Biography of Vander HUGHES, Scott Co, Arkansas ************************************************************************* Contributed by Delaine Edwards. July 6 1999 USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free Information on the Internet, data may be used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or for presentation by other persons or organizations. Files may be printed or copied for Personal use only. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for purposes other than stated above must obtain the written consent of the file contributor. ************************************************************************* THE ADVANCE REPORTER Thursday, March 23, 1967 Spotlight On... VANDER HUGHES When this familiar phrase is heard, "A friend in need is a friend indeed," many people place Vander Hughes in the front row of those they know to be their friends indeed. And there are few adult citizens in this area who have never met Van. During his some forty years of public service as a mechanic in Waldron, it would not be easy to assemble enough figures to indicate how many times this expression has been heard: "If you want it fixed, take [it] to Vander Hughes." Van's grandfather, Rice Hughes, made wagons. He moved from Tennessee to Waldron two years after the end of the War Between the States. Van's father, G.G. Hughes, was a blacksmith. Van completed a course in auto mechanics in a Kansas City school in 1916. His first employment as a mechanic began in 1922 with Arch Shirley who had the Ford automobile agency here. After ten years with Shirley, Van and Bryan Denton (now doing business in Waldron as Denton Motor Company) established a partnership which lasted 15 years. Later, Van established his own shop near his home north of Waldron on Highway 71 where his friends in need bring gadgets to be mended...wood as well as metal. His knowledge and experience in mechanics is acknowledged and appreciated by others who are engaged in similar fields. While Van is welding your broken stove cap lifter, or sealing a hole in your aluminum bake pan, or perhaps building up a worn tooth on the gear of your favorite diesel engine, he will keep you entertained by telling an acceptable joke-or he will swap ideas with you on planting peanuts when the moon is right, or the best way the war in Vietnam could be won. Whatever the subject, Van is always on your level when conversing with you; and you'll feel better after a few minutes' or an hour's visit with him. Van's only helper in his shop is his wife, Chloe, who drops in occasionally when her housekeeping chores permit a visit to the shop. Van and Chloe were married in 1924 and they have 2 daughters, both married. Van and Chloe are members of the Square Rock Methodist Church, and both are active in church and community affairs. Van is a member of the County Welfare Board. "The best way to stay healthy is to keep busy," Van said recently. Evidently he has a good point. He's 67 years young, and he's always busy.