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Obituary: Billy Slagle (1933-2026)

Billy Joe Slagle left this earthly world on Wednesday – January 21, 2026, at ninety-two years of age. Bill was born on August 20, 1933, to Charlie (Speck) Allison and Lessie (Beauty) Jaunita Slagle at the Keener House in Mill Creek, Arkansas. Charlie and Lessie instilled Christian values and a strong work ethic in a young Bill that served as a solid foundation for the rest of his life.

In 1952, Bill graduated from Boles High School as the valedictorian from a class of seven. In 1953, he married the love of his life, Patsy Barker, whom he shared a solid marriage with for nearly seventy-three years. Also in 1953, Bill was drafted by the army, serving in Germany during the Korean War, earning the rank of corporal by the time of his discharge in 1955.

Bill and Patsy bought the Simkin’s homeplace in 1961, where they raised their children, David and Jody, and enjoyed farm life for over fifty years. Bill reluctantly gave up being a farmer at the age of ninety one after he turned the tractor over in a ditch coming back home after mowing the grass at Boles Southern Baptist Church. Not only did Bill help establish the Boles Southern Baptist Church, but he also helped build the church itself where he served as a deacon for the rest of his life. Bill helped establish the Boles Fire Department and served as Fire Chief for over twenty years. In addition to being a Godly, family man and farmer, Bill put himself through barber school in Little Rock where he graduated in 1965. Bill worked as a barber in a shop in Waldron, Arkansas for close to thirty years, which was conveniently located just across the street from the courthouse, making Bill’s shop a source of town gossip that would rival any old lady gossip gang. Bill was a compassionate man who would cut hair at the rest home in Waldron once a month, free of charge.

Bill was preceded in death by his parents, Charlie and Lessie, his brother Bob Slagle, and his sister, Lucy Wright.

His survivors include his loving wife, Patsy, sister Treva Harberson (Tommy), son David (Robyn), and daughter, Jody; grandchildren: Sidney (Tiffany), Ryan, Savanna (Hannah), Sadie, and his “best bud” Charley Girl (Justin); great grandchildren Kenny (Jack), Anthony, Gary, Haylee (Bryson) of Boles, Arkansas, and Trevor of Nacogdoches, Texas.

Bill’s memorial celebration of life will be 10:00 A.M., Wednesday, January 28, 2026 at the Heritage Memorial Funeral Home Chapel in Waldron, Arkansas.  

Bill was a husband, father, mentor, and leader. He was a man of faith who would lend a hand where needed and advice when not needed or requested. To those who knew him, Bill Slagle was a great man, for those of us who knew him well he was the (Old) G.O.A.T (Greatest Of All Time). May the road rise up to meet you. May the wind be always at your back. May the sun shine warm upon your face; the rains fall soft upon your fields and until we meet again, may God hold you in the palm of His hand.

Obituary: Harold Thomas (1936-2026)

Harold G. Thomas, 89, of Waldron, Arkansas, was born October 1, 1936, in Waldron to Graden Joe and Ida Lillian (Duncan) Thomas. He passed away on January 21, 2026, in Fort Smith, Arkansas, leaving behind a legacy of hard work, faith, family devotion, and quiet strength.

Harold began working at a very young age on his parents’ dairy farm, learning early the value of responsibility and perseverance. After graduating high school, he went to work the very next morning at Barber Construction in Texas, where he worked for two and a half years. He returned home to Waldron on September 15, 1956, and on September 18, 1956, began employment at the Waldron Furniture Factory, where he remained until October of 1989. He then went to work for Tyson Foods on October 12, 1989, and continued there until his retirement on April 1, 2000. In 46 years of working life, Harold held only three jobs and was never without work for more than four days-including weekends-a testament to his remarkable work ethic and dedication.

Harold proudly served his country as a United States Army veteran. He enlisted in the Army Reserves in 1956 with the 95th Infantry Rifle Company. From July 1957 to January 1958, he served on active duty, completing Basic Training, Advanced Basic Training, Company Clerk duties, and Clerk Typist School, where Hoyt Goodner served as his instructor. He completed his service before being honorably discharged to the inactive list.

A love story that began in high school became the foundation of Harold’s life. He dated his beloved wife, Alfa Raye Moore, for two years before they were married on July 13, 1958, at Square Rock Methodist Church, officiated by Carl Mathews. Together, they built a life rooted in love, faith, and hard work. They lived in several homes around Waldron before building their forever home on Highway 248 West in the Haw Creek community, moving there on September 20, 1967.

Harold loved the land and the life it provided. He always kept a large garden, raised cattle, and especially loved working the farm in the Denton Community. Putting up hay each summer was a labor he embraced with pride and purpose. The farm was not just work to him-it was peace, tradition, and a way of life he deeply cherished.

He was a faithful member of Waldron First Baptist Church, where he served as a deacon, quietly leading by example through service, integrity, and faith.

