A beer drinking offer for Schepps Beer at the Texan Hotel in Dallas, Texas, 1935. Sign out front of the building says "Look! All the Schepps beer you can drink. 60 cents per hour." . A man drinks beer at the bar where for 60 cents he may have as much beer as he can consume in 60 minutes. Several men use straws to drink beer from a pitcher at the same time. Men and women drink beer from huge mugs and salt their beer before drinking it. A group of men and women raise their mugs in toast as they congregate around a woman playing a piano. From a 25 year retrospective in a newsreel dated July 14, 1960. (Note: Schepps Brewing Co. was founded in Dallas in 1934, and sold in 1935. In 1939, it became Time Brewing, Inc. and subsequently Dallas-Fort Worth Brewing Co. 1940-51.)
Cowboys approaching ride horses into a stable. Cattle graze. Oil wells and military airfield from overhead. Distant view of Dallas Texas city skyline. Night view of streets and signs in Amarillo Texas. Daytime view of a tall skyscraper building and wide street in Houston Texas with cars and traffic View of the Hotel Nimitz in Fredericksburg Texas. Downtown Fort Worth Texas city street with shops, offices, and cars. Downtown area in Pampa Texas. Street corner view in Kerrville Texas. Two different views of The Alamo and surroundings in San Antonio, Texas. A water tower and oil rigs in Kilgore Texas. Downtown area of El Paso, Texas from elevated view. Street view in downtown Beaumont, Texas. Downtown view in Wichita Falls, Texas. Downtown San Angelo Texas views. Distant view of the city of Austin Texas from an elevated position, and then in downtown Austin featuring the State House Capitol building. Cattle, sheep, and sorghum farming views. Rice fields and Turkey ranches. Many oil rigs and oil wells. A busy shipyard in Texas making ships for World War II war effort. A sprawling aircraft factory. Oil rigs pumping oil. Farmer on tractor plows wheat field. View of rice harvesting (Massey Harris Self Propelled Harvest Brigade). Men stack magnesium bars. Magnesium factory next to ocean in Texas. Hand cotton picking and view of a mechanical cotton picker. Tractor pulling sorghum harvester. Sulfur mining and Helium plant in Amarillo. Black clouds in sky from burning natural gas in making synthetic rubber for war effort. Cliff of sulfur dynamited and loaded by train crane. Cowboys herd cattle and view of Fort Worth Stockyards and Exchange. Angora goat farm and turkey farming. War time workers manufacturing. Alabama and Coushatta Native American Indian village with flag of service stars for men in the war. Indian children with elder and Indian logging camp. Campus of University of Texas and State Capitol in Austin. Well dressed women exit Dallas department store.
Four members of the 6-member posse tracking famous crime couple Bonnie and Clyde. These are the posse who killed Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. Posing for a picture are (left to right) : Deputy Sheriff Prentiss Oakley, Sheriff Henderson Jordan, Deputy Sheriff Bob Alcorn, of Dallas, and Deputy Sheriff Ted Hinton, of Dallas, Texas.
Funerals of Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. Dallas County Sheriff Smoot Schmidt seated at desk. He introduces his deputies, Ted Hinton and Bob Alcorn who were members of the posse that killed Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. They give a brief account of the killing that took place in Bienville Parish, Louisiana. Crowd enter the church to take a look at Clyde Barrow's body at his funeral. Clyde Barrow being buried at Western Heights Cemetery and Bonnie Parker in the Crown Hill Memorial Park in Dallas, Texas. Clyde Barrow's family present during Bonnie Parker's burial.
Actors portray as Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. W D Jones, a companion of Clyde Barrow speaks over microphone at jail in Dallas, Texas. Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker meet outside a restaurant. They sit on their car and drink whiskey. Two Grapevine motorcycle policemen come towards the couple. Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker shoot the officers and drive away in their car.
Conclusion of "The Retribution of Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker." In Louisiana, officer Prentiss Oakley talks about how all officers involved fulfilled their duties, carried out orders, and thus justice was served by the killing of Bonnie and Clyde in Louisiana. Crowds fill the sidewalk in front of the Dallas funeral home where Clyde Barrow's body has been brought for burial. The aged father and mother of Clyde Barrow. People crowd around them.Barrow's younger brother consoles his mother. The burial of Clyde Barrow. People lay wreaths on the coffin, and the first shovels of earth are placed in the grave. Three miles away, at another funeral home, even larger crowds line up to view remains of Bonnie Parker. But her funeral and interment is attended only close friends and family, including a younger sister (temporarily on leave from prison) accused of killing two highway patrolmen.