The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 21, 1965 Page: 4 of 8
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THE SEALY NEWS
4
Thursday, October 21, 1965
2
5
7
t
ire
aid,
Sa
The rural doctor's nurse rush-
l ed in and said, “Those boys are
dictator Santa Anna's charges Rusk fear blunder - this strike Dr. A. B. Goldston
Doctor A. B. Goldston of Am- I run them off?”
arllo, was elected President of
i
NOTICE TO COTTON GROWERS
V
We Will Gin on
SATURDAYS ONLY
1
Till OCTOBER 23
Sealy Farmers Coop Gin
OVER RADIO STATION
Otto Beckman Gin
NOW! A WHOLE NEW SERIES OF ULTRA-LUXURIOUS CHEVROLETS
P
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f
BY CHEVROLET
Me4“
On SUNDAY why wait till 8 or
$
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----
am
9 p.m. to call Long Distance?
E
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Your lowest Long Distance rates are in effect all day.
Efem--za
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F
(except Alaska) for $1* or less.
Et
. Southwestern Bell
'Thru minutes station to statioi
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See the new ‘66 Chevrolet, Chevelle, Chevy n. Corvair I Corvette at your Chevrolet
4
EWENS CHEVROLET-PONTIAC-BUICK
212 MEYER
SEALY
TU
-e
9)
SE
OFF THE BEATEN TRAIL-
Stephen Austin's Flag
At Old, San Felipe
Caprice Custom Wagon- with fine new look
of hardwood paneling on sides and tailgate.
Catering to those who are unable to
attend church, the unsaved and for the
spreading of the Gospel in the area.
R. L. SELF, Pastor
DAN KENNEDY, Music
swiping the green apples off
that tree* in the back yard. Shall
emment; here, one time or oth-
er, came every great name from
ground work for U. S. recogni-
tion, finally annexation. But he
ing alone to Mexico City and
near-two-years' prison on now-
Caprice Custom Coupe—with exclusive formal
tool line that comes on no other Chevrolet.
finely instrumented console, together
with new Strafo-bucket front seats.
In the Custom Sedan, a new Strato-
back front seat is available with bucket-
type contours separated by a fold-down
of sedition and treason.
He would return to the tur-
You can read it in the flag he
would design less than three
months later - San Felipe's ban-
ner yonder. With decision lock-
ed, he acted.
22.
war.
Just below is the still-rutted
ferry and steamboat landing,
where the first ones came up to
---f
M awza
1,,
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Ll
VI
Caprice Custom Sedan—with superb new
Body by Fisher elegance inside and out.
n
#-
Everything it takes to create (a dis-
tinguished luxury car has gone into these
new Caprices. r
Beneath the formal styling elegance
that sets the Custom Coupe apart, for
instance, you’ll find thick wall-to-wall
carpeting, comfort-con toured seats and
Hi
M i
l i/W
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
of Hempstead
1 t..‘N
resentative statehood, journey- assault on the city while he cuts American Cancer
2,
You Can Hear The
Sunday Morning Broadcast
From 11 a.m. to 12 Noon
A
C
— News Staff Photo
Front row, left to ri^ht, Ho her t Zboril, Danny Zapalac, George
Teperu, Johnnie Konurik, Mark Vwcnik, Arthur Machula, and Lmw-
rence Mieth.
Second row: Joseph Shalow, Glen Anderson, Anthony Anderson,
instrument panel, glove compartment, cubic-inch version,
and inside door panels. You can order a —
And for incomparably smooth power,
you can specify Chevrolet’s advanced
the look of hand-rubbed walnut, on the Turbo-Jet V8 in either a 396- or 427-
Juma Davis, Tommy Krampitz, Lonnie Schneider, Charles Ames,
and Juma Dotson.
Third rows fay Jochen, Clarence Boson, Edward Mateja, Donnie
Jousan, loin Jones, Richard Anderson, Jerry Maxwell and Larry
Hintz.
But less, as your dealer will happily con-
firm—than the select class of fine cars tlw^
new Caprices invite com- ,mn
parison with in every detail.- “Bn
VsSiN
KYYBC-NAVASOTA
1550 On Your Dial
west.
We must fight east if not
armrest. And in the equally opulent
Custom Wagons, offered in 2- or 3-scat
models, you can even order carpeting foke
the cargo area.
Each model rides super Jet-smooth.
M1)
*232
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like that across. . .at his desk,
like that beside, the quiet man
crystallized a decision for Tex-
as that we sometimes forget.