Harold leaves behind to cherish his memory his loving wife of 67 years, Alfa Raye (Moore) Thomas, of the home; his daughter, Vanessa Reed and husband Tony; his son, Alan Thomas and wife Devonda; grandchildren Cassie Isenhower-Coon and husband Drew, Megan Umphress, Ashton Thomas, and Dustin Thomas; and great-grandchildren Adriana Umphress, Regina Umphress, Kaydan Thomas, Emma Grace Thomas, Bentley Thomas, and Grayson Thomas. He is also survived by two sisters, Shirley Goodman and Anna Nell Johnson.

He was preceded in death by his sister, Clara Dean Moore; two brothers, Harley Thomas and Joe Thomas; his parents, Graden Joe Thomas and Ida Lillian (Duncan) Thomas; and his stepmother, Ina Maye Thomas.

A Celebration of Life service will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Friday, January 23, 2026, at Waldron First Baptist Church, with Rev. Ken Overturf officiating. Interment will follow at Sehorn Cemetery in Winfield, Arkansas.Visitation will be held from 10:00 a.m. until service time on Friday at the church.

Pallbearers will be Ashton Thomas, Dustin Thomas, Bryan Kopf, Jimmy Macky, Billy Joe Thomas, Mitch Crotts, and Paul Plummer. Honorary pallbearers will be the Deacons of Waldron First Baptist Church.

Arrangements are entrusted to Heritage Memorial Funeral Home of Waldron, Arkansas.

Timepiece: Giveaways and Promotions

Cars whiz in and out of the new super-station, paying up to $4 dollars a gallon to pump their choice of fuel. Patrons line up in front of the 12 pumps, feeding in credit cards and selecting which color nozzle will dispense the gas. None of them look to happy in the one-hundred-degree heat and most leave the place without ever speaking to another living soul. The world sure changes with just a few added trips around the sun.

Being raised in the days of Andy Griffin, I can identify with Gomer or Goober running out of the station to check oil, water, and to offer my father a fill-up. The uniform dressed employee would wash the windows and then offer you a promotional gift if you bought ten-gallons of more fuel. Gulf, Esso, Dino, and all the popular chains strived to get your business by offering all sorts of freebies. Personally, the lunar module kit showing the lunar lander, The Eagle, was my favorite. Younger kids liked going to the station that offered an animal that they could add to the Noah Ark kit. The driver could get the ark for a minimal price and then, with each ten-dollar purchase, you received one of Noah’s animals to add to the collection. During the 1930’s, a service station in Pennsylvania even offered a free airplane ride with any fifteen-dollar purchase. That seems like a real bargain today but, at .21 cents a gallon, that would require about a half-dozen fill-ups on hard to get depression era money.

Service stations and grocery stores gave away S&H green stamps. Fill-up the books with stamps and trade them in for a wide-range of gifts or money. I collected up a pocket-full once while working as a sacker at the local grocery store and, being a young smart-aleck, placed them in the offering plate at church. The next week, the pastor who must have had a wife who collected, thanked his benefactor from the pulpit. A sacker in a grocery store? That bring up another subject to be discussed more fully at other times.

Some of the best promotions gave away glass dishware. Quaker Oats were our family favorite. Beginning in the 1920’s, Quaker began placing a cup or a saucer of carnival glass in each box of cereal. It was brilliant advertising and customers would purchase only that name-brand to receive the next essential addition to their collection. My grandmother would open the box, pour out the oatmeal, and eagerly search for the glass within. Additional large pieces could be obtained by turning in box tops or labels. Families finest set of dinnerware, kept in the pantry and for special use, came from those boxes. Duz detergent and others soon followed suit; leading to collections of this red, yellow, or green dishware as valuable collection items today.

Promotional products encouraged you to buy every item imaginable. A&W root beer would supply a small glass of their product free to everyone under six with an adult purchase. Buy a float and keep the beautiful, heavy mug advertising their product. Those mugs now sale for a nice, fancy price. Presidential campaign buttons from every presidential race were place in cereal boxes. An avid collector, I now have a set of every one of those buttons running back to the 1896 campaign and some of those buttons cost much more than an entire case of the original product. Toys, small books, Disney characters, ashtrays, and coasters were stashed in products across America. If that wasn’t enough, buy a twenty-five-pound sack of flour or a fifty-pound sack of hog feed and you received a yard of gingham cloth. Many students went to school with dresses or shirts provided gratis for buying life’s essentials.

Returning home from pumping my own gas, Zachary asks me for fifty-dollars to buy a new hoodie with some kind of funny swatch across the front. “Son, I stated emphatically, you can get that same hoody for twelve dollars down the road.” He looks at me like I am crazy, “It doesn’t have that logo Dad!” Now instead of getting a promotional, we pay for the privilege of doing a company’s advertising for them! Sometimes I feel like I have either set out too long in the sun or experienced a few too many trips around it.

Resident Press (Scott & So. Sebastian County edition) 01/28/26 Vol. 8 No. 04

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Greenwood Resident 01/28/26 Vol. 6 No. 04

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Resident Press (Lavaca, Charleston, Paris edition) 01/28/26 Vol. 5 No. 4

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GO-AR’s President Honored with Resident News’ Media Award

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State Capitol Week in Review From Senator Terry Rice

LITTLE ROCK – The Arkansas Legislative Council voted to fund the Educational Freedom Accounts (EFA) through the rest of the 2025-2026 school year.  The accounts can be used to offset the expenses of home school materials or go toward tuition at an accredited private or parochial school in Arkansas.  Currently, over 44,000 Arkansas students are participating in the program this school year. 

Educational Freedom Accounts are part of the LEARNS Act that was passed during the 2023 Legislative Session.  Unlike other states, the program was implemented in stages.  In 2023, the first year of the EFA program, about 1.5 percent of Arkansas students were allowed to participate.  During the 2024-2025 school year, the percentage of students increased to 3 percent. 

This school year is the first time that all Arkansas children in grades K-12 have been allowed to participate in the EFA program.  Each account is funded up to $6,864 for the 2025-2026 school year.   

Many more students applied for the EFA program this school year, but their parents either did not complete all the paperwork, or they made other choices for their child(ren) such as attending their local public school. 

Arkansas Teacher Maternity Leave 

As of 2023, school districts have been able to choose to participate in a cost sharing model that would allow teachers to have paid maternity leave.  Each school district and the state would pay 50/50 into the program, giving teachers up the 12 weeks of paid maternity leave.  The leave does not require teachers to exhaust their accumulated sick days first.  

Act 904 of 2025, with bipartisan support, updated the law to require the state to cover 100% of the cost, making it a fully funded, paid benefit for teachers rather than a cost-shared one.  Public school and charter schoolteachers are allowed to participate in the program.  The National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) released a case study highlighting the Arkansas’ teacher maternity leave program.  The study confirmed that bipartisan legislation helps Arkansas strengthen support for schoolteachers.  The program gives teachers the time they need to recover and bond with their newborn or adopted child(ren) before they must return to the classroom.    

Online Services 

With the tax deadline only a few months away, Arkansas residents can check for their state refund by accessing the Department of Finance and Administration (DFA) website at: https://www.dfa.arkansas.gov.  You will need your Social Security Number and expected refund amount to access your tax refund information.  

Also, on the DFA website, there is a section of online services that the department offers.  For example, you can order a replacement driver’s license or change your address on your license online.  DFA also offers the opportunity to book an appointment at your local DMV online.  The department states booking an appointment online reduces wait time at the DMV. 

Scott County Voters Attend “A Closer Look” Candidate Forum

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State Capitol Week in Review from Senator Bryan King

In my last column, I wrote about the revolving door of legislators and governor’s staff leaving state government only to personally profit by going to work directly for mega companies that they gave contracts to while in office.
Mega consulting companies like Deloitte and McKinsey have pocketed hundreds of millions of Arkansans’ hard earned tax dollars and hired former high-level staff members such as Jamie Barker and legislators like Grant Hodges.  They have also hired former governors’ staff like Jon Gilmore to lobby for them.  Deloitte has pocketed over half a billion dollars alone.
Now Governor Sanders wants to appoint Jamie Barker, her former deputy chief of staff, to the Board of Corrections. Apparently, having real world experience like working in construction or banking or having any law enforcement or prison related experience is not a requirement. 
To my knowledge, Jamie Barker’s only experience is being a Politico.  A Politico is one who jumps from politics, lobbying, and government jobs. This 29-year-old Politico is now set to be a member of a high-level, governing body that provides oversight and policy direction for the state’s Department of Corrections and related divisions. 
Despite all the gross incompetence in choosing a site with no water infrastructure and the appropriation bill being historically defeated five times for long term funding, the Governor continues to push for this mega prison catastrophe.  If Jamie Barker is appointed to this board, Arkansas will be driven more quickly to financial bankruptcy with this incomprehensible site location.
After last month’s legislative council meeting, Deloitte was awarded another multi-million-dollar contract.  The same afternoon Jamie Barker left his job at the governor’s office; he joined Jon Gilmore’s lobbying firm as a “partner” not a lobbyist.  Arkansas has a law banning state legislators and high-level appointees from becoming lobbyists within a certain period of time after leaving a government position, generally 1-2 years.  So, instead of being a registered lobbyist they use the title of consultant, account manager, or partner to get around the ban.
If this appointment goes through this will be a disaster for this state. Personal profiteers are already bleeding us dry. This will damage not only the correction system, but our budget in the years to come.  It’s time to step up and demand qualified people who put the best interests of Arkansans and not profiteers like Jamie Barker and Grant Hodges.

The last Deloitte contract that went through this last legislative council meeting.