The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 26, 1964 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
9
Thursday, November 26, 1964
tert. Jr., Mrs. Joe
5E"
4
2
4
T
KEiffl! HUM
7e
41
L J
1
4
2.8
I
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Janosky Marvin Steck.
keep their
...
Mr. and Mrs. Joe I. Motl.
Bleiblerville, Mrs F. J. Jurchak;
0
W
I
7
To avoid being hit by stray
4
51”
8
pre-
vite another hunter’s bullet.
DANCE
every
. . at . .
4
Saturday, Nov. 28
5
A
DANCE
WALLIS
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
NOV. 27
1965 WLOCAf } OA SPOAT COUPf
-
Schier Feed & Supply Co
ladies, 5Oc : Gents, $1,00
W.7.
dim
4
1 Minks. Jr. and family, Mr. and
Mrs. William Heiriman, Mr. and
American
Legion Hall
Admission to Hall:
.75c per person
FREE TABLES
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Spoede, ert Dittert; Kenney-New Weh-
Sr. and Mrs. John Zurek spent dem. Mrs. Melvin Kiemsteadt :
Monday in Yoakum visiting with Nelsonville, Mrs. D. P. Albert;
Houston Oilers
Meet Boston Sunday
Houston’s down-trodden Oil-
COSHATTE
Agricultural Society Hall
agree,
sive
disturbances. if statewide
dictions prove accurate.
"They will come from ।
I
in
he
as
Janecek wedding in East Ber-
nard.
Mrs. John Holeck, Jr. visited
but these were the names hand-
ed me. Please don’t feel hurt if
'your name was forgotten.
Thoughts at Thanksgivii
The warmth of family and friends . .
Negroes, Julia Lilly.
Mrs. Joe Brugger is county-
director.
ots to be thankful for!
As we gather with friends and rela-
7 lives for the annual Thanksgiving
\ Day feast, we will he counting our
) blessings. Sure, we all have our prob-
lems and our sorrows, but we have
many, many reasons for joy and
thanksgiving, too.
9)
Harlen Gross; Publicity. Anita
dren, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Felc- may have been more attending Machemehl; Treasurer. Wayne
5
March of Dimes
Leaders Named
In County
1965 March of Dimes officers
are:
Music by
SEALY PLAY BOYS
ther they may be eligible for i spent
social security disability insur-
Good news for patient people.
The *65 Buieks are in produetion again.
And lots of new Buieks are on their way lo un.
Help un send your favorite on its way to you.
Come in and order the Buick you want.
I 42
IM '
i hi ■
people from trying to become unequal.
Who loses, in America, if we gradually exchange
our individual responsibilities and freedoms for more
w
A’ - -70
)
A
%
G
ig-
11
21
- $90
in family life education at Tex-, ily.
Music by . . .
LEROY MATOCHA
Their bosses must build Berlin Walls and mas-
In Enforced Equality Your Dish?
You might say, “Look what an unequal job God’s
forces did in creating the Earth. Such an unfair dis-
"" tribution of rainfall and temperature, of mountains,
of mineral resources. And what unequal people on it!
1, Some tall, some short; some homely and some hand-
.some."
I
■ 1
J
tackle from Wallis; Lewis Sholmire, end from Texas
City; Wayne Rains, halfback from Pearland; and Pat
Pryor, guard from Texas City. On the back row are:
Bill Pickens, tackle from Alvin; Jack Rice, end from
Texas City; and Greg Brezina, linebacked from Louise.
Also pictured with the sroup is Kitten Assistant Coach
John Kelly, a former high school gridder at New Caney.
These boys will also be members of the first team
at the University to play "indoor” football. The Cou-
gars will play all of their varsity home games next
fall in the new Harris County Domed Stadium.
• V ■ 1
1 «
L 1
, i
i . 0
k M
F i
6a
Mm. John Holicik, Ja
Mr. and Mrs. John Sklar of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Kopecky of Teenage
Sealy and Mrs. Adolph Felcman Galveston. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Machemehl;
F f
Seven members of the 1964 University of Houston’s
first undefeated freshman teams in history, hail from
the Houston area.
The Cougar freshmen posted a 4-0-0 season to be-
come the first unbeaten, untied team in UH history.
Wins came from over the following teams: Lamar
Tech Junior Varsity 13-7; Air Force Academy frosh
20-14; North Texas State frosh 21-0 and the Arling-
ton State Junior Varsity 14-0.
They are, bottom, (left to right): Pat Viaclovsky,
Schomburg: M O. Chairman,
Florence Meissner; Coin Collect-
or. Mrs. H. L. Adams; School,
held at Columbus High School. „mIm A
Greenhand Farm Skills mom- FRIDAY,
bers were James Kramer, Hen- * ■ /
country, every city, every in-
come asnd social and education-
al level. Some of these people
are your neighbors and friends.