N3ss
The doctor considered a mo-
ment and replied: "Mmmmm...
No.”
.53 c.e
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NOW!
From the
)g
The price of it all? Somewhat more
than you’re used to paying fora Chevrolet
((v
Telephone anywhere in the,continental United States
#
tion Hall where Texans debated I Borden. Here began Texas' post-1
rights, then statehood, finally al system and provisional gov-
every maneuver, evenonew
the quarterback caught a
thrown by the halfback.
The museum is 118-year-old
J. J. Josey General Store, im-
peccably restored where it stood
on old Plaza de Commercio.
Across is the dog-run log rep-
lica of Austin's cabin, the gran-
ite and bronze Austin statue,
the old brick-walled 1824 well,
the site of San Felipe Convcn-
would lay it down at 43; but
his Old Three Hundred, coastal
Brazos to Colorado, would key
the lock for America, west to
fthe Pacific.
.e
: -
-.9
739
4,
i20
x 0
FOUR -- • ‘
THE SEALY NEWS
Thursday, October 21, 1965
----
sprawl their log cabins that San
Jacinto’s retreat must burn. To
the south is the white frame
church for Texas’ oldest Sunday
school.
But it is inside the museum,
by his flag, you sense Austin of
San Felipe best.
For their historically dedicat-
ed Park Association, Sealy’s Mr.
and Mrs. Walter E. Hill took
me through. The long room’s
wall shelves and quadruple-
banked glass counters compact-
aoewmmpaazmaugxa
fo«,85
AMac s“h=+-E....... . *]
, moil of San Felipe's colonial
hub, the fall of 1835, with actual
revolution’s first guns echoing
at Gonzales, and Mexican troops
staging heavily in San Antonio
to crush it. Now even the Texas
voices that had branded him
"vacillating”, called desperately
for him to lead. Vacillating? He
had sought peace. . .with rights!
Lead where? To war?
In his Bollinger Creek cabin,
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A jumped-up, buckskinned Alamo stands to the end. . .and wie County, and received his
"army” of 300 call him to rein- Goliad. • and finally San Jacin- formal education in Texas
force them at Gonzales. He must to. He will have helped lay schools.
hold against heavy troops that
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plete.
At the front will go a detailed
diorama of the old town, from ,
Noah Smithwick's smithy, edg- t
ing west. Down the rambling, I
log fronted street, Travis prac-
ticed law and waited Bonham; j
Three-legged Willie, off to
found the Texas Rangers, left
freedom newspapering to Gail
2 ‛$ M
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Printed by permission of the
author: Ed Syers, Ingram, Tex-
as, who takes his camper "Obie”,
where a mule can't go, to write
'“’his State, hand-to-hand in his
syndicated newspaper colu'mn
t"‛Off The Beaten Trail". The
• -Vol. Ill of his book by the same
“Title will soon be released. Mr.
Syer visited San Felipe early in
the summer.
The flag 4s at old San Felipe,
and you may never see another
quite like it. It shows the good
• and true colors of Stephen F.
Austin, "Father of Texas”.
.....’Our big and beautifully-tim-
bered State Park named for
liim, lies in the bend north of
"Where U. S. 90 hurdles the Braz-
Qs for Houston. Beside it slum-
"."Ders what was first city of to-
: day's Texas; and — open a year
। North America's Anglo Saxon
ancestry; 13 stripes for the col-
onial origins of his Texans; yet
below the Jack, Texas - a Lone
Star. And, true to his coloniza-
tion word. - the Mexican colors
of Red. White, and Green.
Yet full across, spring the fi-
nal words: “Our Country's
Rights or Death!”
We forget this moderate man
was always fighter: against
wilderness, poverty, misunder-
standing, greed, bickering... !
and inevitably, tyranny. At
showdown, all other avenues ex-
hausted, it was Austin who ,
crossed the Texas Rubicon...
and would have stood at Alamo.
As Travis fired showdown's
first cannon shot and Houston,
its last...
Then in patience, reason. hon-
or and determination to duty, ,
the quiet and peace-loving
Stephen Fuller Austin surely
i loaded those guns.
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5,enhmdua
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" *em,E- .3} ' - ,
3 d-rac.m • m4
520,
now — an excellent museum of
Texas colony times that will let
more of us discover our Anglo
beginnings, key barrel, cornmeal grinder to 1
And perhaps more even of the • shop last, blacksmith bellows to
quiet fighter who caused those bullet molds to a 1793 copybook. )
beginnings. His flag dominates ' Range is extraordinarily com-
the entering right hand wall.
I
y 1
L 1
1
Houston to Bowie Wharton
to Rusk.
Yet above all, Stephen Aus-
tin - first, long before. His desk
is by the door, his San Felipe
flag above.
You cannot put Austin’s
’ struggle for colony in this
1 brief space. Virginia-born of a
west-moving New England fa-
ther, he took up that father’s
Texas cause in 1821, age 28. He
Charles Holub
Dies in Wharton
Funeral services for Charles
Holub, 90, were held from the |
Triska-Urbish Chapel in East ;
Bernard at 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct- [
ober 10, with Rev. Harold E.
Lesch of St. Paul’s American
Lutheran Church of Wharton
officiating.
Mr. Holub was born in La-
vaca County on July 20, 1875.
He had lived most of his life in
the East Bernard Community.
For the past five years he had
made his home in Wharton. He
passed away there Thursday af-
ternoon following a short ill-
ness.
He was a member of the S. P.
J. S. T. Lodge in East Bernard.
Survivors arc one son, Edwin
Holub of Austin; five daugh-
ters, Mrs. Joe Ondruch of Sealy,
Mrs. Alfred Zahn of Wharton,
Mrs. Walter Ondruch of Sealy,
Mrs. August Kutra of Houston
and Mrs. Harry Burger, Jr. of
Wharton; one sister, Mrs. Frank
Holchak of Rosenberg; 23
j grandchildren and six great
grandchildren.*
Pallbearers were Alfred Zahn,
Jr., Jerry Ondruch, Donald On-
druch, Wustace Kutra, Jimmy
Ondruch, and Bobbie Zahn.
• Interment was in the Nation-
al Cemetery with the Triska-
Vrblshrunerai Homein charge
will sweep w st from Bejar.
With a provisional Texas gov-
ernment roughed out at San Fe-
lipe, Austin rides for the Guad-
alupe line.
And crosses it.. .straight for
fortified San Antonio!
He lays siege to double his
numbers, rallies the in-stream-
ing raw frontiersmen to ready i
wedh
103 .
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Mininese
BA
GI
"Inumo
PO
PC
.......
PIC
BI
Unable to move the i
Flatonia punted and apa
Badgers moved the ‘“"I
the gridiron only to ha ’
othei pass intercepted
time in the end zone. Th’
moved along at a prettam .
pace until the Isla F11966
back broke off tackle a "V
the second quarter andr orm
yards foi a touchdown 1
kick was good, and ,,
led at half-time 7-0.
The second half was th
nightmarish for the Bad
Minutes alter the ondmuzand
I kick off Flatonia s * J
on a long run as they n •5
I picking the Badger de -
apart with a mixture oH
passing and running. With
ends split the Buildup 1
weaknesses the Orchard 4
l sive secondary, as they | ‘
9
* I
Flatonia Thumi,
Orchard 25-0
Once again the 01^11
gers moved the ball hwZl
20 yard lines, but M
score, as they dropped
decision to the Flatndg
dogs at Badger Field jaa
day night. “81
Orchard looked „ . I
first half, as quarterodd
koskie mixed his playsKi
marching the team
field after the openioyn
off. But the first dmngi
stopped by a Flatonia ‘
terception on their own 38
line after Orchard had J
up 3 first downs. "a
its supply lines. Leaders war- g . . wi . ,
wise as Houston, Fannin, and Soclety klects
ly display something of every-
thing: smoothing iron to ox
yoke, two-man ripsaw to whis-
..? asaw 3
2 1. i
L—-
4
will never see it. For long,
worn and ill, he will Ivie but
half-a-year after Texas freedom.
So look at his San Felipe flag:
designed, the road to Washing-
ton, for where his heart . re-
mained. It holds a philosophy
Stephen Austin lived and died
for:
Atop, the Union Jack for
•MeN
.6 N
—2**.
At colony capital San Felipe,
he put down Indian and land
speculator, built a legal system,
created a provisional self-gov-
ernment, bridged the clash of
Latin and Anglo mind and
method, spent himself thin to
help a colony prosper, moder-
ated the hotheads, and struggled
to the last ragged hope to keep
। peace with Mexico. . yet still
hold the democracy his colon-
i ists had been promised..
He was in Mexico to this end
when Velasco, Anahuac and
Nacogdoches went for their
guns in '32. Even while the Tex-
an “War Party” shouted for in-
dependence, he would seek rep-
here, Austin reasons prophet!- the Texas Division of the Am-
eally. Assault, there must be! erican Cancