" at cigarettes. For to-
bacco has been accused of many
Sins in the past
of leading to
poverty, of creating mustaches on
women, making men sterile, pois-
oning the,unborn babies of smok-
ing mothers, contributing to tuber-
culosis.
Smoking has been banned
at
some times in a lew countries. In
Denmark
smokers and
snuffers
Help Wa
2 waitresses, penw
ent empoy
income. Apply" i
^
son*
f
.
- -
Barlow HolSl
Ho Phone Colls/ Please
DODGE
has
done1
it
t jv*
>•*•
These and other reports were
mentioned in the news through the
were once publicly whipped.
In
Turkey, King Amuralh once de-
creed beheading for anyone, who
smoked.
Not until about two years
ai?o
did the long-smouldering
contro-
versy over cigarettes really start
to build up
into the public con-
sciousness.
Evidence was being discovered
and rediscovered to blame' ciga-
rettes for sickness and
untimely
death.- ,So also was evidence
to
question that evidence, or to blame
dther
factors
for
the
troubles
being attribxited to cigarettes.
The public was to become > the
jury. As such, the public was to
hear a good deal,
from
' both
newspapers
headlined
years.,
In 1D50,
stories from a cancer;
congress
in Paris reporting three separate
studies, mostly statistical,-
which
linked cigarettes with at least part
betted
wait!
Flair-
Fashionefi
of
increase in lung
amoh{< Americans. ,, The
cancer
studies
were made by ; Dr. Ochsner,
by
Doctors Evarts Graham
of
St.
Out.
Mrs. Katherine Webb of Harbor
Seach, Michigan, is visiting her
sister, Mrs, E. G. Coop, and other
relatives.
Mrs. Anna Judson
hs returned
from a week's visit with her dau-
ghter, Mrs. Jewel Tolley, Mr. Tol-
ley and family in Beaumont, Texas.
Mrs. E. G. Coop and Mrs. Ka-
Harmony in
Congress Hits
a Sour Note
By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON
WASHINGTON (ff)
. The post-
election theme
of harmony be-
tween President
Eisenhower and
the Democratic
4th
Congresse
echoed some dissonant notes tpday
in the wake of. an exchange be-
therine Webb have returned from! tween party chairmen and new
a visit with Mrs. Coop's daughter,
sibie;'-public interest" coming at a
time when, Hall said, responsible
leaders in Congress, are pledging
cooperation.
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas
who will be majority floor leader
when the .Democrats organize the
new Senate in January publicly
criticized some of President Eisen-
hower's campaign remarks at a
news conference Saturday. He also
set out certain, conditions for coop
eration on democratic congression-
al leaders during the next
two
years.
:
.
.
-
-
.
U. S. mints have turned out 4^4
billion nichols since 1866 when the
coin was first issued,
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS WASTE
NnwtinB backache, loss ot pep and energy,
headaches and dizziness may be due to slow-
down of kidney function. Doctors say good
kidney function Is very important tp cottd
health. When some everyday condition, such
us stress and strain, causes this Important
function to slow down,many folka suffer non-
Sing backache—feel miserable, Minor blad-
der irritations due to cold or wrong diet may
cause Betting up nights orf requentpassaged.
Don't neglect your kidneys If these condi-
tions bother you. Try Doan's Pills—a mild
diuretic, Used successfully by millions for
over 60 years. It's amazing how many time*
Doan's give happy relief from these discom-
forts— help thelSmUcsof kidney tubes and fil-
ters flush out waste. Get Doan'a Fills todayl
207-E. Secbni
Hope/ Ark;,
;?4 ^ ^t
, i f«r,
Mrs. V. A. Keth and Mr. Keith in
Dallas, Texas.
Mrs. George Sundstrom and son,
George A., of Phoenix, Ariz., are
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J, A. Davis, and other relatives.
^oodard Cox, Mrs. A. D. Glass, Ji
Mrs. William Groves. Mrs. Horac
Hubbard, Mrs,
Jim James, Mrs
Lloyd Leverett, Mrs. Orval Tayloi
Mrs.' George Thompson; Mrs. Win
die Thompson,
the teacher; as-
sociate members, Mrs. C. M. Ro-
gers, Jr., and Mrs. J. B. Martin.
and the. special guest, Mrs. Fred
Barr.
ELICIOUS ROUND
Lb.
, WHITI, YELLOW SWANS DOWN
Box
AKE MIX
The Rev. and Mrs. Doss
Guest Speakers at
W. S. C. S. Meeting
The Woman's Society of Christian
Service of the First Methodist Churi.
ch met Monday, November 8, at'
2 p. m.
church,.
in the sanctuary of the
The worship service opened with
a song, "Happy the Home", and
Mrs. J. C. Carlton gave the de-
votional using as her subject "The
Dawn of a Soul", Mrs. C. D. Les-
ter closed with prayer.
Mrs. Johnny McCabe, a member
of Circle Three, presented the Rev
and Mrs. Alfred Doss of DeQueen,
who gave reports of the National
Family Life Conference held in
Cleveland, Ohio, which they attend-
ed in October.
Mrs. Albert Graves,
president,
presided over the business meet-
ing. Repovts were made, and the
circle count taken.
Circle
Five
winning wjtlj 15 members present
Hospital Notes
Julia Chester
Admitted: Mrs. Annie Madlock,
Hope, Mrs. Homer C. Gaines, Hope.
Mr. Clyde Zinn, Hope, Mrs. Lucy
Sipes, Columbus, Mrs. Sallie Col-
lier, Hope, Mr.
Edgar Lafferty,
Patmos, Mrs. Nettie Butler, Hope,
Paul
Rawson,
Cape Giradeau,
Mo., Ruby Lee Briggs, Hope.
Discharged:
Mrs. Dan
Green,
Hope, Mrs. Tom Gathright, Sara-
toga, Mr. Steve Atkins, Hope, Mrs.
John S.
Matthews, Hope, Mrs.
Wendell Sowards and son, McCas-
kill, Sarah Jones, Fulton, Dorothy
Powell and son, Hope.
Mr .and Mrs. Homer C, Gaines.
Hope, have a daughter, Mary Loui-
se, born at 10:02 p. m. Friday.
Branch
Admitted: ,Mrs. W. A. Powell,
Patmos, Mr. Steve Bader, Hope,
Mrs. Inez Tefteller, Hope.
Discharged: Ruby Lee Fleming,
Hope, Mrs. Mpnrpe Samuels, Rt.
3, Hope, Mrs. H, L. Levins, Wash-
ington.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Tefteller of
Hope, announce the arrival of a
baby boy on November 6, 1954.
statements by Democratic leaders.
Democratic National Chairman
Stpehen A. Mitchell said yesterday
in a statement that Vice Presi-
dent Nixon snould "retract
and
apologize for his campaign excess-
es." If Nixon continues, Mitchell
added, "I hope that the President
will take the opportunity to dis-,
associate himself from such char-
acter assassination by public dis-
avowal."
Republican National
Chairman
Leonard W. Hall replied of Mitch-
ell's remarks: "This is in the worst
possible taste and In the worst pos-
LOOK YOUR LOVELIEST
THE BEAUTY BOX
Open 6 days a week
After 5 appointments for
the \yorking girls
Latest Hair Styling
Phone 7-5850
112 S. Main
Ruth Hoelscher Janell Roberts
ON SALE
CLEAN UP MERCHANDISE FROM OUR
HARVEST
'; >
l»r>
;.*m
3 ONLY
MEN S TOPCOATS • •
SMALL LOT -- BROKEN SIZES
Program!
YORK M
Selected radio
NE
programs tonight:
NBC
7 People
Are Funny;
7:30
Dragnet;
8 Radio Theater,
"My Man Godfrey."
CBS — 7 Stop The Music; 3:30
Amos And Andy: 9:15 Dance Time,
ABC
7 Jack Gregson
Hour;
8 Town Meeting
Discussion.
MBS
7 Treasury '
Th,P ScEW-oh,.
pole-frame
cuts farm building costs
• You pen s*v» wp to h*M the cost cl
erecting an4 royfftflj" fog Voa* >WWi
ole-type
supported
Creosoted
CHILDREN* DRESSES.. $2.0(1
BROKEN SIZES AND COLORS LADIES
HANSEN GLOVES
I ONLY —SIZE 40
MAN S SUIT . . ,
X**^
.,wt'?
t
*> Hr-f*
; I'v^V^
- $y#
^m
u^!
• •
$8,95 RACK OF
Fall Cott
Reduced
LADIES DRESSES
MEN 5 NYLON SHORTS It
3 QNUY — $17,95 5T, MARYS
•], .
.,
ALL WOOL BLANKETS $1
i'1'IBIiKij^
I
5MAIL W)T
JEAN SETS
ItUE JIANS
*&'
**ifi*!_
fe^t--*•
£&$P^Y>'V '
r/'wf^-f»"-, 't\ ^
y,-?'f?M-t> -
HOP i~$f AifrHO*!* A f t K ^ N I A f c
•
-IAIDISPUY
'
ford Id wi
'Tailor
y,-, ^ -
i Vi» */,'
iZERWORK
*— btft Moving
- Call
__$fOM .
ITGHTERING
ed for
eep Freex*
..
Montgomery Mkt.
7*8361
,^,.
ill* Made Into Innenpr Im
crkiGu«r«nte*d ,
i Day 8ervlo« •— •
ir« & MoHNM C*.
rMreet
Phone 74211
rtl n3,
CLASSIFIED
"
Ads Must fie In Office D*y Before Publication
, WANT AD RATES ^
' All W<Wit Mi
otf
fwyobM m '
SdvaSe* but 8*1 will b« <we»pH>d
ever fti* tiltphons And oe«mddd->
«w «£dum* .allowed with th»
w *
Jp to IS
1p to S
6 to 20
On*
Day
.45
,60
5s
.90
t.OS
1.20
1.35
1.50
fhf*«
j>t*
., 0«
Day*
btryl Month
.90
1.50
4.50
1.20
2.00
6.00
2.50
7.50
3.00
9.00
3.50
10.50
4.00
12.00
4.50
13.50
5.00
15.00
1.50
t.BO
2.10
2.40
2.70
3.00
tl ta 23
26 to 30
II W 35
)6 tu 40
U fd 45
tt 50
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
t t;rm
75e per Ineh
3 tlmei
40= Per neh
6 times
•„.,..>
50e per Inch
hate* quoted above are tor con-
MeirHve insertion*. Irregular or skip-
date ads will take the one-day rot*.
All dally classified advertising copy
Will be accepted until 5 p. m. for
publication the following day.
the publishers reserve the right to
revise or edit all advertisements of-
fered for publication and to reject
tiny •' objectionable advertising sub-
mitted
Initiate of one or more letters,
groups or figures such as house or
telephone numbers count as one word.
The Hope Star
will not be respon-
" slble for-errors in Want Ads unless
errors ore called to' our attention
after FIRST Insertion 'of ad and then
f6r ONLY the ONE .Incorrect insertion.
PHONE: PROSPECT 7-3431
For
Laydway Open on
TRIKES * BIKES AND
DOLLS
OKLAHOMA m€ & SUPPLY
. COMPANY.
3 ROOM modern home. Floor fur*
nace, attic fan. 1305 South Her*
vey. Small down payment, bal-
ance like rent. Phone
7-4568.
3-3t
Aggies Defeat- Hog
Cross Country Team
FAYETf feVlLLE . if ,
Okla-
homa A&M's CfoES-coiliitty team
defeated the- University of Arkan-
sas 17-40 flew Score wins) here as
A&M's 'Frederick
Eckho'ff
set a
hew,
i-ecord over
the
Arkansas
course.
Eckhofi's time. 12:48.7, bettered
the mark
set by Texas A&M's
James Blaine last year 12:59.
Summary: 1. Eckotf.
A&'M. 2.
Landquist, AfeM. 3. Odller, A&M
4.
Bogerund, A&M 5 Morton, Ark
6. Eshbaugh, Ark. 7. Applemap,
A&M.
8.' Hcoker, Ark 9 Tennison,
Aiik 10. Mosely, A&M. 41. Graham,
A&M (freshman). 12 , Ross,
Ark
13 Garner, Ark. (freshman).
Ferguson,
A&M (freshmen).
Wilkinson, A&M (freshman).
U.
15.
SEVERAL colorful cushion mums
blooming in containers. Also bud
ding chrysanthemums . Bring)
containers. Arthur Gray, Ozan.
4-6t
FOUR Chester white pigs for sale
Mrs. A. K Holloway.
9-3t
FOR sale by
individual — 1953
Ford, two door sedan. 17,000 mi-
les, new set of white side-walls,
radio, heater, and many extras.
Can finance. $1395. Contact T.' J.
Barber, phone 7-4038, Hope.'9-3t
Hoj>eStar
Star of HOD* 1199; Preii 1*JT
«oniellddl«d January It, 1*2*
/ESTERN SHARES
..JMlfied Income Fund
ipectu» available from
%'f*'
67 Wert
USED FURNITURE CO.
«g>f .City Urnlts We.t
on Water Barren for Sale
one 7^381
Hope,, Ark.
•
PAULING
isGravel/Fill Dirt and
Light Hauling.
.*,irv
IEST JONES
every'weekday afternoon by
STAR PUBLISHINQ CO.
C. E. Palmer, President
Alex. H, Weihburn, Seey-Trae.
jet The Sler Bulldlne
1 112-14 South Walnut Street
'
* Hope/
Arkqnsoi
Alex. H. Wothburn, Editor & PublUhef
Paul M, Jonei, Managing Editor
Jen M. Davli, Advertlilng Manafei
Coorge W. Hosmor, Mcch. Supt.
Entered at iceond • clau matter «t
Ifie Part Office at Hope/ Arkanioi,
under the Act of March 3, 1897.
Member of the Audit Bureau el
Circulation!
For Rent
HOUSE jacks," Wire stretchers, Post
hole diggej-s, T.arps, 'Reaves .Bar-
gain House and Pawn Shop, 205
S. Walnut, Phone 7-2471. 18-1 Mo.
NICELY furnished '4 room- apart-
ment and bath. Private entrances
7-3497.
• . ' . " ' - 23-tf
LARGE front" room adjoining bath.
Mrs. George • Sandefur, 320
N.
Washington, Phone 7-2125.
" - • : • '
6-3t
5 ROOM unfurnished house. .Close-
in, garage, garden. Miss
Lillie
Middlebrooks, Phone 7-2894.
6-3t
Line Leaping
of Moore Is
Amazing
By ADREN COOPER
FAYETTEVILLE,
(K) T h e
un-
defpated
Aikansas
Ra2orbacks
wiry and wily, have changed their
offense slightly for almost every
game. But there's one, play-a one-
man aerial actthat always works
for y.ardage.
When the' Porkers need yardage
Cor a first. dq\y.c
or
touchdo%vn
they usually launch a 130-poum
guided
muscle
named
Henry
Mopre. Fullback Moore 'takes th(
baljl, leans over the massed line
men, slides rdown. the -other side
ano lands.on his head.
This • hard-headed
junior . frorr
Litte Rock, made 85 -yards-most
ly
through .the- air-agalnst Rice
last .Saturday. Despite- that impres
sive total, Moore had to yteld th
spotlight- to two other stars-Dick;
Moegle, Rice's-all-American cand:
date and teammatd George
Wai
ker.
Subscription Rates (payable In ad-
vance):
•r carrier In Hope and neighboring
towni—•
••t .week
.25
Per year
•• 13.00
By mall In Hempstead/ Nevada,
tqFpyttfe, Howwtl/ ,<""<* ^Miller coun- <
flow,
^JOHNSON
t^TIIHIGCO,
f!?',Printing
"
e»x- ?&'Qffae S,upplies
IPIione 7-254T W Front St.
^y-ip t^^ * . '
^ *
lobfs Service
One month
.85'
Thn* months
_
1.60
«x rnonthi
1.
2.60
One year
•••— 4.50
All other mail-
On* month
1.10
Three months
3.25
tlx month
6.50
On* year
13.00
1 Mefl Advertlilni Ropreiontativei:
Arkansas Dailies, Inc.; 1602 Sterlck
. llcki., Memphis 2, Term.; 505 Texas
lank; •Wo., Dallas 2, Texas; 360 N.
Michigan Ave., Chicago 1,111.; 60 E.;
42d^ St., New York 17, N. V.; 1763
PenobscQt Bldg., Detroit 2,
Mich.;
Terminal Bldg., Oklahoma
City
2,
Member ef The Associated Press:
The-Associated Press is entitled ex-
clusively to the use for republlcatlon
Of all the local news printed in this
newspaper, as well as all AP news
dispatches,
_
.
BRICK house, 515 East Third Hope.
Phone Mrs. Virgie Coleman, 3-
5695, Texarkana, Tex. 2210 Olive.
8-3t
FURNISHED extra large 2 room
apartment. Private entrance and
bath. 801 S. Main, Phone 7-5837.
8-3t
Funeral Directory
SMALL furnished apartment with
private bath. 514 East Third.
.
. ' . . . •
.
9:3t
Lost
10 ft. x 18 ft. Tarp on Highway
4.
between. ;Hope; land .Columbus
Road on Friday.. Call or return
to Henipstead .County Farmers
Assn. Phone 7-4469, •
6-3t
IRISH setter bird.dog. If found no-
tify C. 'T. Jories'in Patm6s, Ark'.,
Phone 7-2925.
9-6f
,-,:,,,,
,
USED GUA88
5-i¥TfT¥ilN8TALueD
^JfJIEW AND USED PARTS
*Mif .most cdrs, »ee w* befor*
PORTER
&. Operator.
Hope
Hy 67 West
OAKCEEST
FUNERAL
HOME
INSURANCE . . . AMBULANCE
2ND & HAZEL . . . PHONE 7-2123
AD-1 Mo. TF
^MtfS.1
Cpmp|0te>arU and
Holland Balers
Trocton
689 A 1140-B
TERMITES
trniite Control Co,
NPip - INSURED
GUARANTEED
f«r Frff Inipectlon Call
D, MIDDLEBROOKS Jr,
H|»w
Nlpht Phont
HERNDON CORNELIUS
BURIAL ASSOCIATION
Largest and Oldest in South
Arkansas. Call
7^5505 for our.
agents
A23-1 Mo.
The Junior choir of BeeBee Me-
morial CME Church will rehearse
Instructions
CLASSES in tap, acrobatic, ballet
and toe. Katharine Windsor, 104
E, 14th. Ph,one 7-3327.
22-1 mo.
For Sole or Rent
W"0 Business buildings on Front
Street, next to Pool hall. If in
terested, contact A. S.Williams,
300
E. 7th, Texarkana, Ark.
Phflne W800 or 22-,6666. 194 Mo.
Wonted
Community
By Helen Turntr
Phone 7-5830
Or bring Item* to .MlM Turiwr
at Hlcki Funeral Horn*
Moore's line-leaping is not nev
he's been
doing
it
for
seve
straight games.
Rice players
praised
Moore a
'a 'better fullback" than Wisco
sin's-heralded
Alan- A m e c h e
"Moore's-not as powerful, but he1
faster," one. Rice player said.
Arkansas
Coach Bbwden Wyi
an outstanding .candidate for coac
of the year, uses Moore chiefly o
a
fullback -".delay".. • or
"draw
play that is .designed 4o
sprin
lf.arpmeriri' Henry-loose
up
th
middle. It seldom does. 'But it i
such a'.constant threat that Porke
fores have to keep In close to guar
against him. In • the •• mean time
te.ammatc Walker
.can pass,
o
quick-lcick over their heads.
Tailback Walker also has a .pe
c^f-tackle slant _that''^works
wel
Walker, though not «xceplionally
fast, is. Arkansas' I'sriiartesl" run-
rer.' On the off-tackle play, Moore,
blocking back Preston
Carpenter
end guard Bud Brooks leads
tha
way.
. '.
.
: .
Brooks,. an' .all-American candidate,
led Walker to a 38-yard touchdown
that clinched the win over
Rice.
A newspaper photo clearly shows
Brooks knocking down the last
man-Dicky Moegle.
Texas relaxed its defense against
Moore's uptthe-middle1;smashes and
he got away oh an 82-yard touch
down jaunt.
Wyatt switched his ^singlewing
Offense slightly against Texas A&M
sending -Moore
off'tackle
on a
Unbeaten Porks
Remain in 4th
Spot in Poll
By HUGH FULL§RT0N JR.
Of. The Associate) Press
By a comfortable margin IP
a
'hopping big ballot, UCLA retainpd
s ranking as the nation's lead-
ng college football- team in this
veek's Associat?d Press poll
of
ports writers and broadcasters.
An even SOO votes wore tabu?
ated to confirm the high-scorin»
Jclans' claim to the top place over
ic challenges, of Ohio State
and
Oklahoma, lenders in earlier pulls
his season.
UCLA was first on 117 of the
00 ballots. Ohio State got 80 first
ilace. votes.
Points wore tabulated on
the
isual basis of IP for each
first-
ilace vote, 9 for second, 8 for third,
tc,
'
'
The first five teams- held
the
ame place? they dropped into dur-
ng the general reshuffling of thn
sast two weeks, but several im-
>ortant chances were
registered
ilsewhere in the first 10.
After UCLA, with 2,GGO points;
and Ohio State, with 2,594. cani
Dklahoma- Arkansas, Notre Dame,
Army, Mississippi Southern Cali-
'ornla, Iowa and Navy in order.
Miami of Florida, suffering
its
first defeat at Auburn's
hands
after six straight victories,
fell
from sixth place to llth. Purdue
also disappeared' from tho top
after taking a 25-14 licking from.
Iowa. That made room for Iowa
12th
last week, and Navy in the
top.
Army's 48-7 shellacking of pro
viously unbeaten Yale couldn't do
more than lift the Cadets
from
seventh into Miami's vacated sixth
place. Mississippi and Southern Cal
ifornia
advanced
two notches
each to seventh and eighth.
The 'leading teams with'
first
SPORTS ROUNDUP
•f «AVi.i TAL10T.
NEW YORK
The thought
persists here that there is no foot
ball coach in the. land who Can
quite match Earl
(Red) Blaik's
iV.lnnt for building an explosive at-
tack when he has the sort of speed
he needs to work with.
Up to this pcint, the Army
coaches rurrent machin? has roll-
ed up an average of 38 points i.i
its seven games and probably will
hike that mark when it rips into
the helpless Penn Quakers Satw-
"day
at Philadelphia. Some Eastern
experts are cautiously comparing
Army's breakway backs with those
of the Diiv'.s-Blanchard era.
This is the greater tribute
to
Blnik's coaching skill for it's only.
four seasons
since
the
socalled
cribbing scandal brought the world
own about his head ar.d forced
inv to start all over again.
The transatlantic traffic: in rac-
ng brood mares, we learn, is not
11 one way. Representatives of the
Lga Khan, having just sold' 20 of
is most blue-blooded matrons to
American-buyers at. an average of
27,000 each, are spending, part of
lie loot for two
females
whosa
oropenitors are as Yankee-Doodle
"s the hot rod.
•
One of- them is- loaded with the
Man o'War strain. The other, a
illy named "Jmperla
purchased
ro'm Calumet Farms, is a daugh-
,er of Bull Lea and a granddaugh-
er of Nellie Flag, a combination
vhich, we understand, would bo
difiicult to boat.
place votes in parentheses:
L UCLA (117)
2. Ohio. State (80)
3. Oklahoma (44)
4. Arkansas (43).
5. Notre Dame (3)
6. Army .(4) . •
7. Mississippi (5)
8. Southern Cal
.9. Iowa
10. Navy
Second 10:
11. Miami (Fla)"
12. Cincinnati
13. Minnesota
14. Wisconsin
15. Virginia Tech
16. West Virginia (2)
17. Maryland
18. Baylor
19. SMU
20. Greo'rgia
Thursday :nighf, " November 11, at
7:30.
AH members please be pre-
sent.
. • . - • • ' .
Beautician Chapter No.,.16, will
meet Wednesday night; November
1C at the home of Mrs. Zephree Wes
son in Mineral Springs. All mem-
bers please be present at 7 o'clock.
Funeral services for Charlie Adir
were held Monday, November 8,
at New Bethel Church with Burial
in Giles Cemetery,
2.66C
2,5i)<
2,29:
2,20'
l,48i
1,45:
72
37!
56:
49,
1G
15
14
11
G
Maj.
Cyril Hall, manager of the
Aga Khan's stud farms, says this
s the first time that these famous
American strains have boon ex
ported to Europe; He can't quite
aelicve his luck yet ir. iandin;
Imuer.'a.
"Sev.eral cf your breeders havr-
asked me how I did it," he said
'They say that Calumet
simplj
does
not lot go of that kind o
horse. I sec that they ;ils,o hav<
sold
Hill
Gail,
their
Kentuckj
Derby winner, to
an Irish buye.
I imagine that will cause som
surprise too."
While American breeders hav
done much importing of top sta'
lions from Europe and
Australi
in recent years, the • major p"oint
.out, foreign breeders have not ha
1he dollars to make similar pui
chases from this country until no\\
when restrictions have been ease
just a little.
i
NEW
YORK, (Ifi ' When' ; Alii
Reynolds slipped.on.a showejr ma
and gashed the index finger of hi
throwing hand the other day, th
Yankees as likely as not toft wha
ever chance they had of overhaul
ing Cleveland in the next Ameri-
can League race.
It is not definite that the Chief, is
through. Last we saw they were
talking about doing a plastic sur-
ery job on the injured digit after
has healed, and there appeared
o
be some
hope that the great
ompetitor from Oklahoma would
e able to report e.t St. Petersburg
cxl spring. But from this distance
doesn't look gocd.
Allie is 37 by the official record,
nd there is reason to surpect that
e might be crowding 40. For some
eason never entirely clear, base-
all players like the fudge of their
ges. At -any. rate, the big
fiist-
aller was nearing the end of his
aroer before the accident befell
im. It figured that he would have
;reat difficulty
overcoming even
ic slightest impairment of his ef-
i.ciency.
Another factor'mitigating against
it- return is the' fact that AlHc
vill have no burning incentive to
ive it one more whirl. Hi? invest
ments in oil wells and such have,
rom all accounts, made him fi-
nancially independent. If we know
he man who pitched two nohitters
n .a single season ar.d who
has
ierce pride in his skill, he will
not be back'unless he is firmly con-
'inced that he still can win.
Some may feel that our opening
'stimate'of the Chief's'importance
.o the Yankees is a little, strong.
We will stick-by it. Casey Stengel
needs the services of his
veteran
stopper for another year or two I
while his mound staff is in a period
cf transition, until his young pitch-
ers are ready to take over
the
entire, burden. They, the
young-
sters such as Bob Grim and Whitey
Ford, will not be ready to bent
Cleveland . on - their
own next
Farmer Star to
Watch Razorbaeks
LITTLE BOCK
Iff)
Ben
H.
WirMoman, an all-time Arkf sas
football great, has notified Slcre-
tary of State C. G. Hall that
lie
will attend the University of Ar-
kansas homecoming footbal gania
ne::l Saturday in FayctteviHe.
Windkleman played on the 19JS.
191b,1920 and 1921 Arkansas teams
r.s halfback
and end. He
was
named to thtf all-SouthU-est Con-
ference teams in both position*.
lie graduated from the University
in 1922.
The clash between the un
ed Razorbaeks and Southern
odisl, with the conference chartl*
rfonship hanging in the balancs,
will be the first homecoming a
Fayetteville Wlilkleman has
at-
tended since his graduation.
-
Winkleman's c.oaching cawer has
included jobs at. the University of
Cincinnati. Stanford and San Jose
State College. He now is in,the
real estate business .at P^lo. ;AloJ,
Calif.
season.
lian Horned.Frogs ionienlratqH on
offense for their battle with the
Longhorns. Coach Abe Martlnj.se'nt
his charges thorough long passing
and running maneuvers and is aid
they would scrimmage but- rlittle
this week.
i •
Rice, latest.victim of the. Arkan-
sas juggernaut; worked in sweat
shirts while the No. 2 team scrim-
maged 'the Rice freshmen.
All-
American candidate. Dickey Mj>e_gje
was on the injured list wi '
Taylor,
but. Coach Jess,
thought they would be re.ady lor
the Texas Aggies on Saturday.
The Agpics took it comparatively
easy at College Station wlver'e
Coach Bear Bryant said he-iWoUld
t his top men skip -contact jWork
r most of the remaining
essions.
At Waco, the Baylor Bears took a
ojiday. They have no game;,this
eekend, but Coach George Sauer
lanned a light -workout-Tijjksday
nd hard scrimmages Wednesday |
nd Thursday.
handoff instead of through center,
it i worked for
"Motfre"
yardage
Mrs. Viola Glover of Chidester
died at her' home Saturday, Nov-
ember 6. Funeral
arrangements
re incomplete,,
WANTED'
TO BUY;
One inch rough green
Oak Lumber —- regular
lengths and tie siding.
Fpr prices pnd specifica-
tions write —
GURDON LUMBER
'COMPANY
PilRNE, ARKANSAS
Mr. and Mrs. Berry Randle and
on, Berry and Mrs, Ollie McCanic
motored to Arcada, La., on Sunday,
November 7, where they visited re- j
atives and friends.
Fights Last Night
By The Associated Press
Brooklyn
Gene (Cyclone) Full-
mer,
154'/^, West Jordan.
Utah,
outpointed Jackie La Bua, 158'/t,
Strict* Offered
15-1 CeU
John Sidney Braggs of Emmet
led at his home Sunday, Novem-
er 7. Funeral arrangements are
ncomplete.
134,
to be exact.
In Arkansas' 21-20 victory over
Baylor, sophomore tailback Buddy
Benson
of the
No.-2-team Tan
jvith the ball nine times on end
sweeps jn an ll-play drive that car
ried the, porkers to . within
easy
field goal distance-arid Carpenter,
kicked the three-pointer that won
the game.
Against Mississippi, the
clutch-
playing Hogs tried only one long
pass-a 66-yard Benson
Carpenter
maneuver for .the victory tally.
Unfortunately, there are no sta
tistics to
show how
many of
Moore's 534 yards
rushing-second
only to Moegle in the Southwest
Conference
have been
.made
through the air.
UP Ranking
Also Lists
Porkers 4th
By NORMAN MILLER
NEW YOR K CUP)
UCLA
pulled further away.. from
Ohio
State and Oklahoma today in . the
three-team race for the national col-
lege football championship, while
Iowa and Navy, advanced
amoria
this week's top 10 in the United
Press ratings.
The powerful Bruins from
the
Pacific
Coast conference, . who
have Averaged nearly 42 points per
game in scoring eight straight vic-
tories, were the first-place choice
of 26 coaches on the 35-man Unit-
ed Press rating board.
UCLA 's point-total of 338 was
"iinds .Notre ,pame . agair.st North
Carolina, Ariny vs. Pennsylvania,
Southern California vs.. Washing-
ton, Mississippi vs. Houston, and
Navy vs. Columbia.
Wisconsin, seeking to .-regain a
place ambng the'top 10, moved up
to llth place this week, followed by
Minnesota,
Baylor
and ' Miami
(Fla). Purdue and Southern--Meth-
odist were tied fnr 35th. and then
came Cincinnati, Miami (O.) anj
West Virginia in order,
Miqhigan
and Penn State were tied for 20th
Nebraska. Rice, Maryland, .Geor-
gia and Michigan Stute also re
ceived points in this week's voting.
NEW YORK (UP) ' The .United
Press college football ratings (with
first-place votes and won-lost rec-
SMU Half back
May Miss the
Game Saturday
By The Associated Press
The .two "surprise" teams of the
Southwest Conference
- Arkansas
and Texas
worked on the same
goal Tuesday:, .a winning conbina-
tion.
Arkansas,
picked for the .cellar
by sportswriters and broadcasters,
was preparing for its conference
battle with Southern Methodist and
aiming' for its eighth straight win.
Texas was just
looking for a
winnng .combination. The
Long
Legal Notice
.
lorns, five-time lo'sers, winners o:
wo victories and a tie, were pickcc
overwhelmingly for the conference
championship. The Longhorns will
ry to salvage part of their formei
only
12
short
of
a
perfect
Mr. and Mrs. George Smith Jr.,
ind Mr. and
Mrs.
Craton Epps
ipeht Thursday in Springhill, La.,
rlsiiing Mr. and Mrs. Willie Thom-
as.
New York 10.
flew York
Kenny Lane, 137,
Legal Notice
S'o. 7681
In the Chancery Court of
,
Hempstead County, Ark.
Frances Messer ....... Plaintiff
vs.
Walter L. Messer ... Defendant
YVARNINQ PBPgR
The defendant Walter L, Messer
4 warned to appear in this court
within thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, Frances
esser.
Witness w hand and the seal
of s,»<4 cpurt this 8 day of Novem-
ords in parentheses):
Team
1. UCLA (26) (8-0)
2.
Ohio State (7) (7-0)
Oklahoma (2) (7-0)
4. Arkansas (7-0^
5. Notre Dame (5-1)
6. Army (6-1)
7. So. Calif. (7-1)
Points
333
310
* 282
243
177
155
!)2
83
65
Transfer of
Athletics
Is Approved
By JOE REICHLER
NEW
YORK
Iff)
Having won
lis four-month fight' to purchase
the
Philadelphia
Athletics
and
transfer the franchise to Kansas
City, industrialist Arnold Johnson'
today tackled the prpblem of hir-
ing a field and general manager.
He may disclose some of
his
plpns at a press conference today.
Elated
by the 6-2 vote of ap-
proval given him by the American
League, Johnson yesterday said he
had an open mind on the manageri-
al situation. He said he had talked
to no one about the jobs but had
many applications.
It was learned that Lou Bou-
dr<eau deposed manager of the Bos-
ton Red Sox has the inside tracn
Jo the field
managing job, ?nd
Paike CarmU, who was business
manager of the New York Yan-
kees Kansas City fani club in the
American Assn., is a top pandj-
flate for general mi»n,9gcr.
Johnson's
architects have . been
score and the highest compiled by
any team, this season. Of the coach-
es
who did not vot<; the Bruins
tops this week, six picked them
second and three for third.
That support widened UCLA's
margin from 17 to 28 points over
Ohio State and from 28 to 56 pointi
over Oklahoma. Ohio State attract-
ed reven first-place ballots and 310
points; Oklahoma had two first-
place votes and 282 pints. Both
have won seven in a row.
UCLA, with a chance for (he first
perfect season in its football his-
tory, itakes next Saturday off be-
fore winding up its schedule Nov.
20
against
Southern
California
(ranked seventh this week). That
game also should decide the PCC
championship, although Coach Hen
ry (Red) Sanders' men are not
eligible
for
the Rose Bowl be
cause they played last New Year's
day.
A comparatively forrnful week-
end left the top six teams in the
exact same order of (he previous
week, Arkansas, A» my and Notre
Dprne following third-ranked • Ok-
lahoma in that order. Southrn Cal-
ifornia and Mississippi each moved
8 Mississippi (8-1)
9. Iowa (5-2)
10. Navy (5-2)
Second 10 teams
11. Wiscon-
sin, 26; -1'2. Minnesota, 20; 13. .Bay-
lor, 18;
14. Miami (Fla), 9; 15.
(tie',, Purdue • and Southern Meth-
odi»1, 8 each; 17 Cincinnati, 7; 13.
Miami (O.), 6; 19. West Virginia,
5; 20. (tie), Michigan and
Penn
State.
Oihcrs
Nebraska, 3; Rice, 2;
Maryland, Georgia and Michigan
State, '1 each
prestige
with their game thif
&
for
nishe
Mon
weekend with
Texas
Christian's
brash
sophomores
and
Texas
tough
but virtually win
ess
Cadets
. on
Thanksgiving
Day.Bc.th look like rough assignments
Arkansas, ranked fourth in the na
tional Associated Press poll again
;odty, still must face Louisian:
State arid the University of Hous
ton after playing the vastly im
proved Mustangs this Saturday.
"We've still got three games t
play," Razorback Coach B.owde
Wyatt said as his boys "-'-•--
their regular light duties
day and went t othe showers. Thj
Porkers, Wyatt admitted, were i
good condition.
Longhorn mentor
switched Billy Quinn back to ful"
back in his search for a winnin
combine. He moved Don Marone;
and Bill Long down to the seconi
and third teams ond said: "We'r
trying..." . .
As the Methodist started
prep
arytions for the highly-ranked Hog
their regular left halfback, Don Me
Ilhenny, was on the doubtful stal-
er )ist. He 'suffered a bruised kic
ney in the close 6-3 victory ove
the Aggies last Saturday. The Mus>
tangs may start John
Marshal
high-scoring soph, in place of M
Ilhenny.
At Fort Worth, the Texas Chri
Ed
Pric
,
ber
Willis,
surveying the
City par*
for weeks end ^re ready to beg"
the seating
to a?,09P
from
and to about |§,000
the
up one notch to seventh and eighth,
respectively, and then tame Iowa
and Navy t0 round out the top 10.
Iowa, moving up fron? 12th to
ninth place, and Navy, jumping
from a tie for 18th .to the 10th rank-
ing. replaced Purdue and Miami
(Fin) among the select group.
V/ith points awarded on a 10^9-8-
7.5.5.4,3.2-1
scale for each vote
from first to 10th place, Arkansas
had 243 points, moving wilhin strife
ing distance of the leaders after
its seventh straight tiiumph; No-
tre Pame had 177 points, Avmy
J55, Southern California 92, M>
&Jssippi 3, Iowa' 65 and N»yy 59
Oliio State, Oklahoma
a.r.ijl Ar-
kansas, the three teams ranked
hind first place, aach c«n cll
s tie for its conference champion-
next Saturday. Ohio State
15th ranked
$<*. •• %
*t
•f
*t
HQ 11 S t A tt| M 0
,. Novitfifeef $, t»S4 1
0*A*R IR1
/ THATS STRANGE, Ji
> BUT it SEEMS LIKE s
SOMEONE'S CALLING
I U.L. TTLJ t i»i T r~IL-WN^»-» ,,—»i
^ UP HERE BETWEEN us-^N
THAT'LL KEEP THE LIGHT J
*~r FROM SHINING v-**'•
GOING TO READ? 1 CAN'l
v_, SLEEP WITH THAT
(. i.inuir eiui.KJis.ir: „,
BUT IT SEEMS LIKE
SOMEONE'S CALLING
.MV NAME FROM •*
i ( SOMEONE'S CALLIr
. * V MV NAME FROM
| ^t FAR.FARdFF
isUttK Wl I M If
LIGHT SHINING
* IN MV EVES ^
Vl J N <l*fhrt Vf ift. * t
. .. *.
»t f.-* f i »* M K ft innVt Sj-^*ft tn«
"*
"
ftv Mlehdil 0'M«H.y dhd R
By J. R. Williams
OUT OUR WAIT
Answer to Previous Puzzle
TELL US/
SAY SOME-
THING/
l£> THAT
YOURS?
THE
HAD EATlM'
UP A ELK/
IT STUCK
OUT THEIR
EARS.'
AT IMS &APE;$HS
UAT6IZ,
- -. ACROSS
3 Greek letter
1 Screen actress, 4. Britannia's
'i
>-,
A
snear
spear
5 Pronoun'
6 Sea (Fr.)
7 Willow '
8 Sleeveless
garment
9 Passage (n the
brain
t, 6 She is a
HI, performer
'•H.Needier
13 Sets anew
14 Dress
15'Gets up
16 Leaping
amphibian
17 Not (prefix)
be (Fr.)
20 Lurer
23 Solitary
10 Essential being25 Heavy blow
41 Italian city
12 Lease
27 Asterisk
42 Feminine
13 Malice
28 Raw silk
' appellation
18 Petroleum
weight
district (two 29 Son of Adam
creature
words)
(Bib.)
' 44 Shield bearing
21 Compass point34 Mineral rock 47 Fruit drinks
WASH TUBES
48 Withered
49 Formerly
51 tiolf device
35 Peruser
36 Dispatches
oi, «,?asim,°dic/a u^24 Openwork
39 Pair (ab,)
53 Note 7n
SJKuSp1*1'
fabdc
40 Small llsh
Guide's
33 Frozen water
34'Boundary
'' (comb, form)
38!Uncomrnon
37 Weight of
' India
38 Scottish
•
' ''sheepfold
'^Hazard
|40 Sfeal-hunting
mariners
142 Esau
45 Cental surgeon
<ab.)
46iFacility
SO-Rounded
52 Otter
54 Bank worker
55 Church
officials
. 22 Roof finial
sP"ng23 Egyptian
COULP^
DIDN'T A WO^\N'& CP-V...
I
.
HOM,B.,,.6.
THEY'RE NOT
THE
40PE ONE OF-
PRIMM, TWINS
TURW&'OUTTO
LIFEIS LOMC5E&T MINUTE
Cw. ,.M t, „, „,.»., ^. T.. .^ „ ,,,.,, „,.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
With Major Hoople
AND HER BUDDIES
6 Mountain spur
7 Property item
•-
*•
•v '-'WWUfe&ts
, *;./*r/t,Ea^«>
1DOWN
IPetty quarrel
1 ,.•> -2 -Movement
(rnusic)
By Dick Turner
CARNIVAL
BUGS BUNNY
FUNNY BUSINESS
By Hershbergei
^V^ <"^
' -> *
k~ ' r-T^-hf
ALLlEY OOP
YEAH-.THAT BUCK LOOKS
-.
STRONG AN1 HEALTHY
TOO.. ENOUGH TO GIVE
KNOCK 'IM7 WOODS WiTHOUT\
U5 A LOTTA TROUBLE
WHEN HE FINDS WE'VE
TAKEN HIS WOMAN,'
' V'No, the car wasn't hurt much—the truck driver wain't
trying to beat ITS brains out!"
By Galbroith
SIDE GLANCES
'fl'hope you like buckshot—by the time Wilbur had the
[ \
» rabbit dressed there wasn't anything else left!"
~
~~
By NaJine Selzer
'S A BOOK
HOW
VSMQKIN© C...
YOUR MONEV
THi STORY QF MARTHA WAYNI
.
THST
i MOU NlfpNT50M5 TPTW
W'TH
bitter Mp 'Wm with thpf§ pr«*l*m*
my I svsr -painf slg«br» mta bri|?|ln|( Ihi
*
1
>
3. 7653
In the Chancery Court of |
'
Hempstead County,: Ark. |
George Scoggins
vs.
. . . •,
Odessa Scoggins .... Defen^flnt •
WARNING ORDER
'
;
The defendant, Odessa Scojginsp
s warned to appear in thlsjwourt-1
A-ithin thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, George
Scoggins. ..
,
.
. .
Witness my hand and the -seal of
said iourt this 8 day of."-"—1- —
1954.
'
^,
Garrett Willis, Clerk
By L. C. Byers, D. C,
(SEAL)
. E. Grain,
Attorney Ad Litem
:
John P. Vesey,
Attorney for Plaintiff
Oct. 9, 16, 23, 30
Legal Notice
NOTICE
IN THE PROBATE COURT
OF HEMPSTEAD
COUNTY, ARKANSAS
IN THE MATTER OF THE .
ESTATE' OF C. W. BARNES,
DECEASED
-
Last known address of decedent:
Hope, Arkansas
_
Date of death of decedent: October
10, 1954
Ah instrument dated October
1954,
was
on the
27th day of
October, 1954, admitted to Frpbatfe
as the last will of the above named
decedent,
and
the
undersigned
have "been' ' appointed
exe'cutors
thereunder.. A contest of th.p prV-
bate of the will can be /, ,
only by the filing of a petition
within the time provided by Igw.A
All persons having claims ^
the estate must exhibit theml^
verified, to the undersigned , ,
six months from the date b.f. thjr.
first publication of this. notipe,. pi
they shall be forever barred and
precluded from any benefit In th*
estate.
This notice first published th,«
2nd day of November, ^954.
L. H. Parris,
' Robert Cassels, Executor
Mail Address:
c/o. John P. Vesey
First National Bank" • '
Building
.
' , j
Hope, Arkansas
' ;
Nov.
2, 9
Tm lost my
head over the
955 FORD'S
V
new
THUNDERBIBD
STYLING!
**ifi*!_
fe^t--*•
£&$P^Y>'V '
r/'wf^-f»"-, 't\ ^
y,-?'f?M-t> -
HOP i~$f AifrHO*!* A f t K ^ N I A f c
•
-IAIDISPUY
'
ford Id wi
'Tailor
y,-, ^ -
i Vi» */,'
iZERWORK
*— btft Moving
- Call
__$fOM .
ITGHTERING
ed for
eep Freex*
..
Montgomery Mkt.
7*8361
,^,.
ill* Made Into Innenpr Im
crkiGu«r«nte*d ,
i Day 8ervlo« •— •
ir« & MoHNM C*.
rMreet
Phone 74211
rtl n3,
CLASSIFIED
"
Ads Must fie In Office D*y Before Publication
, WANT AD RATES ^
' All W<Wit Mi
otf
fwyobM m '
SdvaSe* but 8*1 will b« <we»pH>d
ever fti* tiltphons And oe«mddd->
«w «£dum* .allowed with th»
w *
Jp to IS
1p to S
6 to 20
On*
Day
.45
,60
5s
.90
t.OS
1.20
1.35
1.50
fhf*«
j>t*
., 0«
Day*
btryl Month
.90
1.50
4.50
1.20
2.00 6.00
2.50
7.50
3.00
9.00
3.50 10.50
4.00 12.00
4.50 13.50
5.00 15.00
1.50
t.BO
2.10
2.40
2.70
3.00
tl ta 23
26 to 30
II W 35
)6 tu 40
U fd 45
tt 50
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
t t;rm
75e per Ineh
3 tlmei
40= Per neh
6 times
•„.,..>
50e per Inch
hate* quoted above are tor con-
MeirHve insertion*. Irregular or skip-
date ads will take the one-day rot*.
All dally classified advertising copy
Will be accepted until 5 p. m. for
publication the following day.
the publishers reserve the right to
revise or edit all advertisements of-
fered for publication and to reject
tiny •' objectionable advertising sub-
mitted
Initiate of one or more letters,
groups or figures such as house or
telephone numbers count as one word.
The Hope Star will not be respon-
" slble for-errors in Want Ads unless
errors ore called to' our attention
after FIRST Insertion 'of ad and then
f6r ONLY the ONE .Incorrect insertion.
PHONE: PROSPECT 7-3431
For
Laydway Open on
TRIKES * BIKES AND
DOLLS
OKLAHOMA m€ & SUPPLY
. COMPANY.
3 ROOM modern home. Floor fur*
nace, attic fan. 1305 South Her*
vey. Small down payment, bal-
ance like rent. Phone
7-4568.
3-3t
Aggies Defeat- Hog
Cross Country Team
FAYETf feVlLLE . if ,
Okla-
homa A&M's CfoES-coiliitty team
defeated the- University of Arkan-
sas 17-40 flew Score wins) here as
A&M's 'Frederick
Eckho'ff
set a
hew,
i-ecord over
the
Arkansas
course.
Eckhofi's time. 12:48.7, bettered
the mark
set by Texas A&M's
James Blaine last year 12:59.
Summary: 1. Eckotf.
A&'M. 2.
Landquist, AfeM. 3. Odller, A&M
4.
Bogerund, A&M 5 Morton, Ark
6. Eshbaugh, Ark. 7. Applemap,
A&M.
8.' Hcoker, Ark 9 Tennison,
Aiik 10. Mosely, A&M. 41. Graham,
A&M (freshman). 12 , Ross,
Ark
13 Garner, Ark. (freshman).
Ferguson,
A&M (freshmen).
Wilkinson, A&M (freshman).
U.
15.
SEVERAL colorful cushion mums
blooming in containers. Also bud
ding chrysanthemums . Bring)
containers. Arthur Gray, Ozan.
4-6t
FOUR Chester white pigs for sale
Mrs. A. K Holloway.
9-3t
FOR sale by
individual — 1953
Ford, two door sedan. 17,000 mi-
les, new set of white side-walls,
radio, heater, and many extras.
Can finance. $1395. Contact T.' J.
Barber, phone 7-4038, Hope.'9-3t
Hoj>eStar
Star of HOD* 1199; Preii 1*JT
«oniellddl«d January It, 1*2*
/ESTERN SHARES
..JMlfied Income Fund
ipectu» available from
%'f*'
67 Wert
USED FURNITURE CO.
«g>f .City Urnlts We.t
on Water Barren for Sale
one 7^381
Hope,, Ark.
•
PAULING
isGravel/Fill Dirt and
Light Hauling.
.*,irv
IEST JONES
every'weekday afternoon by
STAR PUBLISHINQ CO.
C. E. Palmer, President
Alex. H, Weihburn, Seey-Trae.
jet The Sler Bulldlne
1 112-14 South Walnut Street
'
* Hope/
Arkqnsoi
Alex. H. Wothburn, Editor & PublUhef
Paul M, Jonei, Managing Editor
Jen M. Davli, Advertlilng Manafei
Coorge W. Hosmor, Mcch. Supt.
Entered at iceond • clau matter «t
Ifie Part Office at Hope/ Arkanioi,
under the Act of March 3, 1897.
Member of the Audit Bureau el
Circulation!
For Rent
HOUSE jacks," Wire stretchers, Post
hole diggej-s, T.arps, 'Reaves .Bar-
gain House and Pawn Shop, 205
S. Walnut, Phone 7-2471. 18-1 Mo.
NICELY furnished '4 room- apart-
ment and bath. Private entrances
7-3497.
• . ' . " ' - 23-tf
LARGE front" room adjoining bath.
Mrs. George • Sandefur, 320
N.
Washington, Phone 7-2125.
"
-
•
:
•
'
6-3t
5 ROOM unfurnished house. .Close-
in, garage, garden. Miss
Lillie
Middlebrooks, Phone 7-2894.
6-3t
Line Leaping
of Moore Is
Amazing
By ADREN COOPER
FAYETTEVILLE,
(K) T h e
un-
defpated
Aikansas
Ra2orbacks
wiry and wily, have changed their
offense slightly for almost every
game. But there's one, play-a one-
man aerial actthat always works
for y.ardage.
When the' Porkers need yardage
Cor a first. dq\y.c
or
touchdo%vn
they usually launch a 130-poum
guided
muscle
named
Henry
Mopre. Fullback Moore 'takes th(
baljl, leans over the massed line
men, slides rdown. the -other side
ano lands.on his head.
This • hard-headed
junior . frorr
Litte Rock, made 85 -yards-most
ly
through .the- air-agalnst Rice
last .Saturday. Despite- that impres
sive total, Moore had to yteld th
spotlight- to two other stars-Dick;
Moegle, Rice's-all-American cand:
date and teammatd George
Wai
ker.
Subscription Rates (payable In ad-
vance):
•r carrier In Hope and neighboring
towni—•
••t .week
.25
Per year
•• 13.00
By mall In Hempstead/ Nevada,
tqFpyttfe, Howwtl/ ,<""<* ^Miller coun- <
flow,
^JOHNSON
t^TIIHIGCO,
f!?',Printing
"
e»x- ?&'Qffae S,upplies
IPIione 7-254T W Front St.
^y-ip t^^ * . '
^ *
lobfs Service
One month
.85'
Thn* months
_ 1.60
«x rnonthi
1.
2.60
One year
•••— 4.50
All other mail-
On* month
1.10
Three months
3.25
tlx month
6.50
On* year
13.00
1 Mefl Advertlilni Ropreiontativei:
Arkansas Dailies, Inc.; 1602 Sterlck
. llcki., Memphis 2, Term.; 505 Texas
lank; •Wo., Dallas 2, Texas; 360 N.
Michigan Ave., Chicago 1,111.; 60 E.;
42d^ St., New York 17, N. V.; 1763
PenobscQt Bldg., Detroit 2,
Mich.;
Terminal Bldg., Oklahoma
City
2,
Member ef The Associated Press:
The-Associated Press is entitled ex-
clusively to the use for republlcatlon
Of all the local news printed in this
newspaper, as well as all AP news
dispatches,
_
.
BRICK house, 515 East Third Hope.
Phone Mrs. Virgie Coleman, 3-
5695, Texarkana, Tex. 2210 Olive.
8-3t
FURNISHED extra large 2 room
apartment. Private entrance and
bath. 801 S. Main, Phone 7-5837.
8-3t
Funeral Directory
SMALL furnished apartment with
private bath. 514 East Third.
.
. ' . . . •
.
9:3t
Lost
10 ft. x 18 ft. Tarp on Highway
4.
between. ;Hope; land .Columbus
Road on Friday.. Call or return
to Henipstead .County Farmers
Assn. Phone 7-4469, •
6-3t
IRISH setter bird.dog. If found no-
tify C. 'T. Jories'in Patm6s, Ark'.,
Phone 7-2925.
9-6f
,-,:,,,,
,
USED GUA88
5-i¥TfT¥ilN8TALueD
^JfJIEW AND USED PARTS
*Mif .most cdrs, »ee w* befor*
PORTER
&. Operator.
Hope
Hy 67 West
OAKCEEST
FUNERAL
HOME
INSURANCE . . . AMBULANCE
2ND & HAZEL . . . PHONE 7-2123
AD-1 Mo. TF
^MtfS.1
Cpmp|0te>arU and
Holland Balers
Traiptors
689 A 1140-B
TERMITES
trniite Control Co,
NPip - INSURED
GUARANTEED
f«r Frff Inipectlon Call
D, MIDDLEBROOKS Jr,
H|»w
Nlpht Phont
HERNDON CORNELIUS
BURIAL ASSOCIATION
Largest and Oldest in South
Arkansas. Call
7^5505 for our.
agents
A23-1 Mo.
The Junior choir of BeeBee Me-
morial CME Church will rehearse
Instructions
CLASSES in tap, acrobatic, ballet
and toe. Katharine Windsor, 104
E, 14th. Ph,one 7-3327.
22-1 mo.
For Sole or Rent
W"0 Business buildings on Front
Street, next to Pool hall. If in
terested, contact A. S.Williams,
300
E. 7th, Texarkana, Ark.
Phflne W800 or 22-,6666. 194 Mo.
Wonted
Community
By Helen Turntr
Phone 7-5830
Or bring Item* to .MlM Turiwr
at Hlcki Funeral Horn*
Moore's line-leaping is not nev
he's been
doing
it
for
seve
straight games.
Rice players
praised
Moore a
'a 'better fullback" than Wisco
sin's-heralded
Alan- A m e c h e
"Moore's-not as powerful, but he1
faster," one. Rice player said.
Arkansas
Coach Bbwden Wyi
an outstanding .candidate for coac
of the year, uses Moore chiefly o
a
fullback -".delay".. • or
"draw
play that is .designed 4o
sprin
lf.arpmeriri' Henry-loose
up
th
middle. It seldom does. 'But it i
such a'.constant threat that Porke
fores have to keep In close to guar
against him. In • the •• mean time
te.ammatc Walker
.can pass,
o
quick-lcick over their heads.
Tailback Walker also has a .pe
c^f-tackle slant _that''^works
wel
Walker, though not «xceplionally
fast, is. Arkansas' I'sriiartesl" run-
rer.' On the off-tackle play, Moore,
blocking back Preston
Carpenter
end guard Bud Brooks leads
tha
way.
. '.
.
: .
Brooks,. an' .all-American candidate,
led Walker to a 38-yard touchdown
that clinched the win over
Rice.
A newspaper photo clearly shows
Brooks knocking down the last
man-Dicky Moegle.
Texas relaxed its defense against
Moore's uptthe-middle1;smashes and
he got away oh an 82-yard touch
down jaunt.
Wyatt switched his ^singlewing
Offense slightly against Texas A&M
sending -Moore
off'tackle
on a
Unbeaten Porks
Remain in 4th
Spot in Poll
By HUGH FULL§RT0N JR.
Of. The Associate) Press
By a comfortable margin IP
a
'hopping big ballot, UCLA retainpd
s ranking as the nation's lead-
ng college football- team in this
veek's Associat?d Press poll
of
ports writers and broadcasters.
An even SOO votes wore tabu?
ated to confirm the high-scorin»
Jclans' claim to the top place over
ic challenges, of Ohio State
and
Oklahoma, lenders in earlier pulls
his season.
UCLA was first on 117 of the
00 ballots. Ohio State got 80 first
ilace. votes.
Points wore tabulated on
the
isual basis of IP for each
first-
ilace vote, 9 for second, 8 for third,
tc,
'
'
The first five teams- held
the
ame place? they dropped into dur-
ng the general reshuffling of thn
sast two weeks, but several im-
>ortant chances were
registered
ilsewhere in the first 10.
After UCLA, with 2,GGO points;
and Ohio State, with 2,594. cani
Dklahoma- Arkansas, Notre Dame,
Army, Mississippi Southern Cali-
'ornla, Iowa and Navy in order.
Miami of Florida, suffering
its
first defeat at Auburn's
hands
after six straight victories,
fell
from sixth place to llth. Purdue
also disappeared' from tho top
after taking a 25-14 licking from.
Iowa. That made room for Iowa
12th
last week, and Navy in the
top.
Army's 48-7 shellacking of pro
viously unbeaten Yale couldn't do
more than lift the Cadets
from
seventh into Miami's vacated sixth
place. Mississippi and Southern Cal
ifornia
advanced
two notches
each to seventh and eighth.
The 'leading teams with'
first
SPORTS ROUNDUP
•f «AVi.i TAL10T.
NEW YORK
The thought
persists here that there is no foot
ball coach in the. land who Can
quite match Earl
(Red) Blaik's
iV.lnnt for building an explosive at-
tack when he has the sort of speed
he needs to work with.
Up to this pcint, the Army
coaches rurrent machin? has roll-
ed up an average of 38 points i.i
its seven games and probably will
hike that mark when it rips into
the helpless Penn Quakers Satw-
"day at Philadelphia. Some Eastern
experts are cautiously comparing
Army's breakway backs with those
of the Diiv'.s-Blanchard era.
This is the greater tribute
to
Blnik's coaching skill for it's only.
four seasons
since
the
socalled
cribbing scandal brought the world
own about his head ar.d forced
inv to start all over again.
The transatlantic traffic: in rac-
ng brood mares, we learn, is not
11 one way. Representatives of the
Lga Khan, having just sold' 20 of
is most blue-blooded matrons to
American-buyers at. an average of
27,000 each, are spending, part of
lie loot for two
females
whosa
oropenitors are as Yankee-Doodle
"s the hot rod.
•
One of- them is- loaded with the
Man o'War strain. The other, a
illy named "Jmperla
purchased
ro'm Calumet Farms, is a daugh-
,er of Bull Lea and a granddaugh-
er of Nellie Flag, a combination
vhich, we understand, would bo
difiicult to boat.
place votes in parentheses:
L UCLA (117)
2. Ohio. State (80)
3. Oklahoma (44)
4. Arkansas (43).
5. Notre Dame (3)
6. Army .(4) . •
7. Mississippi (5)
8. Southern Cal
.9. Iowa
10. Navy
Second 10:
11. Miami (Fla)"
12. Cincinnati
13. Minnesota
14. Wisconsin
15. Virginia Tech
16. West Virginia (2)
17. Maryland
18. Baylor
19. SMU
20. Greo'rgia
Thursday :nighf, " November 11, at
7:30.
AH members please be pre-
sent.
. • . - • • ' .
Beautician Chapter No.,.16, will
meet Wednesday night; November
1C at the home of Mrs. Zephree Wes
son in Mineral Springs. All mem-
bers please be present at 7 o'clock.
Funeral services for Charlie Adir
were held Monday, November 8,
at New Bethel Church with Burial
in Giles Cemetery,
2.66C
2,5i)<
2,29:
2,20'
l,48i
1,45:
72
37!
56:
49,
1G
15
14
11
G
Maj.
Cyril Hall, manager of the
Aga Khan's stud farms, says this
s the first time that these famous
American strains have boon ex
ported to Europe; He can't quite
aelicve his luck yet ir. iandin;
Imuer.'a.
"Sev.eral cf your breeders havr-
asked me how I did it," he said
'They say that Calumet
simplj
does
not lot go of that kind o
horse. I sec that they ;ils,o hav<
sold
Hill
Gail,
their
Kentuckj
Derby winner, to
an Irish buye.
I imagine that will cause som
surprise too."
While American breeders hav
done much importing of top sta'
lions from Europe and
Australi
in recent years, the • major p"oint
.out, foreign breeders have not ha
1he dollars to make similar pui
chases from this country until no\\
when restrictions have been ease
just a little.
i
NEW
YORK, (Ifi ' When' ; Alii
Reynolds slipped.on.a showejr ma
and gashed the index finger of hi
throwing hand the other day, th
Yankees as likely as not toft wha
ever chance they had of overhaul
ing Cleveland in the next Ameri-
can League race.
It is not definite that the Chief, is
through. Last we saw they were
talking about doing a plastic sur-
ery job on the injured digit after
has healed, and there appeared
o
be some
hope that the great
ompetitor from Oklahoma would
e able to report e.t St. Petersburg
cxl spring. But from this distance
doesn't look gocd.
Allie is 37 by the official record,
nd there is reason to surpect that
e might be crowding 40. For some
eason never entirely clear, base-
all players like the fudge of their
ges. At -any. rate, the big
fiist-
aller was nearing the end of his
aroer before the accident befell
im. It figured that he would have
;reat difficulty
overcoming even
ic slightest impairment of his ef-
i.ciency.
Another factor'mitigating against
it- return is the' fact that AlHc
vill have no burning incentive to
ive it one more whirl. Hi? invest
ments in oil wells and such have,
rom all accounts, made him fi-
nancially independent. If we know
he man who pitched two nohitters
n .a single season ar.d who
has
ierce pride in his skill, he will
not be back'unless he is firmly con-
'inced that he still can win.
Some may feel that our opening
'stimate'of the Chief's'importance
.o the Yankees is a little, strong.
We will stick-by it. Casey Stengel
needs the services of his
veteran
stopper for another year or two I
while his mound staff is in a period
cf transition, until his young pitch-
ers are ready to take over
the
entire, burden. They, the
young-
sters such as Bob Grim and Whitey
Ford, will not be ready to bent
Cleveland . on - their
own next
Farmer Star to
Watch Razorbaeks
LITTLE BOCK
Iff)
Ben
H.
WirMoman, an all-time Arkf sas
football great, has notified Slcre-
tary of State C. G. Hall that
lie
will attend the University of Ar-
kansas homecoming footbal gania
ne::l Saturday in FayctteviHe.
Windkleman played on the 19JS.
191b,1920 and 1921 Arkansas teams
r.s halfback
and end. He
was
named to thtf all-SouthU-est Con-
ference teams in both position*.
lie graduated from the University
in 1922.
The clash between the un
ed Razorbaeks and Southern
odisl, with the conference chartl*
rfonship hanging in the balancs,
will be the first homecoming a
Fayetteville Wlilkleman has
at-
tended since his graduation.
-
Winkleman's c.oaching cawer has
included jobs at. the University of
Cincinnati. Stanford and San Jose
State College. He now is in,the
real estate business .at P^lo. ;AloJ,
Calif.
season.
lian Horned.Frogs ionienlratqH on
offense for their battle with the
Longhorns. Coach Abe Martlnj.se'nt
his charges thorough long passing
and running maneuvers and is aid
they would scrimmage but- rlittle
this week.
i •
Rice, latest.victim of the. Arkan-
sas juggernaut; worked in sweat
shirts while the No. 2 team scrim-
maged 'the Rice freshmen.
All-
American candidate. Dickey Mj>e_gje
was on the injured list wi '
Taylor, but.
Coach Jess,
thought they would be re.ady lor
the Texas Aggies on Saturday.
The Agpics took it comparatively
easy at College Station wlver'e
Coach Bear Bryant said he-iWoUld
t his top men skip -contact jWork
r most of the remaining
essions.
At Waco, the Baylor Bears took a
ojiday. They have no game;,this
eekend, but Coach George Sauer
lanned a light -workout-Tijjksday
nd hard scrimmages Wednesday |
nd Thursday.
handoff instead of through center,
it i worked for
"Motfre"
yardage
Mrs. Viola Glover of Chidester
died at her' home Saturday, Nov-
ember 6. Funeral
arrangements
re incomplete,,
WANTED'
TO BUY;
One inch rough green
Oak Lumber —- regular
lengths and tie siding.
Fpr prices pnd specifica-
tions write —
GURDON LUMBER
'COMPANY
PilRNE, ARKANSAS
Mr. and Mrs. Berry Randle and
on, Berry and Mrs, Ollie McCanic
motored to Arcada, La., on Sunday,
November 7, where they visited re- j
atives and friends.
Fights Last Night
By The Associated Press
Brooklyn
Gene (Cyclone) Full-
mer,
154'/^, West Jordan.
Utah,
outpointed Jackie La Bua, 158'/t,
Strict* Offered
15-1 CeU
John Sidney Braggs of Emmet
led at his home Sunday, Novem-
er 7. Funeral arrangements are
ncomplete.
134, to be exact.
In Arkansas' 21-20 victory over
Baylor, sophomore tailback Buddy
Benson
of the
No.-2-team Tan
jvith the ball nine times on end
sweeps jn an ll-play drive that car
ried the, porkers to . within
easy
field goal distance-arid Carpenter,
kicked the three-pointer that won
the game.
Against Mississippi, the
clutch-
playing Hogs tried only one long
pass-a 66-yard Benson
Carpenter
maneuver for .the victory tally.
Unfortunately, there are no sta
tistics to
show how
many of
Moore's 534 yards
rushing-second
only to Moegle in the Southwest
Conference
have been
.made
through the air.
UP Ranking
Also Lists
Porkers 4th
By NORMAN MILLER
NEW YOR K CUP)
UCLA
pulled further away.. from
Ohio
State and Oklahoma today in . the
three-team race for the national col-
lege football championship, while
Iowa and Navy, advanced
amoria
this week's top 10 in the United
Press ratings.
The powerful Bruins from
the
Pacific
Coast conference, . who
have Averaged nearly 42 points per
game in scoring eight straight vic-
tories, were the first-place choice
of 26 coaches on the 35-man Unit-
ed Press rating board.
UCLA 's point-total of 338 was
"iinds .Notre ,pame . agair.st North
Carolina, Ariny vs. Pennsylvania,
Southern California vs.. Washing-
ton, Mississippi vs. Houston, and
Navy vs. Columbia.
Wisconsin, seeking to .-regain a
place ambng the'top 10, moved up
to llth place this week, followed by
Minnesota,
Baylor
and ' Miami
(Fla). Purdue and Southern--Meth-
odist were tied fnr 35th. and then
came Cincinnati, Miami (O.) anj
West Virginia in order,
Miqhigan
and Penn State were tied for 20th
Nebraska. Rice, Maryland, .Geor-
gia and Michigan Stute also re
ceived points in this week's voting.
NEW YORK (UP) ' The .United
Press college football ratings (with
first-place votes and won-lost rec-
SMU Half back
May Miss the
Game Saturday
By The Associated Press
The .two "surprise" teams of the
Southwest Conference
- Arkansas
and Texas
worked on the same
goal Tuesday:, .a winning conbina-
tion.
Arkansas,
picked for the .cellar
by sportswriters and broadcasters,
was preparing for its conference
battle with Southern Methodist and
aiming' for its eighth straight win.
Texas was just
looking for a
winnng .combination. The
Long
Legal Notice
.
lorns, five-time lo'sers, winners o:
wo victories and a tie, were pickcc
overwhelmingly for the conference
championship. The Longhorns will
ry to salvage part of their formei
only
12
short
of
a
perfect
Mr. and Mrs. George Smith Jr.,
ind Mr. and Mrs. Craton Epps
ipeht Thursday in Springhill, La.,
rlsiiing Mr. and Mrs. Willie Thom-
as.
New York 10.
flew York
Kenny Lane, 137,
Legal Notice
S'o. 7681
In the Chancery Court of
,
Hempstead County, Ark.
Frances Messer ....... Plaintiff
vs.
Walter L. Messer ... Defendant
YVARNINQ PBPgR
The defendant Walter L, Messer
4 warned to appear in this court
within thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, Frances
esser.
Witness w hand and the seal
of s,»<4 cpurt this 8 day of Novem-
ords in parentheses):
Team
1. UCLA (26) (8-0)
2.
Ohio State (7) (7-0)
Oklahoma (2) (7-0)
4. Arkansas (7-0^
5. Notre Dame (5-1)
6. Army (6-1)
7. So. Calif. (7-1)
Points
333
310
* 282
243
177
155
!)2
83
65
Transfer of
Athletics
Is Approved
By JOE REICHLER
NEW
YORK
Iff)
Having won
lis four-month fight' to purchase
the
Philadelphia
Athletics
and
transfer the franchise to Kansas
City, industrialist Arnold Johnson'
today tackled the prpblem of hir-
ing a field and general manager.
He may disclose some of
his
plpns at a press conference today.
Elated
by the 6-2 vote of ap-
proval given him by the American
League, Johnson yesterday said he
had an open mind on the manageri-
al situation. He said he had talked
to no one about the jobs but had
many applications.
It was learned that Lou Bou-
dr<eau deposed manager of the Bos-
ton Red Sox has the inside tracn
Jo the field
managing job, ?nd
Paike CarmU, who was business
manager of the New York Yan-
kees Kansas City fani club in the
American Assn., is a top pandj-
flate for general mi»n,9gcr.
Johnson's
architects have . been
score and the highest compiled by
any team, this season. Of the coach-
es
who did not vot<; the Bruins
tops this week, six picked them
second and three for third.
That support widened UCLA's
margin from 17 to 28 points over
Ohio State and from 28 to 56 pointi
over Oklahoma. Ohio State attract-
ed reven first-place ballots and 310
points; Oklahoma had two first-
place votes and 282 pints. Both
have won seven in a row.
UCLA, with a chance for (he first
perfect season in its football his-
tory, itakes next Saturday off be-
fore winding up its schedule Nov.
20
against
Southern
California
(ranked seventh this week). That
game also should decide the PCC
championship, although Coach Hen
ry (Red) Sanders' men are not
eligible
for
the Rose Bowl be
cause they played last New Year's
day.
A comparatively forrnful week-
end left the top six teams in the
exact same order of (he previous
week, Arkansas, A» my and Notre
Dprne following third-ranked • Ok-
lahoma in that order. Southrn Cal-
ifornia and Mississippi each moved
8 Mississippi (8-1)
9. Iowa (5-2)
10. Navy (5-2)
Second 10 teams
11. Wiscon-
sin, 26; -1'2. Minnesota, 20; 13. .Bay-
lor, 18;
14. Miami (Fla), 9; 15.
(tie',, Purdue • and Southern Meth-
odi»1, 8 each; 17 Cincinnati, 7; 13.
Miami (O.), 6; 19. West Virginia,
5; 20. (tie), Michigan and
Penn
State.
Oihcrs
Nebraska, 3; Rice, 2;
Maryland, Georgia and Michigan
State, '1 each
prestige
with their game thif
&
for
nishe
Mon
weekend with
Texas
Christian's
brash
sophomores
and
Texas
tough
but virtually win
ess
Cadets
. on
Thanksgiving
Day.Bc.th look like rough assignments
Arkansas, ranked fourth in the na
tional Associated Press poll again
;odty, still must face Louisian:
State arid the University of Hous
ton after playing the vastly im
proved Mustangs this Saturday.
"We've still got three games t
play," Razorback Coach B.owde
Wyatt said as his boys "-'-•--
their regular light duties
day and went t othe showers. Thj
Porkers, Wyatt admitted, were i
good condition.
Longhorn mentor
switched Billy Quinn back to ful"
back in his search for a winnin
combine. He moved Don Marone;
and Bill Long down to the seconi
and third teams ond said: "We'r
trying..." . .
As the Methodist started
prep
arytions for the highly-ranked Hog
their regular left halfback, Don Me
Ilhenny, was on the doubtful stal-
er )ist. He 'suffered a bruised kic
ney in the close 6-3 victory ove
the Aggies last Saturday. The Mus>
tangs may start John
Marshal
high-scoring soph, in place of M
Ilhenny.
At Fort Worth, the Texas Chri
Ed
Pric
,
ber
Willis,
surveying the
City par*
for weeks end ^re ready to beg"
the seating
to a?,09P
from
and to about |§,000
the
up one notch to seventh and eighth,
respectively, and then tame Iowa
and Navy t0 round out the top 10.
Iowa, moving up fron? 12th to
ninth place, and Navy, jumping
from a tie for 18th .to the 10th rank-
ing. replaced Purdue and Miami
(Fin) among the select group.
V/ith points awarded on a 10^9-8-
7.5.5.4,3.2-1
scale for each vote
from first to 10th place, Arkansas
had 243 points, moving wilhin strife
ing distance of the leaders after
its seventh straight tiiumph; No-
tre Pame had 177 points, Avmy
J55, Southern California 92, M>
&Jssippi 3, Iowa' 65 and N»yy 59
Oliio State, Oklahoma
a.r.ijl Ar-
kansas, the three teams ranked
hind first place, aach c«n cll
s tie for its conference champion-
next Saturday. Ohio State
15th ranked
$<*. •• %
*t
•f
*t
HQ 11 S t A tt| M 0
,. Novitfifeef $, t»S4 1
0*A*R IR1
/ THATS STRANGE, Ji
> BUT it SEEMS LIKE s
SOMEONE'S CALLING
I U.L. TTLJ t i»i T r~IL-WN^»-» ,,—»i
^ UP HERE BETWEEN us-^N
THAT'LL KEEP THE LIGHT J
*~r FROM SHINING v-**'•
GOING TO READ? 1 CAN'l
v_, SLEEP WITH THAT
(. i.inuir eiui.KJis.ir: „,
BUT IT SEEMS LIKE
SOMEONE'S CALLING
.MV NAME FROM •*
i ( SOMEONE'S CALLIr
. * V MV NAME FROM
| ^t FAR.FARdFF
isUttK Wl I M If
LIGHT SHINING
* IN MV EVES ^
Vl J N <l*fhrt Vf ift. * t
. .. *.
»t f.-* f i »* M K ft innVt Sj-^*ft tn«
"*
"
ftv Mlehdil 0'M«H.y dhd R
By J. R. Williams
OUT OUR WAIT
Answer to Previous Puzzle
TELL US/
SAY SOME-
THING/
l£> THAT
YOURS?
THE
HAD EATlM'
UP A ELK/
IT STUCK
OUT THEIR
EARS.'
AT IMS &APE;$HS
UAT6IZ,
- -. ACROSS
3 Greek letter
1 Screen actress, 4. Britannia's
'i
>-,
A
snear
spear
5 Pronoun'
6 Sea (Fr.)
7 Willow '
8 Sleeveless
garment
9 Passage (n the
brain
t, 6 She is a
HI, performer
'•H.Needier
13 Sets anew
14 Dress
15'Gets up
16 Leaping
amphibian
17 Not (prefix)
be (Fr.)
20 Lurer
23 Solitary
10 Essential being25 Heavy blow
41 Italian city
12 Lease
27 Asterisk
42 Feminine
13 Malice
28 Raw silk
' appellation
18 Petroleum
weight
district (two 29 Son of Adam
creature
words)
(Bib.)
' 44 Shield bearing
21 Compass point34 Mineral rock 47 Fruit drinks
WASH TUBES
48 Withered
49 Formerly
51 tiolf device
35 Peruser
36 Dispatches
oi, «,?asim,°dic/a u^24 Openwork
39 Pair (ab,)
53 Note 7n
SJKuSp1*1'
fabdc
40 Small llsh
Guide's
33 Frozen water
34'Boundary
'' (comb, form)
38!Uncomrnon
37 Weight of
' India
38 Scottish
•
' ''sheepfold
'^Hazard
|40 Sfeal-hunting
mariners
142 Esau
45 Cental surgeon
<ab.)
46iFacility
SO-Rounded
52 Otter
54 Bank worker
55 Church
officials
. 22 Roof finial
sP"ng23 Egyptian
COULP^
DIDN'T A WO^\N'& CP-V...
I
.
HOM,B.,,.6.
THEY'RE NOT
THE
40PE ONE OF-
PRIMM, TWINS
TURW&'OUTTO
LIFEIS LOMC5E&T MINUTE
Cw. ,.M t, „, „,.»., ^. T.. .^ „ ,,,.,, „,.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
With Major Hoople
AND HER BUDDIES
6 Mountain spur
7 Property item
•-
*•
•v '-'WWUfe&ts
, *;./*r/t,Ea^«>
1DOWN
IPetty quarrel
1 ,.•> -2 -Movement
(rnusic)
By Dick Turner
CARNIVAL
BUGS BUNNY
FUNNY BUSINESS
By Hershbergei
^V^ <"^
' -> *
k~ ' r-T^-hf
ALLlEY OOP
YEAH-.THAT BUCK LOOKS
-.
STRONG AN1 HEALTHY
TOO.. ENOUGH TO GIVE
KNOCK 'IM7 WOODS WiTHOUT\
U5 A LOTTA TROUBLE
WHEN HE FINDS WE'VE
TAKEN HIS WOMAN,'
' V'No, the car wasn't hurt much—the truck driver wain't
trying to beat ITS brains out!"
By Galbroith
SIDE GLANCES
'fl'hope you like buckshot—by the time Wilbur had the
[ \
» rabbit dressed there wasn't anything else left!"
~
~~
By NaJine Selzer
'S A BOOK
HOW
VSMQKIN© C...
YOUR MONEV
THi STORY QF MARTHA WAYNI
.
THST
i MOU NlfpNT50M5 TPTW
W'TH
bitter Mp 'Wm with thpf§ pr«*l*m*
my I svsr -painf slg«br» mta bri|?|ln|( Ihi
*
1
>
3. 7653
In the Chancery Court of |
'
Hempstead County,: Ark. |
George Scoggins
vs.
. . . •,
Odessa Scoggins .... Defen^flnt •
WARNING ORDER
'
;
The defendant, Odessa Scojginsp
s warned to appear in thlsjwourt-1
A-ithin thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, George
Scoggins. ..
,
.
. .
Witness my hand and the -seal of
said iourt this 8 day of."-"—1- —
1954.
'
^,
Garrett Willis, Clerk
By L. C. Byers, D. C,
(SEAL)
. E. Grain,
Attorney Ad Litem
:
John P. Vesey,
Attorney for Plaintiff
Oct. 9, 16, 23, 30
Legal Notice
NOTICE
IN THE PROBATE COURT
OF HEMPSTEAD
COUNTY, ARKANSAS
IN THE MATTER OF THE .
ESTATE' OF C. W. BARNES,
DECEASED
-
Last known address of decedent:
Hope, Arkansas
_
Date of death of decedent: October
10, 1954
Ah instrument dated October
1954,
was
on the
27th day of
October, 1954, admitted to Frpbatfe
as the last will of the above named
decedent,
and
the
undersigned
have "been' ' appointed
exe'cutors
thereunder.. A contest of th.p prV-
bate of the will can be /, ,
only by the filing of a petition
within the time provided by Igw.A
All persons having claims ^
the estate must exhibit theml^
verified, to the undersigned , ,
six months from the date b.f. thjr.
first publication of this. notipe,. pi
they shall be forever barred and
precluded from any benefit In th*
estate.
This notice first published th,«
2nd day of November, ^954.
L. H. Parris,
' Robert Cassels, Executor
Mail Address:
c/o. John P. Vesey
First National Bank" • '
Building
.
' , j
Hope, Arkansas
' ;
Nov.
2, 9
Tm lost my
head over the
955 FORD'S
V
new
THUNDERBIBD
STYLING!
**ifi*!_
fe^t--*•
£&$P^Y>'V '
r/'wf^-f»"-, 't\ ^
y,-?'f?M-t> -
HOP i~$f AifrHO*!* A f t K ^ N I A f c
.
•
-IAIDISPUY
'
ford Id wi
'Tailor
y,-, ^ -
i Vi» */,'
iZERWORK
*— btft Moving
- Call
__$fOM .
ITGHTERING
ed for
eep Freex*
..
Montgomery Mkt.
7*8361
,^,.
ill* Made Into Innenpr Im
crkiGu«r«nte*d ,
i Day 8ervlo« •— •
ir« & MoHNM C*.
rMreet
Phone 74211
rtl n3,
CLASSIFIED
"
Ads Must fie In Office D*y Before Publicattofl
, WANT AD RATES ^
' All W<Wit Mi
otf
fwyobM
m '
SdvaSe* but 8*1 will b« <we»pH>d
ever fti* tiltphons And oe«mddd->
«w «£dum* .allowed with th»
w *
Jp to IS
1p to S
6 to 20
On*
Day
.45
,60
5s
.90
t.OS
1.20
1.35
1.50
fhf*«
j>t*
., 0«
Day*
btryl Month
.90
1.50
4.50
1.20
2.00
6.00
2.50
7.50
3.00
9.00
3.50
10.50
4.00
12.00
4.50
13.50
5.00
15.00
1.50
t.BO
2.10
2.40
2.70
3.00
tl ta 23
26 to 30
II W 35
)6 tu 40
U fd 45
tt 50
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
t t;rm
75e per Ineh
3 tlmei
40= Per neh
6 times
•„.,..>
50e per Inch
hate* quoted above are tor con-
MeirHve insertion*. Irregular or skip-
date ads will take the one-day rot*.
All dally classified advertising copy
Will be accepted until 5 p. m. for
publication the following day.
the publishers reserve the right to
revise or edit all advertisements of-
fered for publication and to reject
tiny •' objectionable advertising sub-
mitted
Initiate of one or more letters,
groups or figures such as house or
telephone numbers count as one word.
The Hope Star
will not be respon-
" slble for-errors in Want Ads unless
errors ore called to' our attention
after FIRST Insertion 'of ad and then
f6r ONLY the ONE .Incorrect insertion.
PHONE: PROSPECT 7-3431
For
Laydway Open on
TRIKES * BIKES AND
DOLLS
OKLAHOMA m€ & SUPPLY
. COMPANY.
3 ROOM modern home. Floor fur*
nace, attic fan. 1305 South Her*
vey. Small down payment, bal-
ance like rent. Phone
7-4568.
3-3t
Aggies Defeat- Hog
Cross Country Team
FAYETf feVlLLE . if ,
Okla-
homa A&M's CfoES-coiliitty team
defeated the- University of Arkan-
sas 17-40 flew Score wins) here as
A&M's 'Frederick
Eckho'ff
set a
hew,
i-ecord over
the
Arkansas
course.
Eckhofi's time. 12:48.7, bettered
the mark
set by Texas A&M's
James Blaine last year 12:59.
Summary: 1. Eckotf.
A&'M. 2.
Landquist, AfeM. 3. Odller, A&M
4.
Bogerund, A&M 5 Morton, Ark
6. Eshbaugh, Ark. 7. Applemap,
A&M.
8.' Hcoker, Ark 9 Tennison,
Aiik 10. Mosely, A&M. 41. Graham,
A&M (freshman). 12 , Ross,
Ark
13 Garner, Ark. (freshman).
Ferguson,
A&M (freshmen).
Wilkinson, A&M (freshman).
U.
15.
SEVERAL colorful cushion mums
blooming in containers. Also bud
ding chrysanthemums . Bring)
containers. Arthur Gray, Ozan.
4-6t
FOUR Chester white pigs for sale
Mrs. A. K Holloway.
9-3t
FOR sale by
individual — 1953
Ford, two door sedan. 17,000 mi-
les, new set of white side-walls,
radio, heater, and many extras.
Can finance. $1395. Contact T.' J.
Barber, phone 7-4038, Hope.'9-3t
Hoj>eStar
Star of HOD* 1199; Preii 1*JT
«oniellddl«d January It, 1*2*
/ESTERN SHARES
..JMlfied Income Fund
ipectu» available from
%'f*'
67 Wert
USED FURNITURE CO.
«g>f .City Urnlts We.t
on Water Barren for Sale
one 7^381
Hope,, Ark.
•
PAULING
isGravel/Fill Dirt and
Light Hauling.
.*,irv
IEST JONES
every'weekday afternoon by
STAR PUBLISHINQ CO.
C. E. Palmer, President
Alex. H, Weihburn, Seey-Trae.
jet The Sler Bulldlne
1 112-14 South Walnut Street
'
* Hope/
Arkqnsoi
Alex. H. Wothburn, Editor & PublUhef
Paul M, Jonei, Managing Editor
Jen M. Davli, Advertlilng Manafei
Coorge W. Hosmor, Mcch. Supt.
Entered at iceond • clau matter «t
Ifie Part Office at Hope/ Arkanioi,
under the Act of March 3, 1897.
Member of the Audit Bureau el
Circulation!
For Rent
HOUSE jacks," Wire stretchers, Post
hole diggej-s, T.arps, 'Reaves .Bar-
gain House and Pawn Shop, 205
S. Walnut, Phone 7-2471. 18-1 Mo.
NICELY furnished '4 room- apart-
ment and bath. Private entrances
7-3497.
• . ' . " ' - 23-tf
LARGE front" room adjoining bath.
Mrs. George • Sandefur, 320
N.
Washington, Phone 7-2125.
"
-
•
:
•
'
6-3t
5 ROOM unfurnished house. .Close-
in, garage, garden. Miss
Lillie
Middlebrooks, Phone 7-2894.
6-3t
Line Leaping
of Moore Is
Amazing
By ADREN COOPER
FAYETTEVILLE,
(K) T h e
un-
defpated
Aikansas
Ra2orbacks
wiry and wily, have changed their
offense slightly for almost every
game. But there's one, play-a one-
man aerial actthat always works
for y.ardage.
When the' Porkers need yardage
Cor a first. dq\y.c
or
touchdo%vn
they usually launch a 130-poum
guided
muscle
named
Henry
Mopre. Fullback Moore 'takes th(
baljl, leans over the massed line
men, slides rdown. the -other side
ano lands.on his head.
This • hard-headed
junior . frorr
Litte Rock, made 85 -yards-most
ly
through .the- air-agalnst Rice
last .Saturday. Despite- that impres
sive total, Moore had to yteld th
spotlight- to two other stars-Dick;
Moegle, Rice's-all-American cand:
date and teammatd George
Wai
ker.
Subscription Rates (payable In ad-
vance):
•r carrier In Hope and neighboring
towni—•
••t .week
.25
Per year
•• 13.00
By mall In Hempstead/ Nevada,
tqFpyttfe, Howwtl/ ,<""<* ^Miller coun- <
flow,
^JOHNSON
t^TIIHIGCO,
f!?',Printing
"
e»x- ?&'Qffae S,upplies
IPIione 7-254T W Front St.
^y-ip vv * . '
^ *
lobfs Service
One month
.85'
Thn* months
_
1.60
«x rnonthi
1.
2.60
One year
•••—
4.50
All other mail-
On* month
1.10
Three months
3.25
tlx month
6.50
On* year
13.00
1 Mefl Advertlilni Ropreiontativei:
Arkansas Dailies, Inc.; 1602 Sterlck
. llcki., Memphis 2, Term.; 505 Texas
lank; •Wo., Dallas 2, Texas; 360 N.
Michigan Ave., Chicago 1,111.; 60 E.;
42d^ St., New York 17, N. V.; 1763
PenobscQt Bldg., Detroit 2,
Mich.;
Terminal Bldg., Oklahoma
City
2,
Member ef The Associated Press:
The-Associated Press is entitled ex-
clusively to the use for republlcatlon
Of all the local news printed in this
newspaper, as well as all AP news
dispatches,
_
.
BRICK house, 515 East Third Hope.
Phone Mrs. Virgie Coleman, 3-
5695, Texarkana, Tex. 2210 Olive.
8-3t
FURNISHED extra large 2 room
apartment. Private entrance and
bath. 801 S. Main, Phone 7-5837.
8-3t
Funeral Directory
SMALL furnished apartment with
private bath. 514 East Third.
.
. ' . . . •
.
9:3t
Lost
10 ft. x 18 ft. Tarp on Highway
4.
between. ;Hope; land .Columbus
Road on Friday.. Call or return
to Henipstead .County Farmers
Assn. Phone 7-4469, •
6-3t
IRISH setter bird.dog. If found no-
tify C. 'T. Jories'in Patm6s, Ark'.,
Phone 7-2925.
9-6f
,-,:,.„,
,
USED GUA88
5-i¥TfT¥ilN8TALueD
^JfJIEW AND USED PARTS
*Mif .most cdrs, »ee w* befor*
PORTER
&. Operator.
Hope
Hy 67 West
OAKCEEST
FUNERAL
HOME
INSURANCE . . . AMBULANCE
2ND & HAZEL . . . PHONE 7-2123
AD-1 Mo. TF
^MtfS.1
Cpmp|0te>arU and
Holland Balers
Traiptors
689 A 1140-B
TERMITES
trniite Control Co,
NPip - INSURED
GUARANTEED
f«r Frff Inipectlon Call
D, MIDDLEBROOKS Jr,
H|»w
Nlpht Phont
HERNDON CORNELIUS
BURIAL ASSOCIATION
Largest and Oldest in South
Arkansas. Call
7^5505 for our.
agents
A23-1 Mo.
The Junior choir of BeeBee Me-
morial CME Church will rehearse
Instructions
CLASSES in tap, acrobatic, ballet
and toe. Katharine Windsor, 104
E, 14th. Ph,one 7-3327.
22-1 mo.
For Sole or Rent
W"0 Business buildings on Front
Street, next to Pool hall. If in
terested, contact A. S.Williams,
300
E. 7th, Texarkana, Ark.
Phflne W800 or 22-,6666. 194 Mo.
Wonted
Community
By Helen Turntr
Phone 7-5830
Or bring Item* to .MlM Turiwr
at Hlcki Funeral Horn*
Moore's line-leaping is not nev
he's been
doing
it
for
seve
straight games.
Rice players
praised
Moore a
'a 'better fullback" than Wisco
sin's-heralded
Alan- A m e c h e
"Moore's-not as powerful, but he1
faster," one. Rice player said.
Arkansas
Coach Bbwden Wyi
an outstanding .candidate for coac
of the year, uses Moore chiefly o
a
fullback -".delay".. • or
"draw
play that is .designed 4a
sprin
Itarpmeriri' Henry-loose
up
th
middle. It seldom does. 'But it i
such a'.constant threat that Porke
fores hsve to keep In close to guar
against him. In • the •• mean time
teammate Walker
.can pass,
o
quick-kick over their heads.
Tailback Walker also has a .pe
c^f-tackle slant _that''^works
wel
Walker, though not «xceplionally
fast, is. Arkansas' "smartest" run-
rer.' On the off-tackle play, Moore,
blocking back Preston
Carpenter
end guard Bud Brooks leads
tha
way.
. '.
.
: .
Brooks,. an' .all-American candidate,
led Walker to a 38-yard touchdown
that clinched the win over
Rice.
A newspaper photo clearly shows
Brooks knocking down the last
man-Dicky Moegle.
Texas relaxed its defense against
Moore's uptthe-middle1;smashes and
he got away oh an 82-yard touch
down jaunt.
Wyatt switched his ^singlewing
Offense slightly against Texas A&M
sending -Moore
off'tackle
on a
Unbeaten Porks
Remain in 4th
Spot in Poll
By HUGH FULL§RT0N JR.
Of. The Associate) Press
By a comfortable margin IP
a
'hopping big ballot, UCLA retainpd
s ranking as the nation's lead-
ng college football- team in this
veek's Associat?d Press poll
of
ports writers and broadcasters.
An even SOO votes wore tabu?
ated to confirm the high-scoring
Jclans' claim to the top place over
ic challenges, of Ohio State
and
Oklahoma, lenders in earlier pulls
his season.
UCLA was first on 117 of the
00 ballots. Ohio State got 80 first
ilace. votes.
Points wore tabulated on
the
isual basis of IP for each
first-
ilace vote, 9 for second, 8 for third,
tc,
'
'
The first five teams- held
the
ame place? they dropped into dur-
ng the general reshuffling of thn
sast two weeks, but several im-
>ortant chances were
registered
ilsewhere in the first 10.
After UCLA, with 2,GGO points;
and Ohio State, with 2,594. cani
Dklahoma- Arkansas, Notre Dame,
Army, Mississippi Southern Cali-
'ornla, Iowa and Navy in order.
Miami of Florida, suffering
its
first defeat at Auburn's
hands
after six straight victories,
fell
from sixth place to llth. Purdue
also disappeared' from tho top
after taking a 25-14 licking from.
Iowa. That made room for Iowa
12th
last week, and Navy in the
top.
Army's 48-7 shellacking of pro
viously unbeaten Yale couldn't do
more than lift the Cadets
from
seventh into Miami's vacated sixth
place. Mississippi and Southern Cal
ifornia
advanced
two notches
each to seventh and eighth.
The 'leading teams with'
first
SPORTS ROUNDUP
•f «AVi.i TAL10T.
NEW YORK
The thought
persists here that there is no foot
ball coach in the. land who Can
quite match Earl
(Red) Blaik's
iV.lnnt for building an explosive at-
tack when he has the sort of speed
he needs to work with.
Up to this pcint, the Army
coaches rurrent machin? has roll-
ed up an average of 38 points i.i
its seven games and probably will
hike that mark when it rips into
the helpless Penn Quakers Satw-
"day at Philadelphia. Some Eastern
experts are cautiously comparing
Army's breakway backs with those
of the Diiv'.s-Blanchard era.
This is the greater tribute
to
Blnik's coaching skill for it's only.
four seasons
since
the
socalled
cribbing scandal brought the world
own about his head ar.d forced
inv to start all over again.
The transatlantic traffic: in rac-
ng brood mares, we learn, is not
11 one way. Representatives of the
Lga Khan, having just sold' 20 of
is most blue-blooded matrons to
American-buyers at. an average of
27,000 each, are spending, part of
lie loot for two
females
whosa
oropenitors are as Yankee-Doodle
"s the hot rod.
•
One of- them is- loaded with the
Man o'War strain. The other, a
illy named "Jmperla
purchased
ro'm Calumet Farms, is a daugh-
,er of Bull Lea and a granddaugh-
er of Nellie Flag, a combination
vhich, we understand, would bo
difiicult to boat.
place votes in parentheses:
L UCLA (117)
2. Ohio. State (80)
3. Oklahoma (44)
4. Arkansas (43).
5. Notre Dame (3)
6. Army .(4) . •
7. Mississippi (5)
8. Southern Cal
.9. Iowa
10. Navy
Second 10:
11. Miami (Fla)"
12. Cincinnati
13. Minnesota
14. Wisconsin
15. Virginia Tech
16. West Virginia (2)
17. Maryland
18. Baylor
19. SMU
20. Greo'rgia
Thursday :nighf, " November 11, at
7:30.
AH members please be pre-
sent.
. • . - • • ' .
Beautician Chapter No.,.16, will
meet Wednesday night; November
1C at the home of Mrs. Zephree Wes
son in Mineral Springs. All mem-
bers please be present at 7 o'clock.
Funeral services for Charlie Adir
were held Monday, November 8,
at New Bethel Church with Burial
in Giles Cemetery,
2.66C
2,5i)<
2,29:
2,20'
l,48i
1,45:
72
37!
56:
49,
1G
15
14
11
G
Maj.
Cyril Hall, manager of the
Aga Khan's stud farms, says this
s the first time that these famous
American strains have boon ex
ported to Europe; He can't quite
aelicve his luck yet ir. iandin;
Imuer.'a.
"Sev.eral cf your breeders havr-
asked me how I did it," he said
'They say that Calumet
simplj
does
not lot go of that kind o
horse. I sec that they ;ils,o hav<
sold
Hill
Gail,
their
Kentuckj
Derby winner, to
an Irish buye.
I imagine that will cause som
surprise too."
While American breeders hav
done much importing of top sta'
lions from Europe and
Australi
in recent years, the • major p"oint
.out, foreign breeders have not ha
1he dollars to make similar pui
chases from this country until no\\
when restrictions have been ease
just a little.
i
NEW
YORK, (Ifi ' When' ; Alii
Reynolds slipped.on.a showejr ma
and gashed the index finger of hi
throwing hand the other day, th
Yankees as likely as not toft wha
ever chance they had of overhaul
ing Cleveland in the next Ameri-
can League race.
It is not definite that the Chief, is
through. Last we saw they were
talking about doing a plastic sur-
ery job on the injured digit after
has healed, and there appeared
o
be some
hope that the great
ompetitor from Oklahoma would
e able to report e.t St. Petersburg
cxl spring. But from this distance
doesn't look gocd.
Allie is 37 by the official record,
nd there is reason to surpect that
e might be crowding 40. For some
eason never entirely clear, base-
all players like the fudge of their
ges. At -any. rate, the big
fiist-
aller was nearing the end of his
aroer before the accident befell
im. It figured that he would have
;reat difficulty
overcoming even
ic slightest impairment of his ef-
i.ciency.
Another factor'mitigating against
it- return is the' fact that AlHc
vill have no burning incentive to
ive it one more whirl. Hi? invest
ments in oil wells and such have,
rom all accounts, made him fi-
nancially independent. If we know
he man who pitched two nohitters
n .a single season ar.d who
has
ierce pride in his skill, he will
not be back'unless he is firmly con-
'inced that he still can win.
Some may feel that our opening
'stimate'of the Chief's'importance
.o the Yankees is a little, strong.
We will stick-by it. Casey Stengel
needs the services of his
veteran
stopper for another year or two I
while his mound staff is in a period
cf transition, until his young pitch-
ers are ready to take over
the
entire, burden. They, the
young-
sters such as Bob Grim and Whitey
Ford, will not be ready to bent
Cleveland . on - their
own next
Farmer Star to
Watch Razorbaeks
LITTLE BOCK
W)
Ben
H.
WirMoman, an all-time Arkf sas
football great, has notified Slcre-
tary of State C. G. Hall that
lie
will attend the University of Ar-
kansas homecoming footbal gania
ne::l Saturday in FayctteviHe.
Windkleman played on the 19JS.
191b,1920 and 1921 Arkansas teams
r.s halfback
and end. He
was
named to thtf all-SouthU-est Con-
ference teams in both position*.
lie graduated from the University
in 1922.
The clash between the un
ed Razorbaeks and Southern
odisl, with the conference chartl*
rfonship hanging in the balancs,
will be the first homecoming a
Fayetteville Wlilkleman has
at-
tended since his graduation.
-
Winkleman's coaching cawer has
included jobs at. the University of
Cincinnati. Stanford and San Jose
State College. He now is in,the
real estate business .at P^lo. ;AloJ,
Calif.
season.
lian Horned.Frogs ionienlratqH on
offense for their battle with the
Longhorns. Coach Abe Martlnj.sept
his charges thorough long passing
and running maneuvers and is aid
they would scrimmage but- rlittle
this week.
i •
Rice, latest.victim of the. Arkan-
sas juggernaut;' worked in sweat
shirts while the No. 2 team scrim-
maged 'the Rice freshmen.
All-
American candidate. Dickey Mj>e_gje
was on the injured list wi '
Taylor,
but. Coach Jess,
thought they would be re.ady lor
the Texas Aggies on Saturday.
The Agpics took it comparatively
easy at College Station wlver'e
Coach Bear Bryant said he..;woiua
t his top men skip -contact jWork
r most of the remaining
essions.
At Waco, the Baylor Bears took a
ojiday. They have no game;,this
eekend, but Coach George Sauer
lanned a light -workout-Tijjksday
nd hard scrimmages Wednesday |
nd Thursday.
handoff instead of through center,
it i worked for
"Motfre"
yardage
Mrs. Viola Glover of Chidester
died at her' home Saturday, Nov-
ember 6. Funeral
arrangements
re incomplete,,
WANTED'
TO BUY;
One inch rough green
Oak Lumber —- regular
lengths and tie siding.
Fpr prices pnd specifica-
tions write —
GURDON LUMBER
'COMPANY
PilRNE, ARKANSAS
Mr. and Mrs. Berry Randle and
on, Berry and Mrs, Ollie McCanic
motored to Arcada, La., on Sunday,
November 7, where they visited re- j
atives and friends.
Fights Last Night
By The Associated Press
Brooklyn
Gene (Cyclone) Full-
mer,
154'/^, West Jordan.
Utah,
outpointed Jackie La Bua, 158'/t,
Strict* Offered
15-1 CeU
John Sidney Braggs of Emmet
led at his home Sunday, Novem-
er 7. Funeral arrangements are
ncomplete.
134, to be exact.
In Arkansas' 21-20 victory over
Baylor, sophomoi-e tailback Buddy
Benson
of the
No.-2-team 'ran
jvith the ball nine times on end
sweeps jn an ll-play drive that car
ried the, porkers to . within
easy
field goal distance-arid Carpenter,
kicked the three-pointer that won
the game.
Against Mississippi, the
clutch-
playing Hogs tried only one long
pass-a 66-yard Benson
Carpenter
maneuver for .the victory tally.
Unfortunately, there are no sta
tistics to
show how
many of
Moore's 534 yards
rushing-second
only to Moegle in the Southwest
Conference
have been
.made
through the air.
UP Ranking
Also Lists
Porkers 4th
By NORMAN MILLER
NEW YOR K CUP)
UCLA
pulled further away.. from
Ohio
State and Oklahoma today in . the
three-team race for the national col-
lege football championship, while
Iowa and Navy, advanced
amoria
this week's top 10 in the United
Press ratings.
The powerful Bruins from
the
Pacific
Coast conference, . who
have Averaged nearly 42 points per
game in scoring eight straight vic-
tories, were the first-place choice
of 26 coaches on the 35-man Unit-
ed Press rating board.
UCLA 's point-total of 338 was
"iinds .Notre ,pame . agair.st North
Carolina, Ariny vs. Pennsylvania,
Southern California vs.. Washing-
ton, Mississippi vs. Houston, and
Navy vs. Columbia.
Wisconsin, seeking to .-regain a
place ambng the'top 10, moved up
to llth place this week, followed by
Minnesota,
Baylor
and ' Miami
(Fla). Purdue and Southern--Meth-
odist were tied fnr 35th. and then
came Cincinnati, Miami (O.) anj
West Virginia in order,
Miqhigan
and Penn State were tied for 20th
Nebraska. Rice, Maryland, .Geor-
gia and Michigan Stute also re
ceived points in this week's voting.
NEW YORK (UP) ' The .United
Press college football ratings (with
first-place votes and won-lost rec-
SMU Half back
May Miss the
Game Saturday
By The Associated Press
The .two "surprise" teams of the
Southwest Conference
- Arkansas
and Texas
worked on the same
goal Tuesday:, .a winning conbina-
tion.
Arkansas,
picked for the .cellar
by sportswriters and broadcasters,
was preparing for its conference
battle with Southern Methodist and
aiming' for its eighth straight win.
Texas was just
looking for a
winnng .combination. The
Long
Legal Notice
.
lorns, five-time lo'sers, winners o:
wo victories and a tie, were pickcc
overwhelmingly for the conference
championship. The Longhorns will
ry to salvage part of their formei
only
12
short
of
a
perfect
Mr. and Mrs. George Smith Jr.,
ind Mr. and
Mrs.
Craton Epps
ipeht Thursday in Springhill, La.,
rlsiiing Mr. and Mrs. Willie Thom-
as.
New York 10.
flew York
Kenny Lane, 137,
Legal Notice
S'o. 7681
In the Chancery Court of
,
Hempstead County, Ark.
Frances Messer ....... Plaintiff
vs.
Walter L. Messer ... Defendant
YVARNINQ PBPgR
The defendant Walter L, Messer
4 warned to appear in this court
within thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, Frances
ords in parentheses):
Team
1. UCLA (26) (8-0)
2.
Ohio State (7) (7-0)
Oklahoma (2) (7-0)
4. Arkansas (7-0^
5. Notre Dame (5-1)
6. Army (6-1)
7. So. Calif. (7-1)
Points
333
310
* 282
243
177
155
!)2
83
65
Transfer of
Athletics
Is Approved
By JQE REICHLER
NEW
YORK W)
Having won
lis four-month fight' to purchase
the
Philadelphia
Athletics
and
transfer the franchise to Kansas
City, industrialist Arnold Johnson'
today tackled the problem of hir-
ing a field and general manager.
He may disclose some of
his
plpns at a press conference today.
Elated
by the 6-2 vote of ap-
proval given him by the American
League, Johnson yesterday said he
had an open mind on the manageri-
al situation. He said he had talked
to no one about the jobs but had
many applications.
It was learned that Lou Bou-
dr<eau deposed manager of the Bos-
ton Red Sox has the inside tracn
Jo the field
managing job, ?nd
Paike CarmU, who was business
manager of the New York Yan-
kees Kansas City fani club in the
American Assn., is a top pandj-
flate for general mi»n,9gcr.
Johnson's
architects
have . been
score and the highest compiled by
any team, this seasqn. Of the coach-
es
who did not vot<; the Bruins
tops this week, six picked them
second and three for third.
That support widened UCLA's
margin from 17 to 28 points over
Ohio State and from 28 to 56 pointi
over Oklahoma. Ohio State attract-
ed reven first-place ballots and 310
points; Oklahoma had two first-
place votes and 282 pints. Both
have won seven in a row.
UCLA, with a chance for (he first
perfect season in its football his-
tory, itakes next Saturday off be-
fore winding up its schedule Nov.
20
against
Southern
California
(ranked seventh this week). That
game also should decide the PCC
championship, although Coach Hen
ry (Red) Sanders' men are not
eligible
for
the Rose Bowl be
cause they played last New Year's
day.
A comparatively forrnful week-
end left the top six teams in the
exact same order of (he previous
week, Arkansas, A» my and Notre
Dprne following third-ranked • Ok-
lahoma in that order. Southrn Cal-
ifornia and Mississippi each moved
8 Mississippi (8-1)
9. Iowa (5-2)
10. Navy (5-2)
Second 10 teams
11. Wiscon-
sin, 26; -1'2. Minnesota, 20; 13. .Bay-
lor, 18;
14. Miami (Fla), 9; 15.
(tie',, Purdue • and Southern Meth-
odi»1, 8 each; 17 Cincinnati, 7; 13.
Miami (O.), 6; 19. West Virginia,
5; 20. (tie), Michigan and
Penn
State.
Oihcrs
Nebraska, 3; Rice, 2;
Maryland, Georgia and Michigan
State, '1 each
prestige
with their game thif
&
for
nishe
Mon
weekend with
Texas
Christian's
brash
sophomores
and
Texas
tough
but virtually win
ess
Cadets
. on
Thanksgiving
Day.Bc.th look like rough assignments
Arkansas, ranked fourth in the na
tional Associated Press poll again
;odty, still must face Louisian:
State arid the University of Hous
ton after playing the vastly im
proved Mustangs this Saturday.
"We've still got three games t
play," Razorback Coach B.owde
Wyatt said as his boys "-'-•--
their regular light duties
day and went t othe showers. Thj
Porkers, Wyatt admitted, were i
good condition.
Longhorn mentor
switched Billy Quinn back to ful"
back in his search for a winnin
combine. He moved Don Marone;
and Bill Long down to the seconi
and third teams ond said: "We'r
trying..." . .
As the Methodist started
prep
arytions for the highly-ranked Hog
their regular left halfback, Don Me
Ilhenny, was on the doubtful stal-
er )ist. He 'suffered a bruised kic
ney in the close 6-3 victory ove
the Aggies last Saturday. The Mus>
tangs may start John
Marshal
high-scoring soph, in place of M
Ilhenny.
At Fort Worth, the Texas Chri
Ed
Pric
Messer.
Witness
hand and the seal
of s,»<4 cpurt this 8 day of Novem-
,
ber
Willis,
surveying the
City par*
for weeks end ^re ready to beg"
Jnpi'eastai the
seating
from lim to a?,09P
the
and to about |§,000 Jnr
up one notch to seventh and eighth,
respectively, and then tame Iowa
and Navy t0 round out the top 10.
Iowa, moving up fron? 12th to
ninth place, and Navy, jumping
from a tie for 18th .to the 10th rank-
ing, replaced Purdue and Miami
(Fin) among the select group.
V/ith points awarded on a 10^9-8-
7.5.5.4.3-2-1
scale for each vote
from first to 10th place, Arkansas
had 243 points, moving wilhin strife
ing distance of the leaders after
its seventh straight tiiumph; No-
tre Pame had 177 points, Avmy
J55, Southern California 92, Mis
&Jssippi 3, Iowa' 65 and N»yy 59
Oliio State, Oklahoma a.r.ijl Ar-
kansas, the three teams ranked b,o
hind first place, &ach c«n clljwh
s tie for its conference champion-
next Saturday. Ohio State
15th ranked
Missouri
$<*. •• %
*t
•f
*t
HQ 11 S t A tt| M 0
,. Novitfifeef $, t»S4 1
0*A*R IR1
/ THATS STRANGE, Ji
> BUT it SEEMS LIKE s
SOMEONE'S CALLING
I U.L. TTLJ t i»i T r~IL-WN^»-» ,,—»i
^ UP HERE BETWEEN us-^N
THAT'LL KEEP THE LIGHT J
*~r FROM SHINING v-**'•
GOING TO READ? 1 CAN'l
v_, SLEEP WITH THAT
(. i.inuir eiui.KJis.ir: „,
BUT IT SEEMS LIKE
SOMEONE'S CALLING
.MV NAME FROM •*
i ( SOMEONE'S CALLIr
. * V MV NAME FROM
| ^t FAR.FARdFF
isUttK Wl I M If
LIGHT SHINING
* IN MV EVES ^
Vl J N <l*fhrt Vf ift. * t
. .. *.
»t f.-* f i »* M K ft innVt Sj-^*ft tn«
"*
"
ftv Mlehdil 0'M«H.y dhd R
By J. R. Williams
OUT OUR WAIT
Answer to Previous Puzzle
TELL US/
SAY SOME-
THING/
l£> THAT
YOURS?
THE
HAD EATlM'
UP A ELK/
IT STUCK
OUT THEIR
EARS.'
AT IMS &APE;$HS
UAT6IZ,
- -. ACROSS
3 Greek letter
1 Screen actress, 4. Britannia's
'i
>-,
A
snear
spear
SPronotm'
6 Sea (Fr.)
7 Willow '
8 Sleeveless
garment
9 Passage (n the
brain
t, 6 She is a
HI, performer
'•H.Needier
13 Sets anew
14 Dress
15'Gets up
16 Leaping
amphibian
17 Not (prefix)
be (Fr.)
20 Lurer
23 Solitary
10 Essential being25 Heavy blow
41 Italian city
12 Lease
27 Asterisk
42 Feminine
13 Malice
28 Raw silk
' appellation
18 Petroleum
weight
district (two 29 Son of Adam
creature
words)
(Bib.)
' 44 Shield bearing
21 Compass point34 Mineral rock 47 Fruit drinks
WASH TUBES
48 Withered
49 Formerly
51 tiolf device
35 Peruser
36 Dispatches
oi, «,?asim,°dic/a u^24 Openwork
39 Pair (ab,)
53 Note 7n
SJKuSp1*1'
fabdc
40 Small ilsh
Guide's
33 Frozen water
34'Boundary
'' (comb, form)
38!Uncomrnon
37 Weight of
' India
38 Scottish
•
' ''sheepfold
'^Hazard
|40 Sfeal-hunting
mariners
142 Esau
45 Cental surgeon
<ab.)
46iFacility
SO-Rounded
52 Otter
54 Bank worker
55 Church
officials
. 22 Roof finial
sP"ng23 Egyptian
COULP^
DIDN'T A WO^\N'& CP-V...
I
.
HOM,B.,,.6.
THEY'RE NOT
THE
40PE ONE OF-
PRIMM, TWINS
TURW&'OUTTO
LIFEIS LOMC5E&T MINUTE
Cw. ,.M t, „, „,.»., ^. T.. .^ „ ,,,.,, „,.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
With Major Hoople
AND HER BUDDIES
6 Mountain spur
7 Property item
•-
*•
•v '-'WWUfe&ts
, *;./*r/t,Ea^«>
1DOWN
IPetty quarrel
1 ,.•> -2 -Movement
(rnusic)
By Dick Turner
CARNIVAL
BUGS BUNNY
FUNNY BUSINESS
By Hershbergei
^V^ <"^
' -> *
k~ ' r-T^-hf
ALLlEY OOP
YEAH-.THAT BUCK LOOKS
-.
STRONG AN1 HEALTHY
TOO.. ENOUGH TO GIVE
KNOCK 'IM7 WOODS WiTHOUT\
U5 A LOTTA TROUBLE
WHEN HE FINDS WE'VE
TAKEN HIS WOMAN,'
' V'No, the car wasn't hurt much—the truck driver wain't
trying to beat ITS brains out!"
By Galbroith
SIDE GLANCES
'fl'hope you like buckshot—by the time Wilbur had the
[ \
» rabbit dressed there wasn't anything else left!"
~
~~
By NaJine Selzer
'S A BOOK
HOW
VSMQKIN© C...
YOUR MONEV
THi STORY QF MARTHA WAYNI
.
THST
i MOU NlfpNT50M5 TPTW
W'TH
bitter Mp 'Wm with thpf§ pr«*l*m*
my I svsr -painf slg«br» mta bri|?|ln|( Ihi
*
1
>
3. 7653
In the Chancery Court of |
'
Hempstead County,: Ark. |
George Scoggins
vs.
. . . •,
Odessa Scoggins .... Defen^flnt •
WARNING ORDER
'
;
The defendant, Odessa Scoggins p
s warned to appear in thlsjwourt-1
A-ithin thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, George
Scoggins. ..
,
.
. .
Witness my hand and the -seal of
said iourt this 8 day of."-"—1- —
1954.
'
^,
Garrett Willis, Clerk
By L. C. Byers, D. C,
(SEAL)
. E. Grain,
Attorney Ad Litem
:
John P. Vesey,
Attorney for Plaintiff
Oct. 9, 16, 23, 30
Legal Notice
NOTICE
IN THE PROBATE COURT
OF HEMPSTEAD
COUNTY, ARKANSAS
IN THE MATTER OF THE .
ESTATE' OF C. W. BARNES,
DECEASED
Last known address of decedent:
Hope, Arkansas
»•
Date of death of decedent: October
10, 1954
Ah instrument dated October
1954,
was
on the
27th day of
October, 1954, admitted to Frpbatfe
as the last will of the above named
decedent,
and
the
undersigned
have "been' ' appointed
exe'cutors
thereunder.. A contest of th.p prV-
bate of the will can be /, ,
only by the filing of a petition
within the time provided by Igw.A
All persons having claims ^
the estate must exhibit theml^
verified, to the undersigned , ,
six months from the date tif. thjt
first publication of this. notipe,. pi
they shall be forever barred and
precluded from any benefit In th*
estate.
This notice first published th,«
2nd day of November, 1954. ' •
L. H. Parris, Executpr^ .
' Robert Cassels, Executor
Mail Address:
c/o. John P. Vesey
First National Bank" • '
Building
.
' , j
Hope, Arkansas
' ;
Nov.
2, 9
Tm lost my
head over the
955 FORD'S
V
new
THUNDERBIBD
STYLING!
**ifi*!_
fe^t--*•
£&$P^Y>'V '
r/'wf^-f»"-, 't\ ^
y,-?'f?M-t> -
HOP i~$f AifrHO*!* A f t K ^ N I A f c
•
-IAIDISPUY
'
ford Id wi
'Tailor
y,-, ^ -
i Vi» */,'
iZERWORK
*— btft Moving
- Call
__$fOM .
ITGHTERING
ed for
eep Freex*
..
Montgomery Mkt.
7*8361
,^,.
ill* Made Into Innenpr Im
crkiGu«r«nte*d ,
i Day 8ervlo« •— •
ir« & MoHNM C*.
rMreet
Phone 74211
rtl n3,
CLASSIFIED
"
Ads Must fie In Office D*y Before Publication
, WANT AD RATES ^
' All W<Wit Mi
otf
fwyobM m '
SdvaSe* but 8*1 will b« <we»pH>d
ever fti* tiltphons And oe«mddd->
«w «£dum* .allowed with th»
w *
Jp to IS
1p to S
6 to 20
On*
Day
.45
,60
5s
.90
t.OS
1.20
1.35
1.50
fhf*«
j>t*
., 0«
Day*
btryl Month
.90
1.50 4.50
1.20
2.00
6.00
2.50 7.50
3.00 9.00
3.50 10.50
4.00 12.00
4.50 13.50
5.00 15.00
1.50
t.BO
2.10
2.40
2.70
3.00
tl ta 23
26 to 30
II W 35
)6 tu 40
U fd 45
tt 50
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
t t;rm
75e per Ineh
3 tlmei
40= Per neh
6 times
•„.,..>
50e per Inch
hate* quoted above are tor con-
MeirHve insertion*. Irregular or skip-
date ads will take the one-day rot*.
All dally classified advertising copy
Will be accepted until 5 p. m. for
publication the following day.
the publishers reserve the right to
revise or edit all advertisements of-
fered for publication and to reject
tiny •' objectionable advertising sub-
mitted
Initiate of one or more letters,
groups or figures such as house or
telephone numbers count as one word.
The Hope Star
will not be respon-
" slble for-errors in Want Ads unless
errors ore called to' our attention
after FIRST Insertion 'of ad and then
f6r ONLY the ONE .Incorrect insertion.
PHONE: PROSPECT 7-3431
For
Laydway Open on
TRIKES * BIKES AND
DOLLS
OKLAHOMA m€ & SUPPLY
. COMPANY.
3 ROOM modern home. Floor fur*
nace, attic fan. 1305 South Her*
vey. Small down payment, bal-
ance like rent. Phone
7-4568.
3-3t
Aggies Defeat- Hog
Cross Country Team
FAYETf feVlLLE . if ,
Okla-
homa A&M's CfoES-coiliitty
team
defeated the- University of Arkan-
sas 17-40 flew Score wins) here as
A&M's 'Frederick
Eckho'ff
set a
hew,
i-ecord over
the
Arkansas
course.
Eckhofi's time. 12:48.7, bettered
the mark
set by Texas A&M's
James Blaine last year 12:59.
Summary: 1. Eckotf.
A&'M. 2.
Landquist, AfeM. 3. Odller, A&M
4.
Bogerund, A&M 5 Morton, Ark
6. Eshbaugh, Ark. 7. Applemap,
A&M.
8.' Hcoker, Ark 9 Tennison,
Aiik 10. Mosely, A&M. 41. Graham,
A&M (freshman). 12 , Ross,
Ark
13 Garner, Ark. (freshman).
Ferguson,
A&M (freshmen).
Wilkinson, A&M (freshman).
U.
15.
SEVERAL colorful cushion mums
blooming in containers. Also bud
ding chrysanthemums . Bring)
containers. Arthur Gray, Ozan.
4-6t
FOUR Chester white pigs for sale
Mrs. A. K Holloway.
9-3t
FOR sale by
individual — 1953
Ford, two door sedan. 17,000 mi-
les, new set of white side-walls,
radio, heater, and many extras.
Can finance. $1395. Contact T.' J.
Barber, phone 7-4038, Hope.'9-3t
Hoj>eStar
Star of HOD* 1199; Preii 1*JT
«oniellddl«d January It, 1*2*
/ESTERN SHARES
..JMlfied Income Fund
ipectu» available from
%'f*'
67 Wert
USED FURNITURE CO.
«g>f .City Urnlts We.t
on Water Barren for Sale
one 7^381
Hope,, Ark.
•
PAULING
isGravel/Fill Dirt and
Light Hauling.
.*,irv
IEST JONES
every'weekday afternoon by
STAR PUBLISHINQ CO.
C. E. Palmer, President
Alex. H, Weihburn, Seey-Trae.
jet The Sler Bulldlne
1 112-14 South Walnut Street
'
* Hope/
Arkqnsoi
Alex. H. Wothburn, Editor & PublUhef
Paul M, Jonei, Managing Editor
Jen M. Davli, Advertlilng Manafei
Coorge W. Hosmor, Mcch. Supt.
Entered at iceond • clau matter «t
Ifie Part Office at Hope/ Arkanioi,
under the Act of March 3, 1897.
Member of the Audit Bureau el
Circulation!
For Rent
HOUSE jacks," Wire stretchers, Post
hole diggej-s, T.arps, 'Reaves .Bar-
gain House and Pawn Shop, 205
S. Walnut, Phone 7-2471. 18-1 Mo.
NICELY furnished '4 room- apart-
ment and bath. Private entrances
7-3497.
• . ' . " ' - 23-tf
LARGE front" room adjoining bath.
Mrs. George • Sandefur, 320
N.
Washington, Phone 7-2125.
" - • : • '
6-3t
5 ROOM unfurnished house. .Close-
in, garage, garden. Miss
Lillie
Middlebrooks, Phone 7-2894.
6-3t
Line Leaping
of Moore Is
Amazing
By ADREN COOPER
FAYETTEVILLE, (K) T h e
un-
defpated
Aikansas
Ra2orbacks
wiry and wily, have changed their
offense slightly for almost every
game. But there's one, play-a one-
man aerial actthat always works
for y.ardage.
When the' Porkers need yardage
Cor a first. dq\y.c
or
touchdo%vn
they usually launch a 130-poum
guided
muscle
named
Henry
Mopre. Fullback Moore 'takes th(
baljl, leans over the massed line
men, slides rdown. the -other side
ano lands.on his head.
This • hard-headed
junior . frorr
Litte Rock, made 85 -yards-most
ly
through .the- air-agalnst Rice
last .Saturday. Despite- that impres
sive total, Moore had to yteld th
spotlight- to two other stars-Dick;
Moegle, Rice's-all-American cand:
date and teammatd George
Wai
ker.
Subscription Rates (payable In ad-
vance):
•r carrier In Hope and neighboring
towni—•
••t .week
.25
Per year
•• 13.00
By mall In Hempstead/ Nevada,
tqFpyttfe, Howwtl/ ,<""<* ^Miller coun- <
flow,
^JOHNSON
t^TIIHIGCO,
f!?',Printing
"
e»x- ?&'Qffae S,upplies
IPIione 7-254T W Front St.
^y-ip t^^ * . '
^ *
lobfs Service
One month
.85'
Thn* months
_
1.60
«x rnonthi
1.
2.60
One year
•••— 4.50
All other mail-
On* month
1.10
Three months
3.25
tlx month
6.50
On* year
13.00
1 Mefl Advertlilni Ropreiontativei:
Arkansas Dailies, Inc.; 1602 Sterlck
. llcki., Memphis 2, Term.; 505 Texas
lank; •Wo., Dallas 2, Texas; 360 N.
Michigan Ave., Chicago 1,111.; 60 E.;
42d^ St., New York 17, N. V.; 1763
PenobscQt Bldg., Detroit 2,
Mich.;
Terminal Bldg., Oklahoma
City
2,
Member ef The Associated Press:
The-Associated Press is entitled ex-
clusively to the use for republlcatlon
Of all the local news printed in this
newspaper, as well as all AP news
dispatches,
_
.
BRICK house, 515 East Third Hope.
Phone Mrs. Virgie Coleman, 3-
5695, Texarkana, Tex. 2210 Olive.
8-3t
FURNISHED extra large 2 room
apartment. Private entrance and
bath. 801 S. Main, Phone 7-5837.
8-3t
Funeral Directory
SMALL furnished apartment with
private bath. 514 East Third.
.
. ' . . . •
.
9:3t
Lost
10 ft. x 18 ft. Tarp on Highway
4.
between. ;Hope; land .Columbus
Road on Friday.. Call or return
to Henipstead .County Farmers
Assn. Phone 7-4469, •
6-3t
IRISH setter bird.dog. If found no-
tify C. 'T. Jories'in Patm6s, Ark'.,
Phone 7-2925.
9-6f
,-,:,,,,
,
USED GUA88
5-i¥TfT¥ilN8TALueD
^JfJIEW AND USED PARTS
*Mif .most cdrs, »ee w* befor*
PORTER
&. Operator.
Hope
Hy 67 West
OAKCEEST
FUNERAL
HOME
INSURANCE . . . AMBULANCE
2ND & HAZEL . . . PHONE 7-2123
AD-1 Mo. TF
^MtfS.1
Cpmp|0te>arU and
Holland Balers
Traiptors
689 A 1140-B
TERMITES
trniite Control Co,
NPip - INSURED
GUARANTEED
f«r Frff Inipectlon Call
D, MIDDLEBROOKS Jr,
H|»w
Nlpht Phont
HERNDON CORNELIUS
BURIAL ASSOCIATION
Largest and Oldest in South
Arkansas. Call
7^5505 for our.
agents
A23-1 Mo.
The Junior choir of BeeBee Me-
morial CME Church will rehearse
Instructions
CLASSES in tap, acrobatic, ballet
and toe. Katharine Windsor, 104
E, 14th. Ph,one 7-3327.
22-1 mo.
For Sole or Rent
W"0 Business buildings on Front
Street, next to Pool hall. If in
terested, contact A. S.Williams,
300
E. 7th, Texarkana, Ark.
Phflne W800 or 22-,6666. 194 Mo.
Wonted
Community
By Helen Turntr
Phone 7-5830
Or bring Item* to .MlM Turiwr
at Hlcki Funeral Horn*
Moore's line-leaping is not nev
he's been
doing
it
for
seve
straight games.
Rice players praised Moore a
'a 'better fullback" than Wisco
sin's-heralded
Alan- A m e c h e
"Moore's-not as powerful, but he1
faster," one. Rice player said.
Arkansas
Coach Bbwden Wyi
an outstanding .candidate for coac
of the year, uses Moore chiefly o
a
fullback -".delay".. • or
"draw
play that is .designed 4o
sprin
lf.arpmeriri' Henry-loose
up
th
middle. It seldom does. 'But it i
such a'.constant threat that Porke
fores have to keep In close to guar
against him. In • the •• mean time
te.ammatc Walker
.can pass,
o
quick-lcick over their heads.
Tailback Walker also has a .pe
c^f-tackle slant _that''^works
wel
Walker, though not «xceplionally
fast, is. Arkansas' I'sriiartesl" run-
rer.' On the off-tackle play, Moore,
blocking back Preston
Carpenter
end guard Bud Brooks leads
tha
way.
. '.
.
: .
Brooks,. an' .all-American candidate,
led Walker to a 38-yard touchdown
that clinched the win over
Rice.
A newspaper photo clearly shows
Brooks knocking
down the last
man-Dicky Moegle.
Texas relaxed its defense against
Moore's uptthe-middle1;smashes and
he got away oh an 82-yard touch
down jaunt.
Wyatt switched his ^singlewing
Offense slightly against Texas A&M
sending -Moore
off'tackle
on a
Unbeaten Porks
Remain in 4th
Spot in Poll
By HUGH FULL§RT0N JR.
Of. The Associate) Press
By a comfortable margin IP
a
'hopping big ballot, UCLA retainpd
s ranking as the nation's lead-
ng college football- team in this
veek's Associat?d Press poll
of
ports writers and broadcasters.
An even SOO votes wore tabu?
ated to confirm the high-scorin»
Jclans' claim to the top place over
ic challenges, of Ohio State
and
Oklahoma, lenders in earlier pulls
his season.
UCLA was first on 117 of the
00 ballots. Ohio State got 80 first
ilace. votes.
Points wore tabulated on
the
isual basis of IP for each
first-
ilace vote, 9 for second, 8 for third,
tc,
'
'
The first five teams- held
the
ame place? they dropped into dur-
ng the general reshuffling of thn
sast two weeks, but several im-
>ortant chances were
registered
ilsewhere in the first 10.
After UCLA, with 2,GGO points;
and Ohio State, with 2,594. cani
Dklahoma- Arkansas, Notre Dame,
Army, Mississippi Southern Cali-
'ornla, Iowa and Navy in order.
Miami of Florida, suffering
its
first defeat at Auburn's
hands
after six straight victories,
fell
from sixth place to llth. Purdue
also disappeared' from tho top
after taking a 25-14 licking from.
Iowa. That made room for Iowa
12th
last week, and Navy in the
top.
Army's 48-7 shellacking of pro
viously unbeaten Yale couldn't do
more than lift the Cadets
from
seventh into Miami's vacated sixth
place. Mississippi and Southern Cal
ifornia
advanced
two notches
each to seventh and eighth.
The 'leading teams with'
first
SPORTS ROUNDUP
•f «AVi.i TAL10T.
NEW YORK
The thought
persists here that there is no foot
ball coach in the. land who Can
quite match Earl
(Red) Blaik's
iV.lnnt for building an explosive at-
tack when he has the sort of speed
he needs to work with.
Up to this pcint, the
Army
coaches rurrent machin? has roll-
ed up an average of 38 points i.i
its seven games and probably will
hike that mark when it rips into
the helpless Penn Quakers Satw-
"day
at Philadelphia. Some Eastern
experts are cautiously comparing
Army's breakway backs with those
of the Diiv'.s-Blanchard era.
This is the greater tribute
to
Blnik's coaching skill for it's only.
four seasons
since
the
socalled
cribbing scandal brought the world
own about his head ar.d forced
inv to start all over again.
The transatlantic traffic: in rac-
ng brood mares, we learn, is not
11 one way. Representatives of the
Lga Khan, having just sold' 20 of
is most blue-blooded matrons to
American-buyers at. an average of
27,000 each, are spending, part of
lie loot for two
females
whosa
oropenitors are as Yankee-Doodle
"s the hot rod.
•
One of- them is- loaded with the
Man o'War strain. The other, a
illy named "Jmperla
purchased
ro'm Calumet Farms, is a daugh-
,er of Bull Lea and a granddaugh-
er of Nellie Flag, a combination
vhich, we understand, would bo
difiicult to boat.
place votes in parentheses:
L UCLA (117)
2. Ohio. State (80)
3. Oklahoma (44)
4. Arkansas (43).
5. Notre Dame (3)
6. Army .(4) . •
7. Mississippi (5)
8. Southern Cal
.9. Iowa
10. Navy
Second 10:
11. Miami (Fla)"
12. Cincinnati
13. Minnesota
14. Wisconsin
15. Virginia Tech
16. West Virginia (2)
17. Maryland
18. Baylor
19. SMU
20. Greo'rgia
Thursday :nighf, " November 11, at
7:30. AH members please be pre-
sent.
. • . - • • ' .
Beautician Chapter No.,.16, will
meet Wednesday night; November
1C at the home of Mrs. Zephree Wes
son in Mineral Springs. All mem-
bers please be present at 7 o'clock.
Funeral services for Charlie Adir
were held Monday, November 8,
at New Bethel Church with Burial
in Giles Cemetery,
2.66C
2,5i)<
2,29:
2,20'
l,48i
1,45:
72
37!
56:
49,
1G
15
14
11
G
Maj.
Cyril Hall, manager of the
Aga Khan's stud farms, says this
s the first time that these famous
American strains have
boon ex
ported to Europe; He can't quite
aelicve his luck yet ir. iandin;
Imuer.'a.
"Sev.eral cf your breeders havr-
asked me how I did it," he said
'They say that Calumet
simplj
does
not lot go of that kind o
horse. I sec that they ;ils,o hav<
sold
Hill
Gail,
their
Kentuckj
Derby winner, to
an Irish buye.
I imagine that will cause som
surprise too."
While American breeders hav
done much importing of top sta'
lions from Europe and
Australi
in recent years, the • major p"oint
.out, foreign breeders have not ha
1he dollars to make similar pui
chases from this country until no\\
when restrictions have been ease
just a little.
i
NEW
YORK, (Ifi ' When' ; Alii
Reynolds slipped.on.a showejr ma
and gashed the index finger of hi
throwing hand the other day, th
Yankees as likely as not toft wha
ever chance they had of overhaul
ing Cleveland in the next Ameri-
can League race.
It is not definite that the Chief, is
through. Last we saw they were
talking about doing a plastic sur-
ery job on the injured digit after
has healed, and there appeared
o
be some
hope that the great
ompetitor from Oklahoma would
e able to report e.t St. Petersburg
cxl spring. But from this distance
doesn't look gocd.
Allie is 37 by the official record,
nd there is reason to surpect that
e might be crowding 40. For some
eason never entirely clear, base-
all players like the fudge of their
ges. At -any. rate, the big
fiist-
aller was nearing the end of his
aroer before the accident befell
im. It figured that he would have
;reat difficulty
overcoming even
ic slightest impairment of his ef-
i.ciency.
Another factor'mitigating against
it- return is the' fact that AlHc
vill have no burning incentive to
ive it one more whirl. Hi? invest
ments in oil wells and such have,
rom all accounts, made him fi-
nancially independent. If we know
he man who pitched two nohitters
n .a single season ar.d who
has
ierce pride in his skill, he will
not be back'unless he is firmly con-
'inced that he still can win.
Some may feel that our opening
'stimate'of the Chief's'importance
.o the Yankees is a little, strong.
We will stick-by it. Casey Stengel
needs the services of his
veteran
stopper for another year or two I
while his mound staff is in a period
cf transition, until his young pitch-
ers are ready to take over
the
entire, burden. They, the young-
sters such as Bob Grim and Whitey
Ford, will not be ready to bent
Cleveland . on - their
own next
Farmer Star to
Watch Razorbaeks
LITTLE BOCK
Iff)
Ben
H.
WirMoman, an all-time Arkf sas
football great, has notified Slcre-
tary of State C. G. Hall that
lie
will attend the University of Ar-
kansas homecoming football gania
ne::l Saturday in FayctteviHe.
Windkleman played on the 19JS.
191b,1920 and 1921 Arkansas teams
r.s halfback
and end. He
was
named to thtf all-SouthU-est Con-
ference teams in both position*.
lie graduated from the University
in 1922.
The clash between the un
ed Razorbaeks and Southern
odisl, with the conference chartl*
rfonship hanging in the balancs,
will be the first homecoming a
Fayetteville Wlilkleman has
at-
tended since his graduation.
-
Winkleman's c.oaching cawer has
included jobs at. the University of
Cincinnati. Stanford and San Jose
State College. He now is in,the
real estate business .at P^lo. ;AloJ,
Calif.
season.
lian Horned.Frogs ionienlratqH on
offense for their battle with the
Longhorns. Coach Abe Martlnj.se'nt
his charges thorough long passing
and running maneuvers and is aid
they would scrimmage but- rlittle
this week.
i •
Rice, latest.victim of the. Arkan-
sas juggernaut; worked in sweat
shirts while the No. 2 team scrim-
maged 'the Rice freshmen.
All-
American candidate. Dickey Mj>e_gje
was on the injured list wi '
Taylor,
but. Coach
Jess,
thought they would be re.ady lor
the Texas Aggies on Saturday.
The Agpics took it comparatively
easy at College Station
wlver'e
Coach Bear Bryant said he-iWoUld
t his top men skip -contact jWork
r most of the remaining
essions.
At Waco, the Baylor Bears took a
ojiday. They have no game;,this
eekend, but Coach George Sauer
lanned a light -workout-Tijjksday
nd hard scrimmages Wednesday |
nd Thursday.
handoff instead of through center,
it i worked for
"Motfre"
yardage
Mrs. Viola Glover of Chidester
died at her' home Saturday, Nov-
ember 6. Funeral
arrangements
re incomplete,,
WANTED'
TO BUY;
One inch rough green
Oak Lumber —- regular
lengths and tie siding.
Fpr prices pnd specifica-
tions write —
GURDON LUMBER
'COMPANY
PilRNE, ARKANSAS
Mr. and Mrs. Berry Randle and
on, Berry and Mrs, Ollie McCanic
motored to Arcada, La., on Sunday,
November 7, where they visited re- j
atives and friends.
Fights Last Night
By The Associated Press
Brooklyn
Gene (Cyclone) Full-
mer, 154'/^, West Jordan.
Utah,
outpointed Jackie La Bua, 158'/t,
Strict* Offered
15-1 CeU
John Sidney Braggs of Emmet
led at his home Sunday, Novem-
er 7. Funeral arrangements are
ncomplete.
134,
to be exact.
In Arkansas' 21-20 victory over
Baylor, sophomore tailback Buddy
Benson
of the
No.-2-team Tan
jvith the ball nine times on end
sweeps jn an ll-play drive that car
ried the, porkers to . within easy
field goal distance-arid Carpenter,
kicked the three-pointer that won
the game.
Against Mississippi, the
clutch-
playing Hogs tried only one long
pass-a 66-yard Benson
Carpenter
maneuver for .the victory tally.
Unfortunately, there are no sta
tistics to
show how
many of
Moore's 534 yards
rushing-second
only to Moegle in the
Southwest
Conference
have been
.made
through the air.
UP Ranking
Also Lists
Porkers 4th
By NORMAN MILLER
NEW YOR K CUP)
UCLA
pulled further away.. from
Ohio
State and Oklahoma today in . the
three-team race for the national col-
lege football championship, while
Iowa and Navy, advanced
amoria
this week's top 10 in the United
Press ratings.
The powerful Bruins from
the
Pacific
Coast conference, . who
have Averaged nearly 42 points per
game in scoring eight straight vic-
tories, were the first-place choice
of 26 coaches on the 35-man Unit-
ed Press rating board.
UCLA 's point-total of 338 was
"iinds .Notre ,pame . agair.st North
Carolina, Ariny vs. Pennsylvania,
Southern California vs.. Washing-
ton, Mississippi vs. Houston, and
Navy vs. Columbia.
Wisconsin, seeking to .-regain a
place ambng the'top 10, moved up
to llth place this week, followed by
Minnesota,
Baylor
and ' Miami
(Fla). Purdue and Southern--Meth-
odist were tied fnr 35th. and then
came Cincinnati, Miami (O.) anj
West Virginia in order,
Miqhigan
and Penn State were tied for 20th
Nebraska. Rice, Maryland, .Geor-
gia and Michigan Stute also re
ceived points in this week's voting.
NEW YORK (UP) ' The .United
Press college football ratings (with
first-place votes and won-lost rec-
SMU Half back
May Miss the
Game Saturday
By The Associated Press
The .two "surprise" teams of the
Southwest Conference
- Arkansas
and Texas
worked on the same
goal Tuesday:, .a winning conbina-
tion.
Arkansas,
picked for the .cellar
by sportswriters and broadcasters,
was preparing for its conference
battle with Southern Methodist and
aiming' for its eighth straight win.
Texas was just
looking for a
winnng .combination. The
Long
Legal Notice
.
lorns, five-time lo'sers, winners o:
wo victories and a tie, were pickcc
overwhelmingly for the conference
championship. The Longhorns will
ry to salvage part of their formei
only
12
short
of
a
perfect
Mr. and Mrs. George Smith Jr.,
ind Mr. and
Mrs.
Craton Epps
ipeht Thursday in Springhill, La.,
rlsiiing Mr. and Mrs. Willie Thom-
as.
New York 10.
flew York
Kenny Lane, 137,
Legal Notice
S'o. 7681
In the Chancery Court of
,
Hempstead County, Ark.
Frances Messer ....... Plaintiff
vs.
Walter L. Messer ... Defendant
YVARNINQ PBPgR
The defendant Walter L, Messer
4 warned to appear in this court
within thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, Frances
esser.
Witness w hand and the seal
of s,»<4 cpurt this 8 day of Novem-
ords in parentheses):
Team
1. UCLA (26) (8-0)
2.
Ohio State (7) (7-0)
Oklahoma (2) (7-0)
4. Arkansas (7-0^
5. Notre Dame (5-1)
6. Army (6-1)
7. So. Calif. (7-1)
Points
333
310
* 282
243
177
155
!)2
83
65
Transfer of
Athletics
Is Approved
By JOE REICHLER
NEW
YORK
Iff)
Having won
lis four-month fight' to purchase
the
Philadelphia
Athletics
and
transfer the franchise to Kansas
City, industrialist Arnold Johnson'
today tackled the prpblem of hir-
ing a field and general manager.
He may disclose some of
his
plpns at a press conference today.
Elated
by the 6-2 vote of ap-
proval given him by the American
League, Johnson yesterday said he
had an open mind on the manageri-
al situation. He said he had talked
to no one about the jobs but had
many applications.
It was learned that Lou Bou-
dr<eau deposed manager of the Bos-
ton Red Sox has the inside tracn
Jo the field
managing job, ?nd
Paike CarmU, who was business
manager of the New York Yan-
kees Kansas City fani club in the
American Assn., is a top pandj-
flate for general mi»n,9gcr.
Johnson's
architects have . been
score and the highest compiled by
any team, this season. Of the coach-
es
who did not vot<; the Bruins
tops this week, six picked them
second and three for third.
That support widened UCLA's
margin from 17 to 28 points over
Ohio State and from 28 to 56 pointi
over Oklahoma. Ohio State attract-
ed reven first-place ballots and 310
points; Oklahoma had two first-
place votes and 282 pints. Both
have won seven in a row.
UCLA, with a chance for (he first
perfect season in its football his-
tory, itakes next Saturday off be-
fore winding up its schedule Nov.
20
against
Southern
California
(ranked seventh this week). That
game also should decide the PCC
championship, although Coach Hen
ry (Red) Sanders'
men are not
eligible
for
the Rose Bowl be
cause they played last New Year's
day.
A comparatively forrnful week-
end left the top six teams in the
exact same order of (he previous
week, Arkansas, A» my and Notre
Dprne following third-ranked • Ok-
lahoma in that order. Southrn Cal-
ifornia and Mississippi each moved
8 Mississippi (8-1)
9. Iowa (5-2)
10. Navy (5-2)
Second 10 teams
11. Wiscon-
sin, 26; -1'2. Minnesota, 20; 13. .Bay-
lor, 18;
14. Miami (Fla), 9; 15.
(tie',, Purdue • and Southern Meth-
odi»1, 8 each; 17 Cincinnati, 7; 13.
Miami (O.), 6; 19. West Virginia,
5; 20. (tie), Michigan and
Penn
State.
Oihcrs
Nebraska, 3; Rice, 2;
Maryland, Georgia and Michigan
State, '1 each
prestige
with their game thif
&
for
nishe
Mon
weekend with
Texas
Christian's
brash
sophomores
and
Texas
tough
but virtually win
ess
Cadets
. on
Thanksgiving
Day.Bc.th look like rough assignments
Arkansas, ranked fourth in the na
tional Associated Press poll again
;odty, still must face Louisian:
State arid the University of Hous
ton after playing the vastly im
proved Mustangs this Saturday.
"We've still got three games t
play," Razorback Coach B.owde
Wyatt said as his boys "-'-•--
their regular light duties
day and went t othe showers. Thj
Porkers, Wyatt admitted, were i
good condition.
Longhorn mentor
switched Billy Quinn back to ful"
back in his search for a winnin
combine. He moved Don Marone;
and Bill Long down to the seconi
and third teams ond said: "We'r
trying..." . .
As the Methodist started
prep
arytions for the highly-ranked Hog
their regular left halfback, Don Me
Ilhenny, was on the doubtful stal-
er )ist. He 'suffered a bruised kic
ney in the close 6-3 victory ove
the Aggies last Saturday. The Mus>
tangs may start John
Marshal
high-scoring soph, in place of M
Ilhenny.
At Fort Worth, the Texas Chri
Ed
Pric
,
ber
Willis,
surveying the
City par*
for weeks end ^re ready to beg"
the seating
to a?,09P
from
and to about |§,000
the
up one notch to seventh and eighth,
respectively, and then tame Iowa
and Navy t0 round out the top 10.
Iowa, moving up fron? 12th to
ninth place, and Navy, jumping
from a tie for 18th .to the 10th rank-
ing. replaced Purdue and Miami
(Fin) among the select group.
V/ith points awarded on a 10^9-8-
7.5.5.4,3.2-1
scale for each vote
from first to 10th place, Arkansas
had 243 points, moving wilhin strife
ing distance of the leaders after
its seventh straight tiiumph; No-
tre Pame had 177 points, Avmy
J55, Southern California 92, M>
&Jssippi 3, Iowa' 65 and N»yy 59
Oliio State, Oklahoma
a.r.ijl Ar-
kansas, the three teams ranked
hind first place, aach c«n cll
s tie for its conference champion-
next Saturday. Ohio State
15th ranked
$<*. •• %
*t
•f
*t
HQ 11 S t A tt| M 0
,. Novitfifeef $, t»S4 1
0*A*R IR1
/ THATS STRANGE, Ji
> BUT it SEEMS LIKE s
SOMEONE'S CALLING
I U.L. TTLJ t i»i T r~IL-WN^»-» ,,—»i
^ UP HERE BETWEEN us-^N
THAT'LL KEEP THE LIGHT J
*~r FROM SHINING v-**'•
GOING TO READ? 1 CAN'l
v_, SLEEP WITH THAT
(. i.inuir eiui.KJis.ir: „,
BUT IT SEEMS LIKE
SOMEONE'S CALLING
.MV NAME FROM •*
i ( SOMEONE'S CALLIr
. * V MV NAME FROM
| ^t FAR.FARdFF
isUttK Wl I M If
LIGHT SHINING
* IN MV EVES ^
Vl J N <l*fhrt Vf ift. * t
. .. *.
»t f.-* f i »* M K ft innVt Sj-^*ft tn«
"*
"
ftv Mlehdil 0'M«H.y dhd R
By J. R. Williams
OUT OUR WAIT
Answer to Previous Puzzle
TELL US/
SAY SOME-
THING/
l£> THAT
YOURS?
THE
HAD EATlM'
UP A ELK/
IT STUCK
OUT THEIR
EARS.'
AT IMS &APE;$HS
UAT6IZ,
- -. ACROSS
3 Greek letter
1 Screen actress, 4. Britannia's
'i
>-,
A
snear
spear
5 Pronoun'
6 Sea (Fr.)
7 Willow '
8 Sleeveless
garment
9 Passage (n the
brain
t, 6 She is a
HI, performer
'•H.Needier
13 Sets anew
14 Dress
15'Gets up
16 Leaping
amphibian
17 Not (prefix)
be (Fr.)
20 Lurer
23 Solitary
10 Essential being25 Heavy blow
41 Italian city
12 Lease
27 Asterisk
42 Feminine
13 Malice
28 Raw silk
' appellation
18 Petroleum
weight
district (two 29 Son of Adam
creature
words)
(Bib.)
' 44 Shield bearing
21 Compass point34 Mineral rock 47 Fruit drinks
WASH TUBES
48 Withered
49 Formerly
51 tiolf device
35 Peruser
36 Dispatches
oi, «,?asim,°dic/a u^24 Openwork
39 Pair (ab,)
53 Note 7n
SJKuSp1*1'
fabdc
40 Small llsh
Guide's
33 Frozen water
34'Boundary
'' (comb, form)
38!Uncomrnon
37 Weight of
' India
38 Scottish
•
' ''sheepfold
'^Hazard
|40 Sfeal-hunting
mariners
142 Esau
45 Cental surgeon
<ab.)
46iFacility
SO-Rounded
52 Otter
54 Bank worker
55 Church
officials
. 22 Roof finial
sP"ng23 Egyptian
COULP^
DIDN'T A WO^\N'& CP-V...
I
.
HOM,B.,,.6.
THEY'RE NOT
THE
40PE ONE OF-
PRIMM, TWINS
TURW&'OUTTO
LIFEIS LOMC5E&T MINUTE
Cw. ,.M t, „, „,.»., ^. T.. .^ „ ,,,.,, „,.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
With Major Hoople
AND HER BUDDIES
6 Mountain spur
7 Property item
•-
*•
•v '-'WWUfe&ts
, *;./*r/t,Ea^«>
1DOWN
IPetty quarrel
1 ,.•> -2 -Movement
(rnusic)
By Dick Turner
CARNIVAL
BUGS BUNNY
FUNNY BUSINESS
By Hershbergei
^V^ <"^
' -> *
k~ ' r-T^-hf
ALLlEY OOP
YEAH-.THAT BUCK LOOKS
-.
STRONG AN1 HEALTHY
TOO.. ENOUGH TO GIVE
KNOCK 'IM7 WOODS WiTHOUT\
U5 A LOTTA TROUBLE
WHEN HE FINDS WE'VE
TAKEN HIS WOMAN,'
' V'No, the car wasn't hurt much—the truck driver wain't
trying to beat ITS brains out!"
By Galbroith
SIDE GLANCES
'fl'hope you like buckshot—by the time Wilbur had the
[ \
» rabbit dressed there wasn't anything else left!"
~
~~
By NaJine Selzer
'S A BOOK
HOW
VSMQKIN© C...
YOUR MONEV
THi STORY QF MARTHA WAYNI
.
THST
i MOU NlfpNT50M5 TPTW
W'TH
bitter Mp 'Wm with thpf§ pr«*l*m*
my I svsr -painf slg«br» mta bri|?|ln|( Ihi
*
1
>
3. 7653
In the Chancery Court of |
'
Hempstead County,: Ark. |
George Scoggins
vs.
. . . •,
Odessa Scoggins .... Defen^flnt •
WARNING ORDER
'
;
The defendant, Odessa Scojginsp
s warned to appear in thlsjwourt-1
A-ithin thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, George
Scoggins. ..
,
.
. .
Witness my hand and the -seal of
said iourt this 8 day of."-"—1- —
1954.
'
^,
Garrett Willis, Clerk
By L. C. Byers, D. C,
(SEAL)
. E. Grain,
Attorney Ad Litem
:
John P. Vesey,
Attorney for Plaintiff
Oct. 9, 16, 23, 30
Legal Notice
NOTICE
IN THE PROBATE COURT
OF HEMPSTEAD
COUNTY, ARKANSAS
IN THE MATTER OF THE .
ESTATE' OF C. W. BARNES,
DECEASED
-
Last known address of decedent:
Hope, Arkansas
_
Date of death of decedent: October
10, 1954
Ah instrument dated October
1954,
was
on the
27th day of
October, 1954, admitted to Frpbatfe
as the last will of the above named
decedent,
and
the
undersigned
have "been' ' appointed
exe'cutors
thereunder.. A contest of th.p prV-
bate of the will can be /, ,
only by the filing of a petition
within the time provided by Igw.A
All persons having claims ^
the estate must exhibit theml^
verified, to the undersigned , ,
six months from the date b.f. thjr.
first publication of this. notipe,. pi
they shall be forever barred and
precluded from any benefit In th*
estate.
This notice first published th,«
2nd day of November, ^954.
L. H. Parris,
' Robert Cassels, Executor
Mail Address:
c/o. John P. Vesey
First National Bank" • '
Building
.
' , j
Hope, Arkansas
' ;
Nov. 2, 9
Tm lost my
head over the
955 FORD'S
V
new
THUNDERBIBD
STYLING!
**ifi*!_
fe^t--*•
£&$P^Y>'V '
r/'wf^-f»"-, 't\ ^
y,-?'f?M-t> -
HOP i~$f AifrHO*!* A f t K ^ N I A f c
•
-IAIDISPUY
'
ford Id wi
'Tailor
y,-, ^ -
i Vi» */,'
iZERWORK
*— btft Moving
- Call
__$fOM .
ITGHTERING
ed for
eep Freex*
..
Montgomery Mkt.
7*8361
,^,.
ill* Made Into Innenpr Im
crkiGu«r«nte*d ,
i Day 8ervlo« •— •
ir« & MoHNM C*.
rMreet
Phone 74211
rtl n3,
CLASSIFIED
"
Ads Must fie In Office D*y Before Publication
, WANT AD RATES ^
' All W<Wit Mi
otf
fwyobM m '
SdvaSe* but 8*1 will b« <we»pH>d
ever fti* tiltphons And oe«mddd->
«w «£dum* .allowed with th»
w *
Jp to IS
1p to S
6 to 20
On*
Day
.45
,60
5s
.90
t.OS
1.20
1.35
1.50
fhf*«
j>t*
., 0«
Day*
btryl Month
.90
1.50
4.50
1.20
2.00
6.00
2.50
7.50
3.00
9.00
3.50
10.50
4.00
12.00
4.50
13.50
5.00
15.00
1.50
t.BO
2.10
2.40
2.70
3.00
tl ta 23
26 to 30
II W 35
)6 tu 40
U fd 45
tt 50
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
t t;rm
75e per Ineh
3 tlmei
40= Per neh
6 times
•„.,..>
50e per Inch
hate* quoted above are tor con-
MeirHve insertion*. Irregular or skip-
date ads will take the one-day rot*.
All dally classified advertising copy
Will be accepted until 5 p. m. for
publication the following day.
the publishers reserve the right to
revise or edit all advertisements of-
fered for publication and to reject
tiny •' objectionable advertising sub-
mitted
Initiate of one or more letters,
groups or figures such as house or
telephone numbers count as one word.
The Hope Star
will not be respon-
" slble for-errors in Want Ads unless
errors ore called to' our attention
after FIRST Insertion 'of ad and then
f6r ONLY the ONE .Incorrect insertion.
PHONE: PROSPECT 7-3431
For
Laydway Open on
TRIKES * BIKES AND
DOLLS
OKLAHOMA m€ & SUPPLY
. COMPANY.
3 ROOM modern home. Floor fur*
nace, attic fan. 1305 South Her*
vey. Small down payment, bal-
ance like rent. Phone
7-4568.
3-3t
Aggies Defeat- Hog
Cross Country Team
FAYETf feVlLLE . if ,
Okla-
homa A&M's CfoES-coiliitty team
defeated the- University of Arkan-
sas 17-40 flew Score wins) here as
A&M's 'Frederick
Eckho'ff
set a
hew,
i-ecord over
the
Arkansas
course.
Eckhofi's time. 12:48.7, bettered
the mark
set by Texas A&M's
James Blaine last year 12:59.
Summary: 1. Eckotf.
A&'M. 2.
Landquist, AfeM. 3. Odller, A&M
4.
Bogerund, A&M 5 Morton, Ark
6. Eshbaugh, Ark. 7. Applemap,
A&M.
8.' Hcoker, Ark 9 Tennison,
Aiik 10. Mosely, A&M. 41. Graham,
A&M (freshman). 12 , Ross,
Ark
13 Garner, Ark. (freshman).
Ferguson,
A&M (freshmen).
Wilkinson, A&M (freshman).
U.
15.
SEVERAL colorful cushion mums
blooming in containers. Also bud
ding chrysanthemums . Bring)
containers. Arthur Gray, Ozan.
4-6t
FOUR Chester white pigs for sale
Mrs. A. K Holloway.
9-3t
FOR sale by
individual — 1953
Ford, two door sedan. 17,000 mi-
les, new set of white side-walls,
radio, heater, and many extras.
Can finance. $1395. Contact T.' J.
Barber, phone 7-4038, Hope.'9-3t
Hoj>eStar
Star of HOD* 1199; Preii 1*JT
«oniellddl«d January It, 1*2*
/ESTERN SHARES
..JMlfied Income Fund
ipectu» available from
%'f*'
67 Wert
USED FURNITURE CO.
«g>f .City Urnlts We.t
on Water Barren for Sale
one 7^381
Hope,, Ark.
•
PAULING
isGravel/Fill Dirt and
Light Hauling.
.*,irv
IEST JONES
every'weekday afternoon by
STAR PUBLISHINQ CO.
C. E. Palmer, President
Alex. H, Weihburn, Seey-Trae.
jet The Sler Bulldlne
1 112-14 South Walnut Street
'
* Hope/
Arkqnsoi
Alex. H. Wothburn, Editor & PublUhef
Paul M, Jonei, Managing Editor
Jen M. Davli, Advertlilng Manafei
Coorge W. Hosmor, Mcch. Supt.
Entered at iceond • clau matter «t
Ifie Part Office at Hope/ Arkanioi,
under the Act of March 3, 1897.
Member of the Audit Bureau el
Circulation!
For Rent
HOUSE jacks," Wire stretchers, Post
hole diggej-s, T.arps, 'Reaves .Bar-
gain House and Pawn Shop, 205
S. Walnut, Phone 7-2471. 18-1 Mo.
NICELY furnished '4 room- apart-
ment and bath. Private entrances
7-3497.
• . ' . " ' - 23-tf
LARGE front" room adjoining bath.
Mrs. George • Sandefur, 320
N.
Washington, Phone 7-2125.
" - • : • '
6-3t
5 ROOM unfurnished house. .Close-
in, garage, garden. Miss
Lillie
Middlebrooks, Phone 7-2894.
6-3t
Line Leaping
of Moore Is
Amazing
By ADREN COOPER
FAYETTEVILLE,
(K) T h e
un-
defpated
Aikansas
Ra2orbacks
wiry and wily, have changed their
offense slightly for almost every
game. But there's one, play-a one-
man aerial actthat always works
for y.ardage.
When the' Porkers need yardage
Cor a first. dq\y.c
or
touchdo%vn
they usually launch a 130-poum
guided
muscle
named
Henry
Mopre. Fullback Moore 'takes th(
baljl, leans over the massed line
men, slides rdown. the -other side
ano lands.on his head.
This • hard-headed
junior . frorr
Litte Rock, made 85 -yards-most
ly
through .the- air-agalnst Rice
last .Saturday. Despite- that impres
sive total, Moore had to yteld th
spotlight- to two other stars-Dick;
Moegle, Rice's-all-American cand:
date and teammatd George
Wai
ker.
Subscription Rates (payable In ad-
vance):
•r carrier In Hope and neighboring
towni—•
••t .week
.25
Per year
•• 13.00
By mall In Hempstead/ Nevada,
tqFpyttfe, Howwtl/ ,<""<* ^Miller coun- <
flow,
^JOHNSON
t^TIIHIGCO,
f!?',Printing
"
e»x- ?&'Qffae S,upplies
IPIione 7-254T W Front St.
^y-ip t^^ * . '
^ *
lobfs Service
One month
.85'
Thn* months
_
1.60
«x rnonthi
1.
2.60
One year
•••— 4.50
All other mail-
On* month
1.10
Three months
3.25
tlx month
6.50
On* year
13.00
1 Mefl Advertlilni Ropreiontativei:
Arkansas Dailies, Inc.; 1602 Sterlck
. llcki., Memphis 2, Term.; 505 Texas
lank; •Wo., Dallas 2, Texas; 360 N.
Michigan Ave., Chicago 1,111.; 60 E.;
42d^ St., New York 17, N. V.; 1763
PenobscQt Bldg., Detroit 2,
Mich.;
Terminal Bldg., Oklahoma
City
2,
Member ef The Associated Press:
The-Associated Press is entitled ex-
clusively to the use for republlcatlon
Of all the local news printed in this
newspaper, as well as all AP news
dispatches,
_
.
BRICK house, 515 East Third Hope.
Phone Mrs. Virgie Coleman, 3-
5695, Texarkana, Tex. 2210 Olive.
8-3t
FURNISHED extra large 2 room
apartment. Private entrance and
bath. 801 S. Main, Phone 7-5837.
8-3t
Funeral Directory
SMALL furnished apartment with
private bath. 514 East Third.
.
. ' . . . •
.
9:3t
Lost
10 ft. x 18 ft. Tarp on Highway
4.
between. ;Hope; land .Columbus
Road on Friday.. Call or return
to Henipstead .County Farmers
Assn. Phone 7-4469, •
6-3t
IRISH setter bird.dog. If found no-
tify C. 'T. Jories'in Patm6s, Ark'.,
Phone 7-2925.
9-6f
,-,:,,,,
,
USED GUA88
5-i¥TfT¥ilN8TALueD
^JfJIEW AND USED PARTS
*Mif .most cdrs, »ee w* befor*
PORTER
&. Operator.
Hope
Hy 67 West
OAKCEEST
FUNERAL
HOME
INSURANCE . . . AMBULANCE
2ND & HAZEL . . . PHONE 7-2123
AD-1 Mo. TF
^MtfS.1
Cpmp|0te>arU and
Holland Balers
Trocton
689 A 1140-B
TERMITES
trniite Control Co,
NPip - INSURED
GUARANTEED
f«r Frff Inipectlon Call
D, MIDDLEBROOKS Jr,
H|»w
Nlpht Phont
HERNDON CORNELIUS
BURIAL ASSOCIATION
Largest and Oldest in South
Arkansas. Call
7^5505 for our.
agents
A23-1 Mo.
The Junior choir of BeeBee Me-
morial CME Church will rehearse
Instructions
CLASSES in tap, acrobatic, ballet
and toe. Katharine Windsor, 104
E, 14th. Ph,one 7-3327.
22-1 mo.
For Sole or Rent
W"0 Business buildings on Front
Street, next to Pool hall. If in
terested, contact A. S.Williams,
300
E. 7th, Texarkana, Ark.
Phflne W800 or 22-,6666. 194 Mo.
Wonted
Community
By Helen Turntr
Phone 7-5830
Or bring Item* to .MlM Turiwr
at Hlcki Funeral Horn*
Moore's line-leaping is not nev
he's been
doing
it
for
seve
straight games.
Rice players
praised
Moore a
'a 'better fullback" than Wisco
sin's-heralded
Alan- A m e c h e
"Moore's-not as powerful, but he1
faster," one. Rice player said.
Arkansas
Coach Bbwden Wyi
an outstanding .candidate for coac
of the year, uses Moore chiefly o
a
fullback -".delay".. • or
"draw
play that is .designed 4o
sprin
lf.arpmeriri' Henry-loose
up
th
middle. It seldom does. 'But it i
such a'.constant threat that Porke
fores have to keep In close to guar
against him. In • the •• mean time
te.ammatc Walker
.can pass,
o
quick-lcick over their heads.
Tailback Walker also has a .pe
c^f-tackle slant _that''^works
wel
Walker, though not «xceplionally
fast, is. Arkansas' I'sriiartesl" run-
rer.' On the off-tackle play, Moore,
blocking back Preston
Carpenter
end guard Bud Brooks leads
tha
way.
. '.
.
: .
Brooks,. an' .all-American candidate,
led Walker to a 38-yard touchdown
that clinched the win over
Rice.
A newspaper photo clearly shows
Brooks knocking down the last
man-Dicky Moegle.
Texas relaxed its defense against
Moore's uptthe-middle1;smashes and
he got away oh an 82-yard touch
down jaunt.
Wyatt switched his ^singlewing
Offense slightly against Texas A&M
sending -Moore
off'tackle
on a
Unbeaten Porks
Remain in 4th
Spot in Poll
By HUGH FULL§RT0N JR.
Of. The Associate) Press
By a comfortable margin IP
a
'hopping big ballot, UCLA retainpd
s ranking as the nation's lead-
ng college football- team in this
veek's Associat?d Press poll
of
ports writers and broadcasters.
An even SOO votes wore tabu?
ated to confirm the high-scorin»
Jclans' claim to the top place over
ic challenges, of Ohio State
and
Oklahoma, lenders in earlier pulls
his season.
UCLA was first on 117 of the
00 ballots. Ohio State got 80 first
ilace. votes.
Points wore tabulated on
the
isual basis of IP for each
first-
ilace vote, 9 for second, 8 for third,
tc,
'
'
The first five teams- held
the
ame place? they dropped into dur-
ng the general reshuffling of thn
sast two weeks, but several im-
>ortant chances were
registered
ilsewhere in the first 10.
After UCLA, with 2,GGO points;
and Ohio State, with 2,594. cani
Dklahoma- Arkansas, Notre Dame,
Army, Mississippi Southern Cali-
'ornla, Iowa and Navy in order.
Miami of Florida, suffering
its
first defeat at Auburn's
hands
after six straight victories,
fell
from sixth place to llth. Purdue
also disappeared' from tho top
after taking a 25-14 licking from.
Iowa. That made room for Iowa
12th
last week, and Navy in the
top.
Army's 48-7 shellacking of pro
viously unbeaten Yale couldn't do
more than lift the Cadets
from
seventh into Miami's vacated sixth
place. Mississippi and Southern Cal
ifornia
advanced
two notches
each to seventh and eighth.
The 'leading teams with'
first
SPORTS ROUNDUP
•f «AVi.i TAL10T.
NEW YORK
The thought
persists here that there is no foot
ball coach in the. land who Can
quite match Earl
(Red) Blaik's
iV.lnnt for building an explosive at-
tack when he has the sort of speed
he needs to work with.
Up to this pcint, the Army
coaches rurrent machin? has roll-
ed up an average of 38 points i.i
its seven games and probably will
hike that mark when it rips into
the helpless Penn Quakers Satw-
"day
at Philadelphia. Some Eastern
experts are cautiously comparing
Army's breakway backs with those
of the Diiv'.s-Blanchard era.
This is the greater tribute
to
Blnik's coaching skill for it's only.
four seasons
since
the
socalled
cribbing scandal brought the world
own about his head ar.d forced
inv to start all over again.
The transatlantic traffic: in rac-
ng brood mares, we learn, is not
11 one way. Representatives of the
Lga Khan, having just sold' 20 of
is most blue-blooded matrons to
American-buyers at. an average of
27,000 each, are spending, part of
lie loot for two
females
whosa
oropenitors are as Yankee-Doodle
"s the hot rod.
•
One of- them is- loaded with the
Man o'War strain. The other, a
illy named "Jmperla
purchased
ro'm Calumet Farms, is a daugh-
,er of Bull Lea and a granddaugh-
er of Nellie Flag, a combination
vhich, we understand, would bo
difiicult to boat.
place votes in parentheses:
L UCLA (117)
2. Ohio. State (80)
3. Oklahoma (44)
4. Arkansas (43).
5. Notre Dame (3)
6. Army .(4) . •
7. Mississippi (5)
8. Southern Cal
.9. Iowa
10. Navy
Second 10:
11. Miami (Fla)"
12. Cincinnati
13. Minnesota
14. Wisconsin
15. Virginia Tech
16. West Virginia (2)
17. Maryland
18. Baylor
19. SMU
20. Greo'rgia
Thursday :nighf, " November 11, at
7:30.
AH members please be pre-
sent.
. • . - • • ' .
Beautician Chapter No.,.16, will
meet Wednesday night; November
1C at the home of Mrs. Zephree Wes
son in Mineral Springs. All mem-
bers please be present at 7 o'clock.
Funeral services for Charlie Adir
were held Monday, November 8,
at New Bethel Church with Burial
in Giles Cemetery,
2.66C
2,5i)<
2,29:
2,20'
l,48i
1,45:
72
37!
56:
49,
1G
15
14
11
G
Maj.
Cyril Hall, manager of the
Aga Khan's stud farms, says this
s the first time that these famous
American strains have boon ex
ported to Europe; He can't quite
aelicve his luck yet ir. iandin;
Imuer.'a.
"Sev.eral cf your breeders havr-
asked me how I did it," he said
'They say that Calumet
simplj
does
not lot go of that kind o
horse. I sec that they ;ils,o hav<
sold
Hill
Gail,
their
Kentuckj
Derby winner, to
an Irish buye.
I imagine that will cause som
surprise too."
While American breeders hav
done much importing of top sta'
lions from Europe and
Australi
in recent years, the • major p"oint
.out, foreign breeders have not ha
1he dollars to make similar pui
chases from this country until no\\
when restrictions have been ease
just a little.
i
NEW
YORK, (Ifi ' When' ; Alii
Reynolds slipped.on.a showejr ma
and gashed the index finger of hi
throwing hand the other day, th
Yankees as likely as not toft wha
ever chance they had of overhaul
ing Cleveland in the next Ameri-
can League race.
It is not definite that the Chief, is
through. Last we saw they were
talking about doing a plastic sur-
ery job on the injured digit after
has healed, and there appeared
o
be some
hope that the great
ompetitor from Oklahoma would
e able to report e.t St. Petersburg
cxl spring. But from this distance
doesn't look gocd.
Allie is 37 by the official record,
nd there is reason to surpect that
e might be crowding 40. For some
eason never entirely clear, base-
all players like the fudge of their
ges. At -any. rate, the big
fiist-
aller was nearing the end of his
aroer before the accident befell
im. It figured that he would have
;reat difficulty
overcoming even
ic slightest impairment of his ef-
i.ciency.
Another factor'mitigating against
it- return is the' fact that AlHc
vill have no burning incentive to
ive it one more whirl. Hi? invest
ments in oil wells and such have,
rom all accounts, made him fi-
nancially independent. If we know
he man who pitched two nohitters
n .a single season ar.d who
has
ierce pride in his skill, he will
not be back'unless he is firmly con-
'inced that he still can win.
Some may feel that our opening
'stimate'of the Chief's'importance
.o the Yankees is a little, strong.
We will stick-by it. Casey Stengel
needs the services of his
veteran
stopper for another year or two I
while his mound staff is in a period
cf transition, until his young pitch-
ers are ready to take over
the
entire, burden. They, the
young-
sters such as Bob Grim and Whitey
Ford, will not be ready to bent
Cleveland . on - their
own next
Farmer Star to
Watch Razorbaeks
LITTLE BOCK
Iff)
Ben
H.
WirMoman, an all-time Arkf sas
football great, has notified Slcre-
tary of State C. G. Hall that
lie
will attend the University of Ar-
kansas homecoming footbal gania
ne::l Saturday in FayctteviHe.
Windkleman played on the 19JS.
191b,1920 and 1921 Arkansas teams
r.s halfback
and end. He
was
named to thtf all-SouthU-est Con-
ference teams in both position*.
lie graduated from the University
in 1922.
The clash between the un
ed Razorbaeks and Southern
odisl, with the conference chartl*
rfonship hanging in the balancs,
will be the first homecoming a
Fayetteville Wlilkleman has
at-
tended since his graduation.
-
Winkleman's c.oaching cawer has
included jobs at. the University of
Cincinnati. Stanford and San Jose
State College. He now is in,the
real estate business .at P^lo. ;AloJ,
Calif.
season.
lian Horned.Frogs ionienlratqH on
offense for their battle with the
Longhorns. Coach Abe Martlnj.se'nt
his charges thorough long passing
and running maneuvers and is aid
they would scrimmage but- rlittle
this week.
i •
Rice, latest.victim of the. Arkan-
sas juggernaut; worked in sweat
shirts while the No. 2 team scrim-
maged 'the Rice freshmen.
All-
American candidate. Dickey Mj>e_gje
was on the injured list wi '
Taylor,
but. Coach Jess,
thought they would be re.ady lor
the Texas Aggies on Saturday.
The Agpics took it comparatively
easy at College Station wlver'e
Coach Bear Bryant said he-iWoUld
t his top men skip -contact jWork
r most of the remaining
essions.
At Waco, the Baylor Bears took a
ojiday. They have no game;,this
eekend, but Coach George Sauer
lanned a light -workout-Tijjksday
nd hard scrimmages Wednesday |
nd Thursday.
handoff instead of through center,
it i worked for
"Motfre"
yardage
Mrs. Viola Glover of Chidester
died at her' home Saturday, Nov-
ember 6. Funeral
arrangements
re incomplete,,
WANTED'
TO BUY;
One inch rough green
Oak Lumber —- regular
lengths and tie siding.
Fpr prices pnd specifica-
tions write —
GURDON LUMBER
'COMPANY
PilRNE, ARKANSAS
Mr. and Mrs. Berry Randle and
on, Berry and Mrs, Ollie McCanic
motored to Arcada, La., on Sunday,
November 7, where they visited re- j
atives and friends.
Fights Last Night
By The Associated Press
Brooklyn
Gene (Cyclone) Full-
mer,
154'/^, West Jordan.
Utah,
outpointed Jackie La Bua, 158'/t,
Strict* Offered
15-1 CeU
John Sidney Braggs of Emmet
led at his home Sunday, Novem-
er 7. Funeral arrangements are
ncomplete.
134,
to be exact.
In Arkansas' 21-20 victory over
Baylor, sophomore tailback Buddy
Benson
of the
No.-2-team Tan
jvith the ball nine times on end
sweeps jn an ll-play drive that car
ried the, porkers to . within
easy
field goal distance-arid Carpenter,
kicked the three-pointer that won
the game.
Against Mississippi, the
clutch-
playing Hogs tried only one long
pass-a 66-yard Benson
Carpenter
maneuver for .the victory tally.
Unfortunately, there are no sta
tistics to
show how
many of
Moore's 534 yards
rushing-second
only to Moegle in the Southwest
Conference
have been
.made
through the air.
UP Ranking
Also Lists
Porkers 4th
By NORMAN MILLER
NEW YOR K CUP)
UCLA
pulled further away.. from
Ohio
State and Oklahoma today in . the
three-team race for the national col-
lege football championship, while
Iowa and Navy, advanced
amoria
this week's top 10 in the United
Press ratings.
The powerful Bruins from
the
Pacific
Coast conference, . who
have Averaged nearly 42 points per
game in scoring eight straight vic-
tories, were the first-place choice
of 26 coaches on the 35-man Unit-
ed Press rating board.
UCLA 's point-total of 338 was
"iinds .Notre ,pame . agair.st North
Carolina, Ariny vs. Pennsylvania,
Southern California vs.. Washing-
ton, Mississippi vs. Houston, and
Navy vs. Columbia.
Wisconsin, seeking to .-regain a
place ambng the'top 10, moved up
to llth place this week, followed by
Minnesota,
Baylor
and ' Miami
(Fla). Purdue and Southern--Meth-
odist were tied fnr 35th. and then
came Cincinnati, Miami (O.) anj
West Virginia in order,
Miqhigan
and Penn State were tied for 20th
Nebraska. Rice, Maryland, .Geor-
gia and Michigan Stute also re
ceived points in this week's voting.
NEW YORK (UP) ' The .United
Press college football ratings (with
first-place votes and won-lost rec-
SMU Half back
May Miss the
Game Saturday
By The Associated Press
The .two "surprise" teams of the
Southwest Conference
- Arkansas
and Texas
worked on the same
goal Tuesday:, .a winning conbina-
tion.
Arkansas,
picked for the .cellar
by sportswriters and broadcasters,
was preparing for its conference
battle with Southern Methodist and
aiming' for its eighth straight win.
Texas was just
looking for a
winnng .combination. The
Long
Legal Notice
.
lorns, five-time lo'sers, winners o:
wo victories and a tie, were pickcc
overwhelmingly for the conference
championship. The Longhorns will
ry to salvage part of their formei
only
12
short
of
a
perfect
Mr. and Mrs. George Smith Jr.,
ind Mr. and
Mrs.
Craton Epps
ipeht Thursday in Springhill, La.,
rlsiiing Mr. and Mrs. Willie Thom-
as.
New York 10.
flew York
Kenny Lane, 137,
Legal Notice
S'o. 7681
In the Chancery Court of
,
Hempstead County, Ark.
Frances Messer ....... Plaintiff
vs.
Walter L. Messer ... Defendant
YVARNINQ PBPgR
The defendant Walter L, Messer
4 warned to appear in this court
within thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, Frances
esser.
Witness w hand and the seal
of s,»<4 cpurt this 8 day of Novem-
ords in parentheses):
Team
1. UCLA (26) (8-0)
2.
Ohio State (7) (7-0)
Oklahoma (2) (7-0)
4. Arkansas (7-0^
5. Notre Dame (5-1)
6. Army (6-1)
7. So. Calif. (7-1)
Points
333
310
* 282
243
177
155
!)2
83
65
Transfer of
Athletics
Is Approved
By JOE REICHLER
NEW
YORK
Iff)
Having won
lis four-month fight' to purchase
the
Philadelphia
Athletics
and
transfer the franchise to Kansas
City, industrialist Arnold Johnson'
today tackled the prpblem of hir-
ing a field and general manager.
He may disclose some of
his
plpns at a press conference today.
Elated
by the 6-2 vote of ap-
proval given him by the American
League, Johnson yesterday said he
had an open mind on the manageri-
al situation. He said he had talked
to no one about the jobs but had
many applications.
It was learned that Lou Bou-
dr<eau deposed manager of the Bos-
ton Red Sox has the inside tracn
Jo the field
managing job, ?nd
Paike CarmU, who was business
manager of the New York Yan-
kees Kansas City fani club in the
American Assn., is a top pandj-
flate for general mi»n,9gcr.
Johnson's
architects have . been
score and the highest compiled by
any team, this season. Of the coach-
es
who did not vot<; the Bruins
tops this week, six picked them
second and three for third.
That support widened UCLA's
margin from 17 to 28 points over
Ohio State and from 28 to 56 pointi
over Oklahoma. Ohio State attract-
ed reven first-place ballots and 310
points; Oklahoma had two first-
place votes and 282 pints. Both
have won seven in a row.
UCLA, with a chance for (he first
perfect season in its football his-
tory, itakes next Saturday off be-
fore winding up its schedule Nov.
20
against
Southern
California
(ranked seventh this week). That
game also should decide the PCC
championship, although Coach Hen
ry (Red) Sanders' men are not
eligible
for
the Rose Bowl be
cause they played last New Year's
day.
A comparatively forrnful week-
end left the top six teams in the
exact same order of (he previous
week, Arkansas, A» my and Notre
Dprne following third-ranked • Ok-
lahoma in that order. Southrn Cal-
ifornia and Mississippi each moved
8 Mississippi (8-1)
9. Iowa (5-2)
10. Navy (5-2)
Second 10 teams
11. Wiscon-
sin, 26; -1'2. Minnesota, 20; 13. .Bay-
lor, 18;
14. Miami (Fla), 9; 15.
(tie',, Purdue • and Southern Meth-
odi»1, 8 each; 17 Cincinnati, 7; 13.
Miami (O.), 6; 19. West Virginia,
5; 20. (tie), Michigan and
Penn
State.
Oihcrs
Nebraska, 3; Rice, 2;
Maryland, Georgia and Michigan
State, '1 each
prestige
with their game thif
&
for
nishe
Mon
weekend with
Texas
Christian's
brash
sophomores
and
Texas
tough
but virtually win
ess
Cadets
. on
Thanksgiving
Day.Bc.th look like rough assignments
Arkansas, ranked fourth in the na
tional Associated Press poll again
;odty, still must face Louisian:
State arid the University of Hous
ton after playing the vastly im
proved Mustangs this Saturday.
"We've still got three games t
play," Razorback Coach B.owde
Wyatt said as his boys "-'-•--
their regular light duties
day and went t othe showers. Thj
Porkers, Wyatt admitted, were i
good condition.
Longhorn mentor
switched Billy Quinn back to ful"
back in his search for a winnin
combine. He moved Don Marone;
and Bill Long down to the seconi
and third teams ond said: "We'r
trying..." . .
As the Methodist started
prep
arytions for the highly-ranked Hog
their regular left halfback, Don Me
Ilhenny, was on the doubtful stal-
er )ist. He 'suffered a bruised kic
ney in the close 6-3 victory ove
the Aggies last Saturday. The Mus>
tangs may start John
Marshal
high-scoring soph, in place of M
Ilhenny.
At Fort Worth, the Texas Chri
Ed
Pric
,
ber
Willis,
surveying the
City par*
for weeks end ^re ready to beg"
the seating
to a?,09P
from
and to about |§,000
the
up one notch to seventh and eighth,
respectively, and then tame Iowa
and Navy t0 round out the top 10.
Iowa, moving up fron? 12th to
ninth place, and Navy, jumping
from a tie for 18th .to the 10th rank-
ing. replaced Purdue and Miami
(Fin) among the select group.
V/ith points awarded on a 10^9-8-
7.5.5.4,3.2-1
scale for each vote
from first to 10th place, Arkansas
had 243 points, moving wilhin strife
ing distance of the leaders after
its seventh straight tiiumph; No-
tre Pame had 177 points, Avmy
J55, Southern California 92, M>
&Jssippi 3, Iowa' 65 and N»yy 59
Oliio State, Oklahoma
a.r.ijl Ar-
kansas, the three teams ranked
hind first place, aach c«n cll
s tie for its conference champion-
next Saturday. Ohio State
15th ranked
$<*. •• %
*t
•f
*t
HQ 11 S t A tt| M 0
,. Novitfifeef $, t»S4 1
0*A*R IR1
/ THATS STRANGE, Ji
> BUT it SEEMS LIKE s
SOMEONE'S CALLING
I U.L. TTLJ t i»i T r~IL-WN^»-» ,,—»i
^ UP HERE BETWEEN us-^N
THAT'LL KEEP THE LIGHT J
*~r FROM SHINING v-**'•
GOING TO READ? 1 CAN'l
v_, SLEEP WITH THAT
(. i.inuir eiui.KJis.ir: „,
BUT IT SEEMS LIKE
SOMEONE'S CALLING
.MV NAME FROM •*
i ( SOMEONE'S CALLIr
. * V MV NAME FROM
| ^t FAR.FARdFF
isUttK Wl I M If
LIGHT SHINING
* IN MV EVES ^
Vl J N <l*fhrt Vf ift. * t
. .. *.
»t f.-* f i »* M K ft innVt Sj-^*ft tn«
"*
"
ftv Mlehdil 0'M«H.y dhd R
By J. R. Williams
OUT OUR WAIT
Answer to Previous Puzzle
TELL US/
SAY SOME-
THING/
l£> THAT
YOURS?
THE
HAD EATlM'
UP A ELK/
IT STUCK
OUT THEIR
EARS.'
AT IMS &APE;$HS
UAT6IZ,
- -. ACROSS
3 Greek letter
1 Screen actress, 4. Britannia's
'i
>-,
A
snear
spear
5 Pronoun'
6 Sea (Fr.)
7 Willow '
8 Sleeveless
garment
9 Passage (n the
brain
t, 6 She is a
HI, performer
'•H.Needier
13 Sets anew
14 Dress
15'Gets up
16 Leaping
amphibian
17 Not (prefix)
be (Fr.)
20 Lurer
23 Solitary
10 Essential being25 Heavy blow
41 Italian city
12 Lease
27 Asterisk
42 Feminine
13 Malice
28 Raw silk
' appellation
18 Petroleum
weight
district (two 29 Son of Adam
creature
words)
(Bib.)
' 44 Shield bearing
21 Compass point34 Mineral rock 47 Fruit drinks
WASH TUBES
48 Withered
49 Formerly
51 tiolf device
35 Peruser
36 Dispatches
oi, «,?asim,°dic/a u^24 Openwork
39 Pair (ab,)
53 Note 7n
SJKuSp1*1'
fabdc
40 Small llsh
Guide's
33 Frozen water
34'Boundary
'' (comb, form)
38!Uncomrnon
37 Weight of
' India
38 Scottish
•
' ''sheepfold
'^Hazard
|40 Sfeal-hunting
mariners
142 Esau
45 Cental surgeon
<ab.)
46iFacility
SO-Rounded
52 Otter
54 Bank worker
55 Church
officials
. 22 Roof finial
sP"ng23 Egyptian
COULP^
DIDN'T A WO^\N'& CP-V...
I
.
HOM,B.,,.6.
THEY'RE NOT
THE
40PE ONE OF-
PRIMM, TWINS
TURW&'OUTTO
LIFEIS LOMC5E&T MINUTE
Cw. ,.M t, „, „,.»., ^. T.. .^ „ ,,,.,, „,.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
With Major Hoople
AND HER BUDDIES
6 Mountain spur
7 Property item
•-
*•
•v '-'WWUfe&ts
, *;./*r/t,Ea^«>
1DOWN
IPetty quarrel
1 ,.•> -2 -Movement
(rnusic)
By Dick Turner
CARNIVAL
BUGS BUNNY
FUNNY BUSINESS
By Hershbergei
^V^ <"^
' -> *
k~ ' r-T^-hf
ALLlEY OOP
YEAH-.THAT BUCK LOOKS
-.
STRONG AN1 HEALTHY
TOO.. ENOUGH TO GIVE
KNOCK 'IM7 WOODS WiTHOUT\
U5 A LOTTA TROUBLE
WHEN HE FINDS WE'VE
TAKEN HIS WOMAN,'
' V'No, the car wasn't hurt much—the truck driver wain't
trying to beat ITS brains out!"
By Galbroith
SIDE GLANCES
'fl'hope you like buckshot—by the time Wilbur had the
[ \
» rabbit dressed there wasn't anything else left!"
~
~~
By NaJine Selzer
'S A BOOK
HOW
VSMQKIN© C...
YOUR MONEV
THi STORY QF MARTHA WAYNI
.
THST
i MOU NlfpNT50M5 TPTW
W'TH
bitter Mp 'Wm with thpf§ pr«*l*m*
my I svsr -painf slg«br» mta bri|?|ln|( Ihi
*
1
>
3. 7653
In the Chancery Court of |
'
Hempstead County,: Ark. |
George Scoggins
vs.
. . . •,
Odessa Scoggins .... Defen^flnt •
WARNING ORDER
'
;
The defendant, Odessa Scojginsp
s warned to appear in thlsjwourt-1
A-ithin thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, George
Scoggins. ..
,
.
. .
Witness my hand and the -seal of
said iourt this 8 day of."-"—1- —
1954.
'
^,
Garrett Willis, Clerk
By L. C. Byers, D. C,
(SEAL)
. E. Grain,
Attorney Ad Litem
:
John P. Vesey,
Attorney for Plaintiff
Oct. 9, 16, 23, 30
Legal Notice
NOTICE
IN THE PROBATE COURT
OF HEMPSTEAD
COUNTY, ARKANSAS
IN THE MATTER OF THE .
ESTATE' OF C. W. BARNES,
DECEASED
-
Last known address of decedent:
Hope, Arkansas
_
Date of death of decedent: October
10, 1954
Ah instrument dated October
1954,
was
on the
27th day of
October, 1954, admitted to Frpbatfe
as the last will of the above named
decedent,
and
the
undersigned
have "been' ' appointed
exe'cutors
thereunder.. A contest of th.p prV-
bate of the will can be /, ,
only by the filing of a petition
within the time provided by Igw.A
All persons having claims ^
the estate must exhibit theml^
verified, to the undersigned , ,
six months from the date b.f. thjr.
first publication of this. notipe,. pi
they shall be forever barred and
precluded from any benefit In th*
estate.
This notice first published th,«
2nd day of November, ^954.
L. H. Parris,
' Robert Cassels, Executor
Mail Address:
c/o. John P. Vesey
First National Bank" • '
Building
.
' , j
Hope, Arkansas
' ;
Nov.
2, 9
Tm lost my
head over the
955 FORD'S
V
new
THUNDERBIBD
STYLING!
**ifi*!_
fe^t--*•
£&$P^Y>'V '
r/'wf^-f»"-, 't\ ^
y,-?'f?M-t> -
HOP i~$f AifrHO*!* A f t K ^ N I A f c
•
-IAIDISPUY
'
ford Id wi
'Tailor
y,-, ^ -
i Vi» */,'
iZERWORK
*— btft Moving
- Call
__$fOM .
ITGHTERING
ed for
eep Freex*
..
Montgomery Mkt.
7*8361
,^,.
ill* Made Into Innenpr Im
crkiGu«r«nte*d ,
i Day 8ervlo« •— •
ir« & MoHNM C*.
rMreet
Phone 74211
rtl n3,
CLASSIFIED
"
Ads Must fie In Office D*y Before Publication
, WANT AD RATES ^
' All W<Wit Mi
otf
fwyobM m '
SdvaSe* but 8*1 will b« <we»pH>d
ever fti* tiltphons And oe«mddd->
«w «£dum* .allowed with th»
w *
Jp to IS
1p to S
6 to 20
On*
Day
.45
,60
5s
.90
t.OS
1.20
1.35
1.50
fhf*«
j>t*
., 0«
Day*
btryl Month
.90
1.50
4.50
1.20
2.00 6.00
2.50
7.50
3.00
9.00
3.50 10.50
4.00 12.00
4.50 13.50
5.00 15.00
1.50
t.BO
2.10
2.40
2.70
3.00
tl ta 23
26 to 30
II W 35
)6 tu 40
U fd 45
tt 50
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
t t;rm
75e per Ineh
3 tlmei
40= Per neh
6 times
•„.,..>
50e per Inch
hate* quoted above are tor con-
MeirHve insertion*. Irregular or skip-
date ads will take the one-day rot*.
All dally classified advertising copy
Will be accepted until 5 p. m. for
publication the following day.
the publishers reserve the right to
revise or edit all advertisements of-
fered for publication and to reject
tiny •' objectionable advertising sub-
mitted
Initiate of one or more letters,
groups or figures such as house or
telephone numbers count as one word.
The Hope Star will not be respon-
" slble for-errors in Want Ads unless
errors ore called to' our attention
after FIRST Insertion 'of ad and then
f6r ONLY the ONE .Incorrect insertion.
PHONE: PROSPECT 7-3431
For
Laydway Open on
TRIKES * BIKES AND
DOLLS
OKLAHOMA m€ & SUPPLY
. COMPANY.
3 ROOM modern home. Floor fur*
nace, attic fan. 1305 South Her*
vey. Small down payment, bal-
ance like rent. Phone
7-4568.
3-3t
Aggies Defeat- Hog
Cross Country Team
FAYETf feVlLLE . if ,
Okla-
homa A&M's CfoES-coiliitty team
defeated the- University of Arkan-
sas 17-40 flew Score wins) here as
A&M's 'Frederick
Eckho'ff
set a
hew,
i-ecord over
the
Arkansas
course.
Eckhofi's time. 12:48.7, bettered
the mark
set by Texas A&M's
James Blaine last year 12:59.
Summary: 1. Eckotf.
A&'M. 2.
Landquist, AfeM. 3. Odller, A&M
4.
Bogerund, A&M 5 Morton, Ark
6. Eshbaugh, Ark. 7. Applemap,
A&M.
8.' Hcoker, Ark 9 Tennison,
Aiik 10. Mosely, A&M. 41. Graham,
A&M (freshman). 12 , Ross,
Ark
13 Garner, Ark. (freshman).
Ferguson,
A&M (freshmen).
Wilkinson, A&M (freshman).
U.
15.
SEVERAL colorful cushion mums
blooming in containers. Also bud
ding chrysanthemums . Bring)
containers. Arthur Gray, Ozan.
4-6t
FOUR Chester white pigs for sale
Mrs. A. K Holloway.
9-3t
FOR sale by
individual — 1953
Ford, two door sedan. 17,000 mi-
les, new set of white side-walls,
radio, heater, and many extras.
Can finance. $1395. Contact T.' J.
Barber, phone 7-4038, Hope.'9-3t
Hoj>eStar
Star of HOD* 1199; Preii 1*JT
«oniellddl«d January It, 1*2*
/ESTERN SHARES
..JMlfied Income Fund
ipectu» available from
%'f*'
67 Wert
USED FURNITURE CO.
«g>f .City Urnlts We.t
on Water Barren for Sale
one 7^381
Hope,, Ark.
•
PAULING
isGravel/Fill Dirt and
Light Hauling.
.*,irv
IEST JONES
every'weekday afternoon by
STAR PUBLISHINQ CO.
C. E. Palmer, President
Alex. H, Weihburn, Seey-Trae.
jet The Sler Bulldlne
1 112-14 South Walnut Street
'
* Hope/
Arkqnsoi
Alex. H. Wothburn, Editor & PublUhef
Paul M, Jonei, Managing Editor
Jen M. Davli, Advertlilng Manafei
Coorge W. Hosmor, Mcch. Supt.
Entered at iceond • clau matter «t
Ifie Part Office at Hope/ Arkanioi,
under the Act of March 3, 1897.
Member of the Audit Bureau el
Circulation!
For Rent
HOUSE jacks," Wire stretchers, Post
hole diggej-s, T.arps, 'Reaves .Bar-
gain House and Pawn Shop, 205
S. Walnut, Phone 7-2471. 18-1 Mo.
NICELY furnished '4 room- apart-
ment and bath. Private entrances
7-3497.
• . ' . " ' - 23-tf
LARGE front" room adjoining bath.
Mrs. George • Sandefur, 320
N.
Washington, Phone 7-2125.
"
-
•
:
•
'
6-3t
5 ROOM unfurnished house. .Close-
in, garage, garden. Miss
Lillie
Middlebrooks, Phone 7-2894.
6-3t
Line Leaping
of Moore Is
Amazing
By ADREN COOPER
FAYETTEVILLE,
(K) T h e
un-
defpated
Aikansas
Ra2orbacks
wiry and wily, have changed their
offense slightly for almost every
game. But there's one, play-a one-
man aerial actthat always works
for y.ardage.
When the' Porkers need yardage
Cor a first. dq\y.c
or
touchdo%vn
they usually launch a 130-poum
guided
muscle
named
Henry
Mopre. Fullback Moore 'takes th(
baljl, leans over the massed line
men, slides rdown. the -other side
ano lands.on his head.
This • hard-headed
junior . frorr
Litte Rock, made 85 -yards-most
ly
through .the- air-agalnst Rice
last .Saturday. Despite- that impres
sive total, Moore had to yteld th
spotlight- to two other stars-Dick;
Moegle, Rice's-all-American cand:
date and teammatd George
Wai
ker.
Subscription Rates (payable In ad-
vance):
•r carrier In Hope and neighboring
towni—•
••t .week
.25
Per year
•• 13.00
By mall In Hempstead/ Nevada,
tqFpyttfe, Howwtl/ ,<""<* ^Miller coun- <
flow,
^JOHNSON
t^TIIHIGCO,
f!?',Printing
"
e»x- ?&'Qffae S,upplies
IPIione 7-254T W Front St.
^y-ip t^^ * . '
^ *
lobfs Service
One month
.85'
Thn* months
_ 1.60
«x rnonthi
1.
2.60
One year
•••— 4.50
All other mail-
On* month
1.10
Three months
3.25
tlx month
6.50
On* year
13.00
1 Mefl Advertlilni Ropreiontativei:
Arkansas Dailies, Inc.; 1602 Sterlck
. llcki., Memphis 2, Term.; 505 Texas
lank; •Wo., Dallas 2, Texas; 360 N.
Michigan Ave., Chicago 1,111.; 60 E.;
42d^ St., New York 17, N. V.; 1763
PenobscQt Bldg., Detroit 2,
Mich.;
Terminal Bldg., Oklahoma
City
2,
Member ef The Associated Press:
The-Associated Press is entitled ex-
clusively to the use for republlcatlon
Of all the local news printed in this
newspaper, as well as all AP news
dispatches,
_
.
BRICK house, 515 East Third Hope.
Phone Mrs. Virgie Coleman, 3-
5695, Texarkana, Tex. 2210 Olive.
8-3t
FURNISHED extra large 2 room
apartment. Private entrance and
bath. 801 S. Main, Phone 7-5837.
8-3t
Funeral Directory
SMALL furnished apartment with
private bath. 514 East Third.
.
. ' . . . •
.
9:3t
Lost
10 ft. x 18 ft. Tarp on Highway
4.
between. ;Hope; land .Columbus
Road on Friday.. Call or return
to Henipstead .County Farmers
Assn. Phone 7-4469, •
6-3t
IRISH setter bird.dog. If found no-
tify C. 'T. Jories'in Patm6s, Ark'.,
Phone 7-2925.
9-6f
,-,:,,,,
,
USED GUA88
5-i¥TfT¥ilN8TALueD
^JfJIEW AND USED PARTS
*Mif .most cdrs, »ee w* befor*
PORTER
&. Operator.
Hope
Hy 67 West
OAKCEEST
FUNERAL
HOME
INSURANCE . . . AMBULANCE
2ND & HAZEL . . . PHONE 7-2123
AD-1 Mo. TF
^MtfS.1
Cpmp|0te>arU and
Holland Balers
Traiptors
689 A 1140-B
TERMITES
trniite Control Co,
NPip - INSURED
GUARANTEED
f«r Frff Inipectlon Call
D, MIDDLEBROOKS Jr,
H|»w
Nlpht Phont
HERNDON CORNELIUS
BURIAL ASSOCIATION
Largest and Oldest in South
Arkansas. Call
7^5505 for our.
agents
A23-1 Mo.
The Junior choir of BeeBee Me-
morial CME Church will rehearse
Instructions
CLASSES in tap, acrobatic, ballet
and toe. Katharine Windsor, 104
E, 14th. Ph,one 7-3327.
22-1 mo.
For Sole or Rent
W"0 Business buildings on Front
Street, next to Pool hall. If in
terested, contact A. S.Williams,
300
E. 7th, Texarkana, Ark.
Phflne W800 or 22-,6666. 194 Mo.
Wonted
Community
By Helen Turntr
Phone 7-5830
Or bring Item* to .MlM Turiwr
at Hlcki Funeral Horn*
Moore's line-leaping is not nev
he's been
doing
it
for
seve
straight games.
Rice players
praised
Moore a
'a 'better fullback" than Wisco
sin's-heralded
Alan- A m e c h e
"Moore's-not as powerful, but he1
faster," one. Rice player said.
Arkansas
Coach Bbwden Wyi
an outstanding .candidate for coac
of the year, uses Moore chiefly o
a
fullback -".delay".. • or
"draw
play that is .designed 4o
sprin
lf.arpmeriri' Henry-loose
up
th
middle. It seldom does. 'But it i
such a'.constant threat that Porke
fores have to keep In close to guar
against him. In • the •• mean time
te.ammatc Walker
.can pass,
o
quick-lcick over their heads.
Tailback Walker also has a .pe
c^f-tackle slant _that''^works
wel
Walker, though not «xceplionally
fast, is. Arkansas' I'sriiartesl" run-
rer.' On the off-tackle play, Moore,
blocking back Preston
Carpenter
end guard Bud Brooks leads
tha
way.
. '.
.
: .
Brooks,. an' .all-American candidate,
led Walker to a 38-yard touchdown
that clinched the win over
Rice.
A newspaper photo clearly shows
Brooks knocking down the last
man-Dicky Moegle.
Texas relaxed its defense against
Moore's uptthe-middle1;smashes and
he got away oh an 82-yard touch
down jaunt.
Wyatt switched his ^singlewing
Offense slightly against Texas A&M
sending -Moore
off'tackle
on a
Unbeaten Porks
Remain in 4th
Spot in Poll
By HUGH FULL§RT0N JR.
Of. The Associate) Press
By a comfortable margin IP
a
'hopping big ballot, UCLA retainpd
s ranking as the nation's lead-
ng college football- team in this
veek's Associat?d Press poll
of
ports writers and broadcasters.
An even SOO votes wore tabu?
ated to confirm the high-scorin»
Jclans' claim to the top place over
ic challenges, of Ohio State
and
Oklahoma, lenders in earlier pulls
his season.
UCLA was first on 117 of the
00 ballots. Ohio State got 80 first
ilace. votes.
Points wore tabulated on
the
isual basis of IP for each
first-
ilace vote, 9 for second, 8 for third,
tc,
'
'
The first five teams- held
the
ame place? they dropped into dur-
ng the general reshuffling of thn
sast two weeks, but several im-
>ortant chances were
registered
ilsewhere in the first 10.
After UCLA, with 2,GGO points;
and Ohio State, with 2,594. cani
Dklahoma- Arkansas, Notre Dame,
Army, Mississippi Southern Cali-
'ornla, Iowa and Navy in order.
Miami of Florida, suffering
its
first defeat at Auburn's
hands
after six straight victories,
fell
from sixth place to llth. Purdue
also disappeared' from tho top
after taking a 25-14 licking from.
Iowa. That made room for Iowa
12th
last week, and Navy in the
top.
Army's 48-7 shellacking of pro
viously unbeaten Yale couldn't do
more than lift the Cadets
from
seventh into Miami's vacated sixth
place. Mississippi and Southern Cal
ifornia
advanced
two notches
each to seventh and eighth.
The 'leading teams with'
first
SPORTS ROUNDUP
•f «AVi.i TAL10T.
NEW YORK
The thought
persists here that there is no foot
ball coach in the. land who Can
quite match Earl
(Red) Blaik's
iV.lnnt for building an explosive at-
tack when he has the sort of speed
he needs to work with.
Up to this pcint, the Army
coaches rurrent machin? has roll-
ed up an average of 38 points i.i
its seven games and probably will
hike that mark when it rips into
the helpless Penn Quakers Satw-
"day at Philadelphia. Some Eastern
experts are cautiously comparing
Army's breakway backs with those
of the Diiv'.s-Blanchard era.
This is the greater tribute
to
Blnik's coaching skill for it's only.
four seasons
since
the
socalled
cribbing scandal brought the world
own about his head ar.d forced
inv to start all over again.
The transatlantic traffic: in rac-
ng brood mares, we learn, is not
11 one way. Representatives of the
Lga Khan, having just sold' 20 of
is most blue-blooded matrons to
American-buyers at. an average of
27,000 each, are spending, part of
lie loot for two
females
whosa
oropenitors are as Yankee-Doodle
"s the hot rod.
•
One of- them is- loaded with the
Man o'War strain. The other, a
illy named "Jmperla
purchased
ro'm Calumet Farms, is a daugh-
,er of Bull Lea and a granddaugh-
er of Nellie Flag, a combination
vhich, we understand, would bo
difiicult to boat.
place votes in parentheses:
L UCLA (117)
2. Ohio. State (80)
3. Oklahoma (44)
4. Arkansas (43).
5. Notre Dame (3)
6. Army .(4) . •
7. Mississippi (5)
8. Southern Cal
.9. Iowa
10. Navy
Second 10:
11. Miami (Fla)"
12. Cincinnati
13. Minnesota
14. Wisconsin
15. Virginia Tech
16. West Virginia (2)
17. Maryland
18. Baylor
19. SMU
20. Greo'rgia
Thursday :nighf, " November 11, at
7:30.
AH members please be pre-
sent.
. • . - • • ' .
Beautician Chapter No.,.16, will
meet Wednesday night; November
1C at the home of Mrs. Zephree Wes
son in Mineral Springs. All mem-
bers please be present at 7 o'clock.
Funeral services for Charlie Adir
were held Monday, November 8,
at New Bethel Church with Burial
in Giles Cemetery,
2.66C
2,5i)<
2,29:
2,20'
l,48i
1,45:
72
37!
56:
49,
1G
15
14
11
G
Maj.
Cyril Hall, manager of the
Aga Khan's stud farms, says this
s the first time that these famous
American strains have boon ex
ported to Europe; He can't quite
aelicve his luck yet ir. iandin;
Imuer.'a.
"Sev.eral cf your breeders havr-
asked me how I did it," he said
'They say that Calumet
simplj
does
not lot go of that kind o
horse. I sec that they ;ils,o hav<
sold
Hill
Gail,
their
Kentuckj
Derby winner, to
an Irish buye.
I imagine that will cause som
surprise too."
While American breeders hav
done much importing of top sta'
lions from Europe and
Australi
in recent years, the • major p"oint
.out, foreign breeders have not ha
1he dollars to make similar pui
chases from this country until no\\
when restrictions have been ease
just a little.
i
NEW
YORK, (Ifi ' When' ; Alii
Reynolds slipped.on.a showejr ma
and gashed the index finger of hi
throwing hand the other day, th
Yankees as likely as not toft wha
ever chance they had of overhaul
ing Cleveland in the next Ameri-
can League race.
It is not definite that the Chief, is
through. Last we saw they were
talking about doing a plastic sur-
ery job on the injured digit after
has healed, and there appeared
o
be some
hope that the great
ompetitor from Oklahoma would
e able to report e.t St. Petersburg
cxl spring. But from this distance
doesn't look gocd.
Allie is 37 by the official record,
nd there is reason to surpect that
e might be crowding 40. For some
eason never entirely clear, base-
all players like the fudge of their
ges. At -any. rate, the big
fiist-
aller was nearing the end of his
aroer before the accident befell
im. It figured that he would have
;reat difficulty
overcoming even
ic slightest impairment of his ef-
i.ciency.
Another factor'mitigating against
it- return is the' fact that AlHc
vill have no burning incentive to
ive it one more whirl. Hi? invest
ments in oil wells and such have,
rom all accounts, made him fi-
nancially independent. If we know
he man who pitched two nohitters
n .a single season ar.d who
has
ierce pride in his skill, he will
not be back'unless he is firmly con-
'inced that he still can win.
Some may feel that our opening
'stimate'of the Chief's'importance
.o the Yankees is a little, strong.
We will stick-by it. Casey Stengel
needs the services of his
veteran
stopper for another year or two I
while his mound staff is in a period
cf transition, until his young pitch-
ers are ready to take over
the
entire, burden. They, the
young-
sters such as Bob Grim and Whitey
Ford, will not be ready to bent
Cleveland . on - their
own next
Farmer Star to
Watch Razorbaeks
LITTLE BOCK
Iff)
Ben
H.
WirMoman, an all-time Arkf sas
football great, has notified Slcre-
tary of State C. G. Hall that
lie
will attend the University of Ar-
kansas homecoming footbal gania
ne::l Saturday in FayctteviHe.
Windkleman played on the 19JS.
191b,1920 and 1921 Arkansas teams
r.s halfback
and end. He
was
named to thtf all-SouthU-est Con-
ference teams in both position*.
lie graduated from the University
in 1922.
The clash between the un
ed Razorbaeks and Southern
odisl, with the conference chartl*
rfonship hanging in the balancs,
will be the first homecoming a
Fayetteville Wlilkleman has
at-
tended since his graduation.
-
Winkleman's c.oaching cawer has
included jobs at. the University of
Cincinnati. Stanford and San Jose
State College. He now is in,the
real estate business .at P^lo. ;AloJ,
Calif.
season.
lian Horned.Frogs ionienlratqH on
offense for their battle with the
Longhorns. Coach Abe Martlnj.se'nt
his charges thorough long passing
and running maneuvers and is aid
they would scrimmage but- rlittle
this week.
i •
Rice, latest.victim of the. Arkan-
sas juggernaut; worked in sweat
shirts while the No. 2 team scrim-
maged 'the Rice freshmen.
All-
American candidate. Dickey Mj>e_gje
was on the injured list wi '
Taylor, but.
Coach Jess,
thought they would be re.ady lor
the Texas Aggies on Saturday.
The Agpics took it comparatively
easy at College Station wlver'e
Coach Bear Bryant said he-iWoUld
t his top men skip -contact jWork
r most of the remaining
essions.
At Waco, the Baylor Bears took a
ojiday. They have no game;,this
eekend, but Coach George Sauer
lanned a light -workout-Tijjksday
nd hard scrimmages Wednesday |
nd Thursday.
handoff instead of through center,
it i worked for
"Motfre"
yardage
Mrs. Viola Glover of Chidester
died at her' home Saturday, Nov-
ember 6. Funeral
arrangements
re incomplete,,
WANTED'
TO BUY;
One inch rough green
Oak Lumber —- regular
lengths and tie siding.
Fpr prices pnd specifica-
tions write —
GURDON LUMBER
'COMPANY
PilRNE, ARKANSAS
Mr. and Mrs. Berry Randle and
on, Berry and Mrs, Ollie McCanic
motored to Arcada, La., on Sunday,
November 7, where they visited re- j
atives and friends.
Fights Last Night
By The Associated Press
Brooklyn
Gene (Cyclone) Full-
mer,
154'/^, West Jordan.
Utah,
outpointed Jackie La Bua, 158'/t,
Strict* Offered
15-1 CeU
John Sidney Braggs of Emmet
led at his home Sunday, Novem-
er 7. Funeral arrangements are
ncomplete.
134, to be exact.
In Arkansas' 21-20 victory over
Baylor, sophomore tailback Buddy
Benson
of the
No.-2-team Tan
jvith the ball nine times on end
sweeps jn an ll-play drive that car
ried the, porkers to . within
easy
field goal distance-arid Carpenter,
kicked the three-pointer that won
the game.
Against Mississippi, the
clutch-
playing Hogs tried only one long
pass-a 66-yard Benson
Carpenter
maneuver for .the victory tally.
Unfortunately, there are no sta
tistics to
show how
many of
Moore's 534 yards
rushing-second
only to Moegle in the Southwest
Conference
have been
.made
through the air.
UP Ranking
Also Lists
Porkers 4th
By NORMAN MILLER
NEW YOR K CUP)
UCLA
pulled further away.. from
Ohio
State and Oklahoma today in . the
three-team race for the national col-
lege football championship, while
Iowa and Navy, advanced
amoria
this week's top 10 in the United
Press ratings.
The powerful Bruins from
the
Pacific
Coast conference, . who
have Averaged nearly 42 points per
game in scoring eight straight vic-
tories, were the first-place choice
of 26 coaches on the 35-man Unit-
ed Press rating board.
UCLA 's point-total of 338 was
"iinds .Notre ,pame . agair.st North
Carolina, Ariny vs. Pennsylvania,
Southern California vs.. Washing-
ton, Mississippi vs. Houston, and
Navy vs. Columbia.
Wisconsin, seeking to .-regain a
place ambng the'top 10, moved up
to llth place this week, followed by
Minnesota,
Baylor
and ' Miami
(Fla). Purdue and Southern--Meth-
odist were tied fnr 35th. and then
came Cincinnati, Miami (O.) anj
West Virginia in order,
Miqhigan
and Penn State were tied for 20th
Nebraska. Rice, Maryland, .Geor-
gia and Michigan Stute also re
ceived points in this week's voting.
NEW YORK (UP) ' The .United
Press college football ratings (with
first-place votes and won-lost rec-
SMU Half back
May Miss the
Game Saturday
By The Associated Press
The .two "surprise" teams of the
Southwest Conference
- Arkansas
and Texas
worked on the same
goal Tuesday:, .a winning conbina-
tion.
Arkansas,
picked for the .cellar
by sportswriters and broadcasters,
was preparing for its conference
battle with Southern Methodist and
aiming' for its eighth straight win.
Texas was just
looking for a
winnng .combination. The
Long
Legal Notice
.
lorns, five-time lo'sers, winners o:
wo victories and a tie, were pickcc
overwhelmingly for the conference
championship. The Longhorns will
ry to salvage part of their formei
only
12
short
of
a
perfect
Mr. and Mrs. George Smith Jr.,
ind Mr. and Mrs. Craton Epps
ipeht Thursday in Springhill, La.,
rlsiiing Mr. and Mrs. Willie Thom-
as.
New York 10.
flew York
Kenny Lane, 137,
Legal Notice
S'o. 7681
In the Chancery Court of
,
Hempstead County, Ark.
Frances Messer ....... Plaintiff
vs.
Walter L. Messer ... Defendant
YVARNINQ PBPgR
The defendant Walter L, Messer
4 warned to appear in this court
within thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, Frances
esser.
Witness w hand and the seal
of s,»<4 cpurt this 8 day of Novem-
ords in parentheses):
Team
1. UCLA (26) (8-0)
2.
Ohio State (7) (7-0)
Oklahoma (2) (7-0)
4. Arkansas (7-0^
5. Notre Dame (5-1)
6. Army (6-1)
7. So. Calif. (7-1)
Points
333
310
* 282
243
177
155
!)2
83
65
Transfer of
Athletics
Is Approved
By JOE REICHLER
NEW
YORK
Iff)
Having won
lis four-month fight' to purchase
the
Philadelphia
Athletics
and
transfer the franchise to Kansas
City, industrialist Arnold Johnson'
today tackled the prpblem of hir-
ing a field and general manager.
He may disclose some of
his
plpns at a press conference today.
Elated
by the 6-2 vote of ap-
proval given him by the American
League, Johnson yesterday said he
had an open mind on the manageri-
al situation. He said he had talked
to no one about the jobs but had
many applications.
It was learned that Lou Bou-
dr<eau deposed manager of the Bos-
ton Red Sox has the inside tracn
Jo the field
managing job, ?nd
Paike CarmU, who was business
manager of the New York Yan-
kees Kansas City fani club in the
American Assn., is a top pandj-
flate for general mi»n,9gcr.
Johnson's
architects have . been
score and the highest compiled by
any team, this season. Of the coach-
es
who did not vot<; the Bruins
tops this week, six picked them
second and three for third.
That support widened UCLA's
margin from 17 to 28 points over
Ohio State and from 28 to 56 pointi
over Oklahoma. Ohio State attract-
ed reven first-place ballots and 310
points; Oklahoma had two first-
place votes and 282 pints. Both
have won seven in a row.
UCLA, with a chance for (he first
perfect season in its football his-
tory, itakes next Saturday off be-
fore winding up its schedule Nov.
20
against
Southern
California
(ranked seventh this week). That
game also should decide the PCC
championship, although Coach Hen
ry (Red) Sanders' men are not
eligible
for
the Rose Bowl be
cause they played last New Year's
day.
A comparatively forrnful week-
end left the top six teams in the
exact same order of (he previous
week, Arkansas, A» my and Notre
Dprne following third-ranked • Ok-
lahoma in that order. Southrn Cal-
ifornia and Mississippi each moved
8 Mississippi (8-1)
9. Iowa (5-2)
10. Navy (5-2)
Second 10 teams
11. Wiscon-
sin, 26; -1'2. Minnesota, 20; 13. .Bay-
lor, 18;
14. Miami (Fla), 9; 15.
(tie',, Purdue • and Southern Meth-
odi»1, 8 each; 17 Cincinnati, 7; 13.
Miami (O.), 6; 19. West Virginia,
5; 20. (tie), Michigan and
Penn
State.
Oihcrs
Nebraska, 3; Rice, 2;
Maryland, Georgia and Michigan
State, '1 each
prestige
with their game thif
&
for
nishe
Mon
weekend with
Texas
Christian's
brash
sophomores
and
Texas
tough
but virtually win
ess
Cadets
. on
Thanksgiving
Day.Bc.th look like rough assignments
Arkansas, ranked fourth in the na
tional Associated Press poll again
;odty, still must face Louisian:
State arid the University of Hous
ton after playing the vastly im
proved Mustangs this Saturday.
"We've still got three games t
play," Razorback Coach B.owde
Wyatt said as his boys "-'-•--
their regular light duties
day and went t othe showers. Thj
Porkers, Wyatt admitted, were i
good condition.
Longhorn mentor
switched Billy Quinn back to ful"
back in his search for a winnin
combine. He moved Don Marone;
and Bill Long down to the seconi
and third teams ond said: "We'r
trying..." . .
As the Methodist started
prep
arytions for the highly-ranked Hog
their regular left halfback, Don Me
Ilhenny, was on the doubtful stal-
er )ist. He 'suffered a bruised kic
ney in the close 6-3 victory ove
the Aggies last Saturday. The Mus>
tangs may start John
Marshal
high-scoring soph, in place of M
Ilhenny.
At Fort Worth, the Texas Chri
Ed
Pric
,
ber
Willis,
surveying the
City par*
for weeks end ^re ready to beg"
the seating
to a?,09P
from
and to about |§,000
the
up one notch to seventh and eighth,
respectively, and then tame Iowa
and Navy t0 round out the top 10.
Iowa, moving up fron? 12th to
ninth place, and Navy, jumping
from a tie for 18th .to the 10th rank-
ing. replaced Purdue and Miami
(Fin) among the select group.
V/ith points awarded on a 10^9-8-
7.5.5.4,3.2-1
scale for each vote
from first to 10th place, Arkansas
had 243 points, moving wilhin strife
ing distance of the leaders after
its seventh straight tiiumph; No-
tre Pame had 177 points, Avmy
J55, Southern California 92, M>
&Jssippi 3, Iowa' 65 and N»yy 59
Oliio State, Oklahoma
a.r.ijl Ar-
kansas, the three teams ranked
hind first place, aach c«n cll
s tie for its conference champion-
next Saturday. Ohio State
15th ranked
$<*. •• %
*t
•f
*t
HQ 11 S t A tt| M 0
,. Novitfifeef $, t»S4 1
0*A*R IR1
/ THATS STRANGE, Ji
> BUT it SEEMS LIKE s
SOMEONE'S CALLING
I U.L. TTLJ t i»i T r~IL-WN^»-» ,,—»i
^ UP HERE BETWEEN us-^N
THAT'LL KEEP THE LIGHT J
*~r FROM SHINING v-**'•
GOING TO READ? 1 CAN'l
v_, SLEEP WITH THAT
(. i.inuir eiui.KJis.ir: „,
BUT IT SEEMS LIKE
SOMEONE'S CALLING
.MV NAME FROM •*
i ( SOMEONE'S CALLIr
. * V MV NAME FROM
| ^t FAR.FARdFF
isUttK Wl I M If
LIGHT SHINING
* IN MV EVES ^
Vl J N <l*fhrt Vf ift. * t
. .. *.
»t f.-* f i »* M K ft innVt Sj-^*ft tn«
"*
"
ftv Mlehdil 0'M«H.y dhd R
By J. R. Williams
OUT OUR WAIT
Answer to Previous Puzzle
TELL US/
SAY SOME-
THING/
l£> THAT
YOURS?
THE
HAD EATlM'
UP A ELK/
IT STUCK
OUT THEIR
EARS.'
AT IMS &APE;$HS
UAT6IZ,
- -. ACROSS
3 Greek letter
1 Screen actress, 4. Britannia's
'i
>-,
A
snear
spear
5 Pronoun'
6 Sea (Fr.)
7 Willow '
8 Sleeveless
garment
9 Passage (n the
brain
t, 6 She is a
HI, performer
'•H.Needier
13 Sets anew
14 Dress
15'Gets up
16 Leaping
amphibian
17 Not (prefix)
be (Fr.)
20 Lurer
23 Solitary
10 Essential being25 Heavy blow
41 Italian city
12 Lease
27 Asterisk
42 Feminine
13 Malice
28 Raw silk
' appellation
18 Petroleum
weight
district (two 29 Son of Adam
creature
words)
(Bib.)
' 44 Shield bearing
21 Compass point34 Mineral rock 47 Fruit drinks
WASH TUBES
48 Withered
49 Formerly
51 tiolf device
35 Peruser
36 Dispatches
oi, «,?asim,°dic/a u^24 Openwork
39 Pair (ab,)
53 Note 7n
SJKuSp1*1'
fabdc
40 Small llsh
Guide's
33 Frozen water
34'Boundary
'' (comb, form)
38!Uncomrnon
37 Weight of
' India
38 Scottish
•
' ''sheepfold
'^Hazard
|40 Sfeal-hunting
mariners
142 Esau
45 Cental surgeon
<ab.)
46iFacility
SO-Rounded
52 Otter
54 Bank worker
55 Church
officials
. 22 Roof finial
sP"ng23 Egyptian
COULP^
DIDN'T A WO^\N'& CP-V...
I
.
HOM,B.,,.6.
THEY'RE NOT
THE
40PE ONE OF-
PRIMM, TWINS
TURW&'OUTTO
LIFEIS LOMC5E&T MINUTE
Cw. ,.M t, „, „,.»., ^. T.. .^ „ ,,,.,, „,.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
With Major Hoople
AND HER BUDDIES
6 Mountain spur
7 Property item
•-
*•
•v '-'WWUfe&ts
, *;./*r/t,Ea^«>
1DOWN
IPetty quarrel
1 ,.•> -2 -Movement
(rnusic)
By Dick Turner
CARNIVAL
BUGS BUNNY
FUNNY BUSINESS
By Hershbergei
^V^ <"^
' -> *
k~ ' r-T^-hf
ALLlEY OOP
YEAH-.THAT BUCK LOOKS
-.
STRONG AN1 HEALTHY
TOO.. ENOUGH TO GIVE
KNOCK 'IM7 WOODS WiTHOUT\
U5 A LOTTA TROUBLE
WHEN HE FINDS WE'VE
TAKEN HIS WOMAN,'
' V'No, the car wasn't hurt much—the truck driver wain't
trying to beat ITS brains out!"
By Galbroith
SIDE GLANCES
'fl'hope you like buckshot—by the time Wilbur had the
[ \
» rabbit dressed there wasn't anything else left!"
~
~~
By NaJine Selzer
'S A BOOK
HOW
VSMQKIN© C...
YOUR MONEV
THi STORY QF MARTHA WAYNI
.
THST
i MOU NlfpNT50M5 TPTW
W'TH
bitter Mp 'Wm with thpf§ pr«*l*m*
my I svsr -painf slg«br» mta bri|?|ln|( Ihi
*
1
>
3. 7653
In the Chancery Court of |
'
Hempstead County,: Ark. |
George Scoggins
vs.
. . . •,
Odessa Scoggins .... Defen^flnt •
WARNING ORDER
'
;
The defendant, Odessa Scojginsp
s warned to appear in thlsjwourt-1
A-ithin thirty days and answer the
complaint of the Plaintiff, George
Scoggins. ..
,
.
. .
Witness my hand and the -seal of
said iourt this 8 day of."-"—1- —
1954.
'
^,
Garrett Willis, Clerk
By L. C. Byers, D. C,
(SEAL)
. E. Grain,
Attorney Ad Litem
:
John P. Vesey,
Attorney for Plaintiff
Oct. 9, 16, 23, 30
Legal Notice
NOTICE
IN THE PROBATE COURT
OF HEMPSTEAD
COUNTY, ARKANSAS
IN THE MATTER OF THE .
ESTATE' OF C. W. BARNES,
DECEASED
-
Last known address of decedent:
Hope, Arkansas
_
Date of death of decedent: October
10, 1954
Ah instrument dated October
1954,
was
on the
27th day of
October, 1954, admitted to Frpbatfe
as the last will of the above named
decedent,
and
the
undersigned
have "been' ' appointed
exe'cutors
thereunder.. A contest of th.p prV-
bate of the will can be /, ,
only by the filing of a petition
within the time provided by Igw.A
All persons having claims ^
the estate must exhibit theml^
verified, to the undersigned , ,
six months from the date b.f. thjr.
first publication of this. notipe,. pi
they shall be forever barred and
precluded from any benefit In th*
estate.
This notice first published th,«
2nd day of November, ^954.
L. H. Parris,
' Robert Cassels, Executor
Mail Address:
c/o. John P. Vesey
First National Bank" • '
Building
.
' , j
Hope, Arkansas
' ;
Nov.
2, 9
Tm lost my
head over the
955 FORD'S
V
new
THUNDERBIBD
STYLING!
?"if?V
ri -
H0!pt S T A R , H O P E , A R K A N S A S
f u£*day, November 9, 1954
Br Kill* Deer,
I Heart Attack
Welt
«fid
a teart at*
, 66, a druggist,
Kiwitn
a
group
of
slaffd 14 miles north'
'»# Highway 84. His
iafd
when he shot
c,he suffered the at-
dled imme-.
tli*iday
*Bre Preseoit
Musical Coterie
ill ttieet on Tuesday evening, in-
stead of Wednesday evening as
brevloilsly anrtdunced, In the home
of itfs, C. C. Thomas at 7 o'clock
with Mrs* W. P. Cummlngs co-hos^
tess.
•
to the
g
Dale Mai'
Fphoned lor att
, Old
ir, Tex, UP)
Walter
^
, , 'the oldest of four
^veterans still living, will
I'W 112th, birthday annlver-
"
l "
A
6< Confederate veteran,
health., .
Civil War veter-
A. Lundy,
108.
Fla., and John Stall-
Slant, Va, of the Confed-
andJAlbcrt W oolson,
., of the Union
PRESCOH NEWS
: .
..,.„.,-„..
Wednesday November- 10
Mrs.
Saxon Regan will be hostess
to the Wednesday Bridge Club
at
her home on. Wednesday afternoon
at 2 o'clock.
>lants decorated the home of Mrs.
3. V. Fore on f rielay afternoon
when she was hostess to the 1950
lanasta Club.
High score honors were, held by
Mrs.
Jim Yancey.
At the close of the games! a de-
ectable salad and sandwich course
was served to members Mrs. Fred
Powell, Mrs. H. J. Wilson, Mrs. J.
B. Hesterly, Mrs. C, G. Gordon,
Mrs. Homer Ward, Mrs. ilmon Gee,
Vtrs. Yancey and a guest Mrs. W.
P. Cunnings.
The men of the Presbyterian Ch-
urch will have the monthly dinner
and program at the church Wed-
nesday evening at 6:30. Haskell
Jones of Hope will be the guest
speaker.
Thursday November 11
National Educational week will
be celebrated with an Open House
at the High School and Junior High
School on Thursday from 1:00 to
3 p. m. The P. T. A. will meet in
the High School auditorium at 3
p. m. instead of in the Park Ele-
mentary School.
arlie by"Vic"Cobb
Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Bryson and
daughter Sarah Janet, Mrs. J. V.
McMahen
and
daughter,
Betsy
Jane, attended the Shriners Circus
in Little Rock Thursday.
Mrs. Edgar Andrews and Miss
Carolyn Andrews motored to Tex-
arkana Thursday for the day.
Defense Hints
New Issue in
Ohio Slaying
By H. 0. QUIOQ
CLEVELAND, O.
(UP)
Samuel H. Sheppard's defense hint
el today that his wife's murderer
might have had a woman accom-
pliace,
'
Sheppard, 30, an osteopath-sur-
geon, is accused by the state of
savagely beating his wife to death
last July 4 after a quarrel about
his attentions to other women.
Cross-examining the pathologist
who made the post-mortem exam-
ination of the body, Chief Defense
Counsel William J. Corrlgan sud-
3 SUSPECTS KILLED
MEXICO CITY ,/P)
In a blaz
ing gun« battle federal police yes-
terday killed three men wanted for
questioning in connection with ah
$80,000 robbery at the home of for-
mer Mexican Finance Minister Ra-
mon Beteta. Two police agents also
were slain.
Officials said the men. led by
t)r. JMarciano Vazquez, opened fire on
the officers trying to make the
arrest.
Marilyn Sheppard died of suffo'ca-
lion from her own blood.
The state charges that Sheppard,
30-year-old osteopath-surgeon, blud-
geoned his wife to death with re-
peated savage blows oh the head
after the two had quarreled over
Sheppard's
attentions to
other
women during the nine-year mar-
p,yv;'\
•
~
rley/oll you need is one
fietnew T. V. sets sold
MMfeobb'-cind you can
Yeat;jng~the glasses.
'S
7-2598
" '
W. C. T. V. Haa
November Meeting
The W. C. T. V. met on Thursday
afternoon in the home of the pre-
sident, Mrs, J. T. McRae for the
November meeting with Mrs. Theo
Elgin and Mrs, A. L. Turner
co-
hostesses.
Beautiful arrangements of roses
decorated the rooms and the dining
table held a Thanksgiving center-
piece designed with a horn of plen-
ty, persimmons and turkey pine
cones.
- Mrs. McRae presided and the
meeting was opened with prayer
and the song "Go Ye Forth and
[Seed be Sowing."
Reports of the 75th convention
held in Little Rock were given'by
Mrs. Burke Shelton, Mrs. S. O. Lo-
gan and Mrs. McRae. Highlights of
the 80th National Convention held
in Lexington,
Ky., in September
Were given by Mrs. J. B. Hesterly.
Mrs. J.,W. Teeter gave the devo-
tional on "Power of Strength" bas-
ed on the 6th beatitude, Mrs: Joe
R. Hamilton reviewed a chapter of
the study.
The meeting closed with the Aar-
onic benediction.
Miss Sue Marshall of Little Rock
was a guest.
: A delectable dessert course was
served.
Mrs. N. N. Daniel accompanied
Mr. and Mrs. Crit Stuart Jr., of
Hope to Hot Springs on Thursday.
Miss Mary Jewell Herring .spent
Thursday in Little Rock.
Miss Martha
Mitchell has
re-
turned to Henderson State Teach-
ers College, Arkadelphia after
a
visit with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Mitchell.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Hirst who
have been the guests of Dr. and
Mrs. O. G. Hirst and other rela-
tives, left Friday for a visit with
their daughter, Mrs. Ralph Scott
and family in Little Rock before
returning to their home in Wash-
ington, D. C.
Mrs. T. R. Moberg, Misses Fred-
die and Barbara Moberg, Mrs. Bill
Call and Miss Wyonda Dail have
returned from Memphis where they
were the guests of relatives.
•Mr.
and Mrs, Carl White spent
a part of last week in Denton, Tex-
as with their daughter Miss June
White, who attends T. S. C. W.
denly asked:
Was there called to hour at-
tention a woman's fo'otstep in the
?and after the murder?"
The Witness, Dr. Lester Adelson,
deputy
coroner,
said
after
a
pause:
I was shown a woman's foot-
print in thf> sand."
The defense attorney did not pur-
sue that line of questioning. He in-
dicated later, however, that a wo-
man accomplice mipht be part of
the defense strategy.
Dr. Sheppard is on trial for his
life. During a morning of testi-
mony by Dr. Adolson abou thow he
picked .into
Marilyn
Sheppard's
brain in the autopsy, Dr. Shep-
pard at times
closed
his eyes,
clasped his
hands
and
seemed
abcut to break down.
At other
times he whispered medical
ad-
vise to the cross examining at-
torney.
Corrigan made much of what he
contends was "bugling" of the au-
topsy. He also brought out that aft-
er the autcpsy Dr. Adelson
had
heard some of the rumors
that
swept, Cleveland about the
killing.
riage. 7
.
Chief Defense Counsel William J.
Corigan also made every
effort
to bring out hi.3 contention that
Dr. Adelson was negligent in the
atuopsy and in the report he wrote
about it.
Friends of Mrs. L. L. Mitchell'
will be glad to know she has re-
turned to her home.after under go-
ing major surgery at the Texark-
ana Hospital, Texarkana.
' '
EHPERT
serusce
W H H -
jUALITY and
NDABILITY
ut fill thos«
-Druggist on duty
* Calll PR 7-3*24
from 7
liitfPrug
By H. D. QUIGG
CLEVELAND, O.
UP)
Dr.
Samuel H. Sheppard sat in an at-
titude of prayer today while
a
medical examiner told in minute
detail how he picked into Shep-
pard's beaten wife's brain in a
lp,0sf -mortem examination.
In a prolonged cross-examina-
tion of Dr. Lester Adelson, coun-
ty deputy coroner, the defense in
the Sheppard murder trial seemed
to be trying to establish that Mrs.
Like Having Clinic's
Special Prescription
FOR YOUR PILES
Of course, when you get an ointment
for shrinking piles, you'd like a
special prescription, from a clinic,
for your case. That's virtually what
you get, in Thornton Minor Clinic's
ointment. AH the experience of not
one doctor but a full medical as well
as surgical staff is behind it; it re-
sults from study of more than 75,000
cases seen in the clinic. So, it is not
iust a "modified skin salve" but a
specialized pile prescription designed
to deal with specific problems o£
itching, bleeding, swelling, pain. If
you want an aid to reduce piles the
non-surgical way, use a clinicnUy-
approved prescription—Thornton
Minor. Oiittment or suppository form
—$1.00 at all druggists'.
We're Really Excited !! !! !
WHAT YOU DREAMED
COUIDN T HAPPEN- DID!
ANOTHER
FORD FIRST
Wai* and Watch for Thursday's Hope
Star. Make plans now to be in Hope
All Day Friday, November 12th ...
and go to the ....
CO,
Your Ford Dealer for Over 30 Years
Phone 7-2341
HOPE, ARK.
220 W. Second St.
•
1, Carolyn Andrews Chose
'Homecoming Queen
The Prescott Curley Wolves have
chosen Miss Carolyn Andrews, dau-
ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar An-
drews, to reign as queen at the
Homecoming game
at Cummins
Field'Friday night, November 19th
when they meet the Hope Bobcats.
Miss Mary Jewell Herring, dau-
ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Hansel Her-
ring will serve as maid of honor.
Maids in the Hoyal Court will
be:' Miss Rebecca Lynn Gary, dau-
ghter of Mr, and Mrs. V. S. Gary;
Miss Simone Golden, daughter
of
Rev. and Mrs. W. D. Golden; Miss
Genevieve King, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Karl King Jr., and Miss
Marta Ligon, daughter
of
Mr.
and Mrs. Freeman Ligon.
Mrs. J. V. Fore,
Hostess To
Canasta Club
Arrangements of roses and pot
Completely
THE
STORY: Greg Seaver, a
yoi'na man who wants tp do things
on his... own, leaves the relative
security of working for his step-
father to chauffeur a y/ealthy in-
valid, Wade Daggett. "Dagdett is
paralyzed and this has
left his
face disfigured. They Have picked
up Rupert Landusky, an alien Il-
legally
in the
country, as they
travel In Daggett's car and trail-
er.
Reaching
no
decision about
what do do with Landusky, who
suffered from exhaustion and near
starvation when they found him,
they dine at a tavern. Rupert In
nocenTly precipitates trouble with
some
young
hoodlums who
are
botherin'g a girl, In retalllatlon the
hoodlums ridicule Daggett,
SfOPsiMPLE
DIARRHEA
Qaf Fair, Soothing Relief with
PIRCY MEDICINE
APPLES
if.'p
1-*'
Pfi, Pure Ribbon Cane Syrup
ji;|t Plenty of Good Sorghum
|^i;; Best Country Eggs in Town
liSELL'S CURB MARKET
Phone 7-9933
XIV
CONSTRUCTION
, Farm Buildings and Industrial Buildings
Qccpr.ding to specifications. Can be con-
t'low cost,
CAU . . , PR 7-4W3
for complete informotipn,
KETT STEEL &
EQUIPMENT CO,
ALLEN
C CO.
Sam blundered to his feet. "La
dies and gents," he began like a
sideshow barker, "for 10 cents, one
dime, the tenth part of a dollar,
you can see old Push in the face,
the only man in captivity"
Greg's chair fell over with a
crash and his whole weight was
behind his arm as his fist smashed
full
against the jeering mouth.
Sam, taken by surprise, sat on
the floor, dabbing at the blood
that.ocfeed from his cut lip. The
waitress set down her tray, shak
ing too much to serve the meal.
Sam struggled to his feet and
his head rocked as Greg Struck
him again.
The third man seized
Greg's
arm. "Hold it, Bud. I'll get this
bunch out of here. We don't want
no trouble. You'd better look after
Ihe old gentleman."
Greg turned around. Daggett, see
ing his savage anger, managed a
faint smile.
Gre lifted him to his feet and
took his good arm while Rupeit
followed them, carrying Daggett's
walking stigk as though it were
a drawn sword. No one spoke or
moved as they made their slow
progress through the dining room
and the lobby and Greg lifted Dag-
gett
into the
car.
When
they
reached the trailer camp, Daggett
lay down, on his bed.
Rupert looked curiously at Greg,
"I didn't knew you had it in you."
Seeing
Greg's
expression
h i s
brows arched expressively and he
wheeled and went put of the trail-
er.
At last Daggett said, "Don't take
it so hard, Greg. Things like that
happen to the handicapped. It's
a kind of instinct. It gives e weak
person a feeling of power to turn
on a weaker, That's all the. per-
secution of minorities .is, really.
There is no pportmanship in na-
ture.
Kindness is a thing one
learns."
his way into a crowd in front of
one o'f the booths. When he real-
ized that Greg was in pursuit he
began to run in earnest,., heading
for the unlighted ar?a behind the
laooths. He turned and tw'Isted like
an eel
If. he. had not stumbled
over a Ipose plank lying, on the
ground and lost his balance, he
would have go't away. Before he
could
regain
his
stride,
Greg
tackled him and he fell headlong
with Greg sprawling on top.
The thief
lifted his knee and
Greg, threw himself tp' /one- side
to avoid the blow. There were run-
ning footsteps and a girl- paused
beside them.
"My handbag," she panted. "He
stole it. Where is it?"
She
was the girl whom Greg
had
seen
once before that day,
laughing on the edge of the crowd.
In his surprise at recognizing her.
he relaxed his hold and his cap-
tive squirmed away, got to his feet,
and dashed for the sheltering dark-
ness.
Greg stood up, brushing off his
tro'users. "Sorry I messed that up.
Was there much money in your
bag?"
Her face was drained of color.
With a mechanical ' gesture sho
brushed back the fair hair that
whipped across her .cheeks. "All
I have in the world,"
Greg whistled. Seeing her dazed
expression he said, "You had bet-
ter get a -?op. Report it right away."
When she did not move, he touched
her
arm. "I'll go along if you
like."
Ifour everyday driving
Now—Gulf refines out the "dirty-burning tail-end" of gasoline—the No.l trouble-
maker in high-compression engines. Then Gulf specially blends new Super-Refined
No-Nox for top economy in the kind of driving motorists do most.
-j-jj^vwjjmr-nj-jr. j. l.'. j. L .'. U.J.JA iLUjlMM-.yXrS'^ & rfffffftfrf^y***"**
ffffff
• "• •»•"*»•« ff
'f/f"
" f{*fnt •"'"
""
ppy mr""'",(^vw-^v.yvw. VI• • Wjgf• V£ •£&£>X»J JftJf^S^ *
,-•
*> \
fy,S
'
*
"
tf'-^vMk'-'V'
&
*
ANNOUNCES A NIW P0U$Y!
New yw f«in h?vf yswr Horn*
te mft t Mm
^U p
new
fo
<
,.i>. *i
,«12 Easy Payments
arfl«-10%DownPoym«i
Creg did not like Daggett's color
and the faint blue line avound his
mouth; he was uneasy about leav-
ing
the old man alpne, but ho
understopd that tonight his pres-
ence would merely be «n irritation.
He
drove as near the
carnival
grounds as, he could, parked the
cay,
and walked Pfl slowly, thrust-
ing his way thvpugh tho crowd.
U was pot wntil a man ran hard
intp him. knocking him o« bal
that he
was jevred '"*'
She
looked at him as though
she had not seen him before.
"There's no reason svhy you should
bother."
"That's okay. We had better get
a move on, before the guy leaves
the fair grounds."
"We won't find him,' she said
in a tone of quiet despair. "That's
the kind of day it has been. Every-
thing has gone wrong."
"Then it is time for your luck
to change." Hearing his own voice
Greg thought, If anyone said that
to
me under the same circum-
stances
I'd haul
off and sock
him.
The girl let him lead her around
the booth and back into the lighted
area. It was not easy to find a
policeman in the crowd but Greg
succeeded at last. He was a young
policeman, with red cheeks and o
prominent Adam's apple, watching
the men who operated the shell-
game in a bemused sort of way.
Greg tpld him what hadi hao-
pened and the policeman ' shook
his
head. "One
of the carnival
people, probably. I don't suppose
there is much chance pf laying
hands on him. They all fctick to-
gether," He pulled out .a notebook.
"Can you describe him?"
"He was wearing a light gray
suit
and he had a green turtle-
neck sweater under his jacket,"
Greg said.
.
.
(To P« Qpntjnued)-'
The "gunk" that takes the "go" out of your engine!
That tar-like, gummy residue is what's left after evaporating
a single gallon of the "dirty-burning tail-end" of gasoline...
the part that Gulf refines out in making new Super-Refined
NO-NOX. There's at least that much "dirty-burning tail-end"
in a tankful of ordinary gasoline! This material, when de-
posited in your engine, is harmful to engine parts, impairs
their performance, leads to costly overhauls.
See the difference Gulf super-refining makes:
Instead of trying to fight harmful deposits with so-
called "miracle additives"—inside your engine—
Gulf believes in preventing them from forming in
the first place, removes the cause—the "dirty-burn-
ing tail-end"—at the refinery, Just look at the pla.tes
in the unretouched photo at left and see what a
difference Gulf super-refining makes!
What's more, besides giving your engine more
complete protection, new Super-Refined Gulf NO-
NOX gives you extra gas mileage in the short-trip,
fctop-and-go driving motorists do most... no knock,
no pre-ignition ,.. stall'proof smoothness.. .plus in-
stant starts andfast,fuel'Saving
warm-up*
/&$.">" \* 'K
&f «/,?/->>•" ^j-«3
&£>: ^yrtl
To City Subscribers:
If you fail to get your Star
please telephone 7-3431 by
6 p. m. and a special carrier
will deliver your paper.
42"t"^i v*
^ VtJLX
56TH YEAR: VOL. 56 — NO. 24
Star of Hope 1899, Pttsi 1927
Consolidated Jan. 18, 1.929
HOPE, ARKANSAS, WE£HESt>AY, NOVEMBER 10,19S4
Member: the Atioetated Prfcit & Audi* Bureau «»
AY. Net Paid Clfcl. ft Met. Ehdlnft Sept. 30, 19S|
Club Folks Told
of Tremendous
U. S. Fire Loss
Quake Hits Areas
in California
UKIAH, Caif.
(UP)
A sharp
earthquake shook parts of Mendo-
cino and Lake counties in north-
ern California to'day, first reports
indicated there was no
serious
damage.
The tremblor.was felt here and
at Lakeport about 10:07 a. m. PST.
Ukiah residents flooded newspa-
per and police switchboards with
phone calls reportng the shake.
Residents said they felt
tha
quake, which had a "slow, rolling
motion," for about five seconds.
Senate Asked
to Ratify Asian
Security Pact
WASHINGTON
President
Accidents,
Hunting Take
Toll in State
/
By The Associated Press
At least nine Arkansans died in
traffic and hunting accidents dur-
ing the first two days pf the state's
Emmet
E. T. Cox
T. Cox,
field
officer.
deer season.
Accidental shooting have
claim-
ed three lives, an arm, a toe an;l
indirectly resulted in; a
traffi c
death.
.
. .
Thomas Blalock, 17, of Dyess,
Eircnhowar today asked the Sen-
ate to ratify the Southeast Asia
collective security pact as "an im-
portant link" in the free world's
defense against any Communist ag-
jgrersion
In a special message submitting
the treaty, the President said it is
designed "to promote security and
peace in Southeast Asia and the
Southwest
Pacific
by
deterrin-
Communists and other aggression
in that area.''
He. added:
"The Southeast Asia collective
defense treaty complements
our
other security treaties in the Pa-
cific and cc-nstitutes an important
link in the collective security of
the free nations of Southeast Asia
and the Pacific."
The Pacific pact was signed at
Manila Sept.
8 by the.... United
States, Australia,
France. New
ealand. Pakistan, the
Phillipines,
14-Year-Old Hunte With Men
Ark., died yesterday after he was
shot
accidentally by his
father,
\vith whom he was hunting west
of Water Valley in -Randolph Coun-
ty.
Western Acturial Bureau of Chica-
go, told a joint meeting of Hope
civic clubs today that fire loss in
the U. S. today is much greater
than the loss in England during the
bombing by Germany.
And he cited figures which re-
vealed that the American loss
by
flflrp. was $300 million more than tho
loss in England during a 24-month
period.
He took a larger city as an ex-
ample. In this city in a single year
S3 persons burned to death and 200
were injured in fires. Of this num-
ber 47 died in home fires and 121
Thailand and the United Kingdom.
The President, asked the Senate
to "give early and favorable con-
sideration" to gratification of
the
were Injured.
Chief cause
of fires is burning
rubbish. Next comes smoking, fol-
lowed by electricity (40 fires per
jfrjday are caused by leaving electric
*'irons on), flame liquids, lightning
"" and television," Mr." Cox"'said.
"."'
Then he told the group that tele-
vision sets are absolutely safe when
properly cared for. Loave the set
at least six inches from a wall and
If it should catch fire, pull the plus,
call.the fire department and wrap
the set in a. blanket but never try
to move it.
"Remember they are safe whejj
properly ventilated and grounded."
ytfjhe reminded.
Getting back to the cost of fires
in America he made the following
comparison: Fires in Italy per ca-
pita loss total 30c; in France, 74c;
in England 96c; and hi the United
The season's first reported death
from an accidental shooting was
Buddy Hamilton about 30, of La
Crosse. lard
county, Hamilton's
shotgun disiharged as he was re-
moving it from an automobile. He
was hunting in the Bandmill area,
15 rr.'iJes west ot Melbourne
Edgar L. Gipson, a 41-year-old
Newton County farmer, t was killed
en route to a desr hunt. Coroner
Otis Davis said the Run pointing
into the rear seat of the car in
which Gipson was seated
fired
when another hunter brushed it.
Eight-year-old Bobby Joe Denton
of Center, Sharp County, was kill-
ed in an ambulance-car crash in
Trumann.
The
boy was being
rushed to a Memphis hospital with
head injuries when the trafiic ac-
c-ident occurred. The boys father
said the youngster was shot when
a .22 caliber rifle accidentally .dis-
charged on a squirrel hunt.
Warren Wood,
36,
of
Siloam
Springs-lost.,an lla,rr^,,,a;f.tei-vhe.-,vas
severely injured. Wood/ hunting in
Madison County, dropped his shot-
gur and the weapon fired. Thomas
Kervin, 16, of Fordyce lost a too.
Kervin was crawling through
n
fence when his shotgun went off.
At least three Arkanscns have
died from apparent heart attacks
while deer hunting and another
person, killed in a traffic accident,
was on his way to a hunting camp.
Little Rock's deathless
traffic
Star photo
Ken (Buckshot) Bobo, 14, was In this successful Spring Hill
deer-hunting party which posed for their; picture In front of The
8Va -building late Mor^y. Behind the; Mm deer in the truck are
Jake Momon, left, and Hoyt Archer. • The deer were killed
Bois d'Arc bottoms.
' • '*
•
_
•
in
treaty.
'
' /
•
The White House said however
the new 84th Congress convenes ' in
January.
He wants the Senate Foreign Re-
lations committee to study
the
treaty between now and then, so
that there can be an early vote on
it next year.
"It is a treaty,"
Eisenhower
said, "for -defense, against
both
open armed attack and internal
subversion."
He went on to say that deluded
in the treaty is an understanding
on hehalf of the United
States
"that the only armed attack in the
treaty area which the United States
would regarn as necessarily dan-
gerous to our peace and security
would be a Communist armed at-
tack."
'
•
The treaty calls, the President
said, "for economic cooperation to
enable the free countries of this
area .to give strength and vigor
pot only militarily;: but fclso so-
•--•-"--
and/ecbnomicay."
Futile Fight
toiLbwe'r;-
IncomeTax
By CHARLES ,F. BARRETT
WASHINGTON Wl
Key
Demo-
crats who led a lutile fight earlier
this year for a big individual in-
come tax cut held out little hope
cr escorts to
protect
American I today for any substantial laxpayei
nilitary- planes on proper missions relief ; in 1955, even '•; .'though
the
Escorts Are
Necessary,
President Says
By CHARLES CORDDRY
WASHINGTON
(UP) Presi-
dent Eisenhower saici today
the
United States should provide flght-
Move to Block
Power Contract
Is Defeated
WASHINGTON UP. Tho Senate
House Atomic Energy Committee
today dcfcp.ted a Democratic at-
tempt to block immediate signing
of the Dixon-Yates .contract.
The committee acted shortly aft
or President Eisenhower said at
his news conference he still favored
the controversial proposal.
The vote was
10-8 along strict
party lines. The 10 .Republicans on
the committee voted 'to table 1
resolution by Sen. Pastore (D-RI)
which would have called on the
Atomic Energy Commission not to
gn the contract to feed private
owcr into Tennessee Valley Au-
writy lines.
After the vote the committee do
ded to resume immediately
its
ublic hearings on the contract.
Fastore's resolution, amended ba-
re the vote was taken, would
ave told the AEC to delay .sign-
ng the agreement until the com-
liltee "shall have had a further
pportunity
to study the ques-
on , . . after/the convening of
he 84th Congress"
Congress meets again next Jan-
'
Shoulders1 Appeal
j
Before Court-
]
ST. LOUIS iff) — The U. S. Court
of Appeals has under submission
appeals of former St. Louis Police
Lt Louis Shoulders and suspended
Patrolman Elmer Bolah who are
serving prison terms for perjury*
in the GreenleasP ransom case.
The action came afte? attorneys
for the two men presented argil'
rrents to the court yesterday.
Merle L. Silvcrstein, Dolnn's at"
totney, argued that a throe-judge"
panel which heard the trial In fed-
eral district court at Karisas City
was ordered to disregard a state-
ment by FBI Agent Frank Staab
that Dolan wanted to change his
grand jury testimony.
States $5.09.
We are not trying to scare
any
one,
merely trying to
make you
conscious of the needless hazards
days
ended
at 185 when Mrs.
Clausel Roby Haydem, 60, of Lit-
tle Reck died last night. 'She was
struck by a car Monday as
she
war,
crossing a Little Rock street.
A traffic accident also caused
1he death of 11-year-old Charles
Ray
and correct
eluded..
them. Mr. Cox con-
Public Invited
to See Film
Operation Ivy
"Operation Ivy," is the title o£
a thrilling film made by the armed
,f'forces showing the
devestating
destructiveness of
the
Hydrogen1
Sc^l]Yy"'g^J"pJliYad'c]phia""and New
bomb, which will be shown here Vork banker. Born in Pittsburgh.
Wednesday night
at 7:30 at the r)ied Momjsy.
Bailey of near McCrory.
The boy was injured in a highway
mishap near Bald Knob Saturday.
He died at a Little Rock hospital.
icar risky areas.
Mr. Eisenhower told his. news
conference that he personally ap-
proved the stiff American protest
to-: Moscow on the shooting down
of an American B-29 "off Northern
Japan
by
two Russian
fighter
planes.
'
-
;. •'
" • • • • • "•"•'•'
•.'^''".
::'-'
i''
;
He said the United States
be-
lieves the nlsr.e had -a right to' fly
Asked about fighter escorts, "Mr.
Eisenhov. ei said that when they
aie necessaiy, and when Ameri-
can planes aie whcie they have
a light to go, then we should use
fighter escoits.
The Piesidents attitude on
tone
Democratic
party
will
contro
Cognress indicated a less favorable
• They .indicated ; a less favorable
budget situation may postpone a
new individual income tax cut un
til 1950, oi- at best permit a small
er cut. than they advocated in the
past Congressional session,
All^O holdover Democrats on tin
tax-writing House Ways and Mean
CornrMttee were polled for thei
viev/s£on a possible individual in
come Stax cut next .year
Of 'jhe nine who replied,
fiv
voicefl doubts about the yuospcct
fpr such a cut, three declined t
make? any foiecast and only Rep
"'[ <D-Mich) said the outloo
ight. Dmgell on Monday an
Deaths Around
the Natton
By The Assocaited Press
RICHMOND, Ind. I.T) Dr. D. J.
McCarthy, 80, who served as per-
sonal surgeon to Queen Marie of
Romania in World War I and was
decorated by the Serbian govern-
ment for his work during 1he war
with a Red Cross unit in Serbia
and Romania. Died Tuesday.
PHILADELPHIA
C.
Allison
City Hall, it was announced
by
Air Force, Reserve
Plight com-
mander William L. Hobbs.
"Finally taken out of wraps by
.the scientists and armed forces,"
said Maj. Hobbs, "the film should
be seen by every one so that they
might know about the power con-
., tained in the bomb and its ettec-
tiveness on the world outlook,"
Hobbs said that the public has
been invited to' view this color film
and has urged all former U. S. Air
Force Personnel to be present a-
long with their neighbors.
Hobbs has urged again that all
FT. LEONARD WOOD, Mo.
Maj Gen. A. C Lieber, 59, former
post and division commander at
Ft Leonard Wood and veteran of
both world wars. Born in Boston.
Died Tuesday,
Nine New Polio
Cases in State
LITTLE ROCK
UPi Nine
new
cases of polio were reported to the
State. Health Deoartment last week,
bringing to 335 the total number
of cases so far this year,
com-
former Air Force personnel contact pared to 290 'by the same date in
him to learn more concerning the 1953.
new "earn while you learn" phase
Three cases were reported from
Public
to Support
Hope C of C
Tuesday, November 16, is
the
scheduled starting date for the 10
55 Hope Chamber
of Commerce
Membership Drive.
Drive
Chairman
Harrell
Hall
states that 70 workers have volun-
teered time and work to complete-
ly cover the city in giving every
business and individual an oppor'
tunity to participate in this great
community effort.
The entire army of workers wu)
breakfast Tuesday morning. Nov-
ember 16 and kick the 1955 Mem-
bership Drive off to a great start.
There are many things that,
a
Chamber of Commerce is called
upon and exepected to do. Its activ-
ities affect the entire community
life, as well as the life of every
individual citizen in the community.
The work and responsibilites
of.
operating
the Chamber of Com-
merce is
'a community-wide pro-
gram and deserves the support of
the citizenry- both in terms
of fi-
nances and working time on
the
part of the individuals.
You owe it to yourself and your
fellow citizen to cooperate in
the
activities of your Chamber of Com-
merce to make Hope, Arkansas a
better place
to live and a more
prosperous community, Mr. Hall
said.
In issuing his statements regard-
ing the beginning of the Member-
ship Drive, Chairman Hall stated
"It is certainly heartening to work
with so many interested and ener-
getic citizens who have
pledged
themselves to put this drive over
and I am
convinced that every
prospective
Chamber
Membei
will be contacted and that the fine
people of this town will cooperate
in giving our Chamber of Comm
erce a new
breath of life and in
puting this drive over the top. It
air-ffferi^sur
one died was very calm.
The President said there was a
dispute between Russia and
the
United States over the area where
he plane was attacked.
The plane was on a
mapping
nission over the northern most
Japanese island of Hokkaido. The
:lane was near. Hanasaki peninsu-
a. The Russians occupy the Haob-
omai island group which is only
hree miles from the tip of the
peninsul
and is in the southern
end of the Kurile island chain.
Mr. Eisenhower said a wartime
agreement gave the Kurile islands
to Russia, but did not definitely
define the. Hoabomai island group
The President also said the gen-
eral Soviet attitude on this inci-
dent seems to be more conciliatory
than
in some
other
insances in
the
past. He indicated that the
Russians may have sent a new
note. Russia's first note said the
B-29
opened fire first.
Other news conference remarks:
1. He said he was not t'.oing to
say that Charles E Bohlen, U. S.
Ambassador to Moscow., v/as wrong
for attending a Soviet reception
just after he had received prelim-
inary repo'rts Sunday evening about
the plane incident The President
said' Bohlen got the bare news of
the incident 30 minutes before the
reception and he had to make up
his mind on the spur of the mo-
ment.
2. He denied reports
that the
United States had ordered Gener-
alisMmo Chiang Kai-shek to bar
Nationalist attacks on the Chinese
mainland. He said the United States
do'es; not give orders to its part-
ners.
^mMn. he will introduce a
early in the new Congies*! to foot)
individual exemptions
for e'ac
taxpayer and dependent by $10'
Wonders
Where Escort
Fighters Were
By ELTON C. FAY
WASHINGTON
UP)
Pentago
Challei
By
kins
Sett.
—,
today, and rah m1jL;a1
challenge1
™*
you ere
they Me,M'"j$j
Soviets Rush
Plans for a
Space Ship
By JOHN ORMONDE
,
SANTA, MONICA, Calif, (UP)
The
Soviet
Union
is rushing
planes for an inter-planetary, space
ship, anrt unless Amreica awakes
to this real danger, the West may
ose
its margin of power,
an
head o£t ».„ at,,
committee >wWd
censure/1
In ,dryt 'i
He
,
task withduupias !j
ever "wlsdom*
courage
might'
Asked if the vote Have a clue to
he probable result of another vote
11 whether to waive a. 30-day lay-
ver period required by lew, the
committee
- c to a i r m a n, Rep.
N. Sterling Cole (R-NY) said:
'It.has every indication of that
eventual outcome."
Challenges
Reds to
for Peace
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UP)
Brig.
Gen Carlos P RomuJo
ef the Philippines challcrged Bus
Fia tcday to make, a positive con
Uibution towards conveiting
tnr
atom to peaceful Use
warnoi
v
,
,
thai Woildwirte atomic conhols ma
be irhnossible.
Romulo spoke in the "atoms
for-peace" debate by the genera
assembly's political and security
ircraft company executive
oday.
said
officials 'professed puzzlement t
day over why a jet fighter esco
oid not go along with a photo bomb
er shot down by Soviet Ml Gs off
northern Japan last weekend.
Spokesmen, said the 'Far
East
Command long has had
authority
to provide "cover" for mapping
and weather planes on rmssioris
where trouble could arise. Such es-
corts are used frequen tly,
they
added.
But military sources said they
were unable to explain why
jet
fighters did not accompany
the
RB 29: assigned to at1, aerial map
ping job over northern Japan close
to
Russian-held
Sakhalin
Island
and the'Kuriles'. Fighter protection
subsequently was provided for
a
second photo bomber which com-
pleted the mission.
committee.
He noted Russia's recent
an
nouncement that it has an.electric
power plant run by atomic energy,
and recalled that a Soviet dele-
gate once told the U. N. of atom-
ic projects for razing mountains
and irrigating deserts.
"It does seem that this is the
opportune
time for
tho
Soviet
Union to make some more concrete
reports and to offer some more ex-
plicit contributions for ..the greater
inowledge o* man in the peaceful
Benefits of atomic energy," Romu
"Building of a space ship by the
Russians would 'have a far-rcach-
ng effect on the West," said Wil-
iam P. Lear, head of Lear,'*Inc,
'We know they're working' hard
at it, too."
Lar said the Russians 'recruited;,
several
top German
/_ scientists',
chiefly from the Nazi missile sta;
ion at Pecnemunde,' after World
War II, for the express purpose
of exploiing the
possibilities ,of
inter-planetary waif are
f \ >,<*»'*'
"The Germans were thinkings Jn
teams of space ships as early
as
... It will be possible
to
a a space ship within a.nothe
._;•," he added, -,\,f
• - t"H
Lear, whose three manufactur-
ing plants produce1 airplane parts');
estimated the building of a space
chip by America would cost about
$1,000,000,000.
,
If we' arer willing, t9 spend that
kind
"
'""
would
then
scientists
tell mo
,
^
,
fectly feasible to priced with the
spaceship ''-project. 'We'a >
itfeed
the same scientists.' who helped
make the atom bomb, because ,th9
materials required for, bulling the
space ship are essentially
the
same.'1,
Lear gave two reasons for f his
939
build
year
of
money, and I think
it
be in the national intc&est)
QUITE A THRILL
SAN
FRANCISCO,
(UP)
Wil*
Ham. R. Ditch, 23, of Oakland,.roar-
ed across the Golden Gate bridge
and downtown San Francisco at
CO '.niles an hour yesterday.
"I was just trying to give you a
thrill"1 iie' told police who. finally
caught him and booked him
on
charges of speeding, reckless driv-
ing and attempting to evade arrest.
All Around the Town
By The *tar Stiff
of the new Air Reserve. He said Benton County. One case each was, ^
surprising if on the op-
that it was now possible for assign- reported from Arkansas,
Asmey
-
»
Tuesday November 16
ed members to attend weekly class- Crittenden. Independence,
Missis- e™§ day Tuesday, Novembei «,,
Many local business houses will
close. Armistice Day (Veterans
Day)
including
the local banks,
the Draft Board office and all ot-
fices in the City Hall.
)
MAN ,»-^w^^
DEQUEEN, I*'
' D<>Y^e Leard,
S3, pf Mineral Springs community
near here was kille<J yesterday
when the car'he was driving went
cut of oooSvol and crashed off the
highway a,bj?ut three miles north
of G}Ua.m jji PP* Cpgpjy,
NEW! SUPER'W3FINED
N
THE
'
,
« ,
' »"' t
» -
es and receive a full day's pay for
attending only two hour sessions,
during which they have a wonder-
ful opportunity to learn some cour-
se while receiving pay.
"Everyone
in the
city,"
said
Hobbs, "should be present Wed-
nesday night to view this amazing
film, "Operation Ivy."
Postoffice to
Close Thursday
Hope Postoffice
will be closed
Yeteians Day with no city oy ru-
ral deliveues or window services.
Special delivery service will
be
mantdined and mail placed in box-
es and dispatched as usual. Stamps
be pm-phased f rom a lobby ma-
sippi and Ouschita counties.
Heart Attack Is
Fatal to Hunter
STUTTGART
1*1
Lee
Jones,
62, a grocer at the Cassacoe Com-
munity near heie, appaienlly died
of a heart attack yesterday as he
was preparing to begin a day of
deer hunting.
Deputy Coroner Howard Morph-
e'w said the man was found near
the edge of a hunting camp by
two companions.
SURPRISE 'FEATURE'
SAN FRANCISCO, (UP)
Of-
ficmls at the new $14,000,000 ai-
povt terminal here d^sccvojed
a
pew leature in the lavish stiuctuv
&ftcr Die fiist rain of the season.
90% of our work is down. Our wor-
kers are ready to go."
Your live here, your family . is
growing up here, if you are com-
pletely satisfied
with everything
then join in and help to keep it
from sliding down hill, then jf you
are not completely satisfied
join
in an help keep it from sliding. It
is your town and you Chamber of
Commerce, will you not help sup-
port it, Mr, Hall concluded.
Defendant Wins in
Circuit Court Case
A Jury found
for the defendant
Mrs. Lillian Woods, sued by
the
General Contract Corp. in a, case
involving
the now defunct Luck
Mptov Company in H.errm$t.ea'd Civ
Austria
Marine Pfc. Ellis V.
RothweU, son of Mr. and Mrs. Han-
'Let Us put it clearly: This is
a challenge to the Soviet Union,
Thit, is a '•'competition. Let us have
the Soviet Union take part
for
everybody's benefit, including its
own."
i
'
, „
The United Nations meanwhile
locked to the United States today
for an explanation of whether
it
is possible to prevent atomic ma-
terials intended for peaceful pur-
poses from being used for
arms
production,
The question was raised by Swed-
ish Delegate Rickard Sandier be-
fore the general assembly's main
political committee. U. S. Ambas-
saclor Henry Cabot Lodge,
Jr,
might give the explanation
to-
"sandler said the/ United States
indicated in a previous
debate
that certain methods were known
that would prevent production
ot
I'tomic materials in peaceful proj-
ects, that could be used for warlike
purposes.
conviction that whichever
" side
makes the first rpacc ship,
will
have a decided edge in the Ea^t-
West cold war.
"First, there's the tremendous
psychological effect, knowing
that
an enemy can strike through qut-
er spree, without your being able
to combat him,
v
"Second, there's tho observatory
effect, which would be quite enor-
mcus. From a space ship, nn er\Q-
my 'cotild televised anything '$ot
could be perceived, and it \vould
also be extremely useful for radar
purposes,'
ri*.j,
Uurtl
tained^VM
fered-fe&ttifr?
McCartfc^aa*'
moire.r'ridiqJJi
™;iV,=,k>o: V*H<
mittens; ciliic.
|apt5.tttiari>
n - * -"<
Pass*
Unions Approve
Atomic Contract
OAK RIDGE, Tenn. W
Amer-
ica's atomic-hydro ge n w eapons
production has been steadied lor
Arrest Sought
in Abduction
HEBER SPRINGS :.fl
< Sh erf ff
Jess Badridge said he has issued,
warrants for two persons whP t()ojc
seven-year-old
Leilani
Gresbpjp
from
the
Quitm^n
community
school about 10 miles" west of 'here
today,
, '
Bnldridge Kaid police are search-
ing for the girl's mother,
Mrs,
Madge Gresham of Dallas, Tex.,
and Mrs. Greham's brother, • Jpo
Love.
Baldrldge
said
the Quitman.
school principal told him the
pie took the child from'the i
yesterday morning over his pro-
test. She was living with her grand-
father, J. A, Greaham,
-
>
State police said that after pick'
ing up the girl the couple was last
seen headed .south on Highway 33,
driving a late-model gray' FprJ
with a
Texas
license,
number
NN-1907,
sengcrs t'of,;
Airline ""
pilot arii
calm wl
plane to
•SCRptrV'i
Qkla., '<>
wp.
..<m*
ff9r*»&&
rold P. Duke of Hope
and
Other successful
deer hunters ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ------- _
checked at the Police Station »ereirine pfc Richard C. Chism, son of
were Verdo Powell, 4 pts. ; J o nn
R g. c>hisp^ Of Hpue.
C. Weaver, Magnolia, 2 pts., " h a v e arrived at Inchon harbor a-
lam .Hatfield
2 pts.;
and Jim
Thompson, 4 pts.
Mrs. Maxine White of the Fas-
hion Shop attended spring fashion
show and market in Dallas this
week,
Jewel M Jacques of the Shover
SUcel School has been appointed
as NCTE Liaison Officei for
the
english department of the ATA at
a lecent meet in Little Rock • • • •
Us a veiy high position in the State
Negro Teacheis Association,
Billy Hcmdon,
son of Mr and
son Rothwell of Hope and husband at least a
year
— alter seven
of the former Nelda F. Bright
of months of'chain-reacting Isoor un-
Blevins . , .and Marine Pfc. Jesse I rest'
with final
approval of a
M. Duke, son of Mr. and Mrs, Ha- package svage boost for 9,000 atom
ic workers.
Ratification by CIO and
AFL.
unions '.representing.".'.GOO
work
ers here nnd ,at Padugah, Ky., vir<
tuolly ends for a year the recur?
jing threat of crippling produption
strikes;, hanging over, both places
since wage 'talks first collapsed
last April 15.
The package deal provides (1)
a C-cent hcuily increase retroac
live to April 15; (2) a 4-cent in
cieate elective Jan. 15. 1955;
board the attack
transport USS
Pkkaway for duty with the
First
'•
' -
Charles
B.
Division in Korea
Matties,, mechanic second, USN,
son of G. H. Matties of Hope Rt.
Four and husband of the former
Nancy Harrington of Phoenix, Ail-
ona,
recently icpoited to the Naval
Air Station at Alameota, Califor-
nia,
(3) an impr vcd holiday schedule,
It lumps together two wage
openers piovided lor each
L. B. Kent who lives south of mpnths m the unio.ii contracts
Rope on Highway 2D brought in a|9nd 1$ a copromlse betweeo
Coral
si>ake
this, moiniqg,
the
most po+sonious leptile m Ameiica
Hs venom attacks the nerves
Mrs. Billy Bob Hemdon oi Fones-t instead of the blood stream. .
City, is scheduled to ship out this j and there is no known ewe . . , ,
week from a Now Juisey poit for .this
&naHe measured 30 mpb.es,
\vH£ the ftrnipd services
here,
CIO deman dot 15 ?ents and man-
agement offer of 6 cents.
»
It does away with, father pro,.
Auction union negptifttlons until the,
cuuent contract.*
IS, when
,
ne#t Qot.
Mayor Called in
to Murder Trtol
ful.
what
to
tUt."
m
By H. D. .
CLEVELAND, O. (UP)
J Soencer Houk of Bay Village
told on the witness itan4 today
how Dr. Samuel H, Sheppard. haq
pointed the finger of suspie^ &
him as the bludgean.mu.rdare,r- pf;
Shepard's pregnant
' wjle,
}yn,Hpuk, who bad, b?en 9 o:o?e
friend and. neighbor of the
pards.
before JN. July* p
testified he had plead,ed wrtji
husband
tp
dcme it,"
arpujid; t » (
Slight Dqmoge
in Accident .
•S^-j
i t r "•
-
1
l <
<i »
v'^v , ,
•, - -fi> /,u 4 ,$^iy^