Next year we can expect even
more troubled people to need
help," says Miss Reynolds.
Many people are interested in
last week with their chil- Janosky of Galveston. There
Important among our personal bless-
ings is the privilege of having so many
of you as customers and friends of
our business. It is our pleasure to
serve your needs.
Texans will seek professional Mrs. Arnold Zurek, Joe Zurek,
help for some type of mental -u-
1/
UI VOW LOCAL AUTMORIZED BUICK DEALER AUTMORIZED BUICK DEALER IN 1ws
E. B. WILSON MOTOR CO., 454 E Main,
i
ug
g 9
•* I
soon as possible."
Increases in benefits now be-
ing paid will be retroactive to
November 1963 and will be paid
with the checks to be delivered
early in December. People new-
ly eligible for benefits because
of the amendment will receive
back payments to November
1963 if they apply before the
end of November 1964.
cr’s “period of disability” start-1
ed.
The new law removes a time '
limit which went into effect in ।
July 1962 and permits the be- '
ginning of the "period of dis-
ability” for benefit purposes to '
be set at the time the worker |
actually became disabled. The
change does not liberalize the |
requirements of the law in any I
way except to permit the actual |
date of disability to be recog-I
nized, Rogers pointed out. It
affects only people who worked |
under social security for at 1
least five of the ten years be- i
fore they became disabled and |
who applied after July 2. 1962, !
of have not yet applied.
"We have the names and ad-
dresses of those who applied,
and we either have already
written to them or we will with-
in a few days," Rogers said. '
। "They do not need to take any I
action right away, but if they j
do not hear from us within two
weeks they should call or write •
er, Luke Hill, A. Q.
Frank Pechanec, Lawn
d5q
l
I
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Cervenka. Buckhorn-Cochran. Mrs. James
Bettv Jo, Dinah, and Darrell. Hammack: Burleigh, Mrs Con-
attended the birthday party for way Waak; Sealy, Mrs Vernon
their nephew and cousin, Bennie Madden; Wallis, Mrs. Vance
Ondruch, in Frydek Sunday af- Cooper: Kenney Colored School,
ternoon. It was his 21st birth- Darien Lotts: Coordinator for
day. Colored School, Sidney Diggs;
______ ■ —. Bellville Mother’s March for
THE SEALY NEWS
i9 West Front Street Box 488 - Telephone TUrner 5-3334
'___________ SEALY, TEXAS 77474
• Entered as second class mail matter in the post office at
< Sealy, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1897.
PITbLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
,, H
5
19 ‘L’f*
2
helping these people and
knowing what steps can
taken to prevent as well
Alvin Marek, Walter Re
C. Turner, J D Divin,5M
rie Slanina, Oliver Steck;
Verm, Mrs. J J. Sabrsui.4
Tom Kveton, W G. j EhMi
R. W. Egger, Joe Walter
Crosby, Chas. Kiesewetk
win Kinkier, Mrs. Gus N&
David R Frayard, w, ■ A
Mrs. Emma SchwanbeeE
J. E. Kirkham, Jr., MrA
Freeman, Milton Necken 2
Tupa, Mrs Frank Parma"
Mueller, Bennie Mize *
Glenwood Kveton, Adahs i
police-enforced regimentations to
as A&M University.
During 1964, some 84,000
of Galveston visited briefly
Sunday with Mrs. Adolph Hran-
icky and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Blaz-
ek.
, I Schubert, Frank C Mana"
, Louise Hassler, Roy
Krupala, Mrs. Anne zr
Gross, John Klanika,Minl
Kloss, J. C. Krenek, j L.
/ /
-M
Through the eons from cave dweller to today’s space
■explorers, each able-bodied person simply lived his
'life as best he could, by his own unequal efforts, for
his own unequal rewards — knowing that extra effort
meant extra reward. Only recently, in this country,
1 has the doctrine of enforced economic equality been
widely peddled. The idea is- that it’s evil for one per-
/son to have a dollar more or less than high neighbor
—or to work harder or more intelligently to get it —
and that there must be an even bigger and more pow-
erful Government to keep that from happening.
If this had been the doctrine of American govern-
ment all along — if there had been enforced economic
equality between Thomas Edison and every blacksmith,
between John D. Rockefeller and.his janitor, between
General Motors and the Central City Buggy Manufac-
turing Co. — America might now be eligible for
foreign aid from India and Ghana. Instead,, unequal
Americans from Plymouth Rock to. the Pacific, making
unequal' sacrifices, working unequally hard, have made
Amherica great — wealthy enough to provide compas-
sion for the disabled and helpless, even wealthy enough
to survive massive experimenting with unsound de-
structive doctrines. But how much, how long?
Each session of our Congress is urged to furnish
more legislation and appropriation to equalize incomes
and outgoes, to equalize the cost of medical service,
housing, education, recreational facilities ... or just
name it .
It's unjust. Congress is told, for necesities and coni;
forts to cost your neighbor more than they cost yu,
for his share to be any less than yours
Then is it just — you might ask — that you and
your children must pay for the difference, via sub-
sidies, tax exemptions, or outright government owner-
ship and operation of business and services?
Communist bosses tell their people that equal phy-
sical comforts for everybody — a full stomach and a
warm bed — are the only freedoms that matter But
their people — once they've tried it — don’t seem to
ers, still looking for their third shots while hunting. the Texas
win of the season, after eight Safety Association advises
straight setbacks, tackle the de- hunters to keep out of the brush
fending champion Boston Pat- in heavily hunted country. A
riots here Sunday, November hilltop also can be especially
29, at Jeppesen Stadium at 2:30 dangerous. On high ground,
p.m. stand in front of a tree or rock
Coach Mike Holovak’s Pat- so that your silhouette won't in-
i
i c
G- N ■'
IMLII
spiritual guidance of our house of worship..,
the security of living in a fine community ... the
bundance and richness of our great country,
where we may live and worship and vote as we
please . . . for all this and much more we offer
thanks. From all of us to our loyal friends and
patrons, a happy and healthy Thanksgiving.
0U57y A
chairman. Randy
Teenage Advisor,
Mother’s March Chairmen
are:
Bellville.. Mrs Harlen Gross:
Cat Spring-Millheim. Mrs Rob-
ken, Mrs. Hugo Kveton rjf
Stierling. G Elmer ToudhdM
Joe Peters, L. A. HackbE
John J. Macha, Mra.“N21
Spreen, Herbert Holtkamp’mI
win Kocurek, F A. Lezazzl
Rosalie P Moore, Eddie
Herman Pacher Erank KTS1
der. C H Havran, J MM I
gan. Mrs. F J Sachnik,"1
Mrs. Alma Hibbeler, Mn 2I
O Kunze, Miss Hattie HennB
Frank G. Lamar, Hugo gZi
Mrs N Pennington, Ndnk
Walter Luedecke, LI
Felcman. Mrs J W Owezl
Kruse, J Lee Dittert, Gn
Blast. Alvin J Holub, CaI
Kulhanek, Mrs Joe A Kamen
Mrs Joe Moore, Joe Kal
Steve Uhyrek, Leo Wittenom
Mrs Otto Buenger, Adolphse
boda.
NEW SUBSCRIBERS _ i
Stotts
physical comforts to make fatter, equal serfs of us
all? You? Your Neighbor? Or both?
— Hugh Hansen
WALLIS F. F. A.
IN LEADERSHIP CONTEST
1 The Wallis F. F. A. entered
3 teams in a recent District IV,
Area III Leadership contest,
Mental Health Needs ek’ Mrs. Rudolph Polasek, Mr.
A T . an Mrs. Charles Polasek, Sr.,
Are Increasing Mrs. Bert Dibala, Mr. and Mrs.
The scope of mental health Joe Pilcik. Mrs. John Zurek.
needs increases daily as our Mrs. Charles Janicek, Mr. and
population continues to grow. Mrs. Innocent Minks, Sr., Mr.
says Patsy Reynolds, specialist and Mrs. Ivan Minks anti fam-
ry Divin, Mike Kocurek, placed
3rd.
Greenhand F. F. A. Quiz
members, Kenneth Korenek,
Dwayne Vincent, William Tow-
man. placed 4th.
Farm Radio Team members,
Al Kocurek, Victor Eder. John-
nie Sodolak, placed 6th.
Then* are over 20 schools in
this district.
Mr. and Mrs. Innocent
---—-------y---—________and dependents in the Houston ■
Views or opinions, expressed under by-lines, do not necessarily seven-countv service area will L
reflect the views of the editor; only by hearing both sides of a seven ,? L..51 . WiF
nuestion can the public form an Intelligent opinion become eligible for social secur- l
“—----- ----------- ity disability insurance bene- ■
llsthe svent.ot errors or omissions in legal or other advertisements, the fits or will have benefits thev
publishers do not hold themselves liable lor damage, further than the .mount nts or Wi nave penents .m!
UM. bull by The Sealy “Newadvertisement, Advertising 11 accepted only on are now receiving increased. SC-
— --------------—---------- cording to Fred C. Rogers, so-Ji
All obituaries, cards of thanks, notices, of memoriam and an- cial security district manager in
nouncements of parties, where a charge is to be made, will be Honetn
euarged tor at our regular advertising rates of 3c per word. Houston; c.. . . »
--------- _ —--;— • •----------- The benefits and increases
".Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation ol , are nrovided bv a new amend- 1
any. persons, rirm. or corporatin which may appear in the column, of Th. are proviaed OY. a new amend
Sraz.News.win be Kadly corrected upon its being brought to the attention ment to the social Security law
of the manazemeut. Suggest ive criticism from our readers is appreci.ted. .. . . elen h
- —----—--------------- which changes the rule for set- ] "
ting the date on which a work- L
us. Our address is 515 Rusk
Avenue, Houston. Our telephone
is CApitol 8-0611.
• "On the other hand, there'
may be many former workers j
who are now disabled but who |
have never asked at the social j
security office to find out whe-
k 1
N
2
I
Ip
I •.
W1c
48>
ance benefits. Some people did man in Garland. I
not apply because they realized Bennie Hranicky and niece. ’
hat they were not eligible since Madalyne Hranicky of Houston, ‛
they had waited beyond the visited with mother and grand-
time limit for filing an appli- mother, Mrs. Adolph Hranicky ,
cation. Others may not have ( Saturday and Sunday .Saturday !
heard about disability benefits, they all attended the Vacek and i
We want to hear from them as, *
„oag,
U ! l
1.j
■
n y
1
W
» 12
s Vh.5 -
I Kill? ’
8 t
T -#s
i pi
414
Be
5a
r
Se
,i
11
I' ghe
F IH rl
I A S ।
gni
2994 *
5 "geg
lib
1
I« ■
; I u 5
I
g8eejh
? g||| Si 1
ggge
with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
I Holecek in College Station Sun-
I day.
Attending the golden wed-
ding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Reuther in Eagle
Lake Sunday were Mrs. George
Reuther, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Korenek and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Kir. Mrs. Ed Blaz-
riots, the reigning Eastern Div-
ision kings, are hot on the trail
of league-leading Buffalo and
nary afford another defeat. Buf-
falo stands 9-1 while Boston is
9-2-1 with only four weeks left
in the ’64 campaign.
Hear coach Sammy Baugh
started rookie Don Trull last
Sunday against the Kansas City
Chiefs and although the former
Baylor All-American didn’t look
too good on his first two series,
he returned to action later in
the game and did a creditable
job. The Baylor rookie connect-
ed on his first touchdown toss
of the season when he hit Char-
lie Hennigan with a 10-yard
yard shot late in the second
quarter.
It wouldn’t be too surprising
to see Baugh give Trull a lot of
playing time in the Oilers’ re-
maining three games. Trull hit
seven of 18 for 96 yards while
Blanda connected for 16 of 28
for 179 yards.
Also Baugh is lnkely to play
rookie halfback Ode Burrell a
lot in the final games as the
Mississippi State rookie looked
good in his brief outing. He
picked up eight yards on three
carries and returned four kick-
offs 105 yards while catching
one pass for 17 yards.
The Oilers will lie faced with
stopping Boston’s blitzing de-
fenses again Sunday. The Hous-
ten line did a good job -of- pick- ■
ing up the Boston blitz in Bos-
ton when the Oilers dropped a
25-24 decision on Gino Cappel-
lettis last second field goal
Following the game with the
Patriots, the Oilers take a week
off before closing out the sea-
son on December 1, with New
Vork and December 20 with
Denver.
at#
60;
UH'
ili
Fit!
11 F
treat mental disturbances. The
State Mental Health Planning
Committee has been studying
the situation. Under the leader-
ship of Hale County Judge C. L.
Abernathy, the committee is
nearing completion of recom-
mendations for a statewide ef-
fort to meet this challenge.
Mental illness is a disease
which can be treated and pre-
vented and is not a disgrace,
says Miss Reynolds.
"The disgrace comes only
when people do not care enough
to do something constructive to
help fhese troubled people,” she
emphasized.
A M - g --5
C eee—
B agUStoy VV
348
1 FOUR ‛u
THE SEALY NEWS
Thursday, November 26, 1964
■--■ .
Area People to
Get S. S. Benefits
About 600 disabled people
Every young man M
serve a hitch in the servieN
learns to make beds, to taken
ders. not to volunteer sM m
other skills he’ll need whek
marries.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Soloman, Mescal. The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 26, 1964, newspaper, November 26, 1964; Sealy, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1528248/m1/4/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Virgil and Josephine Gordon Memorial Library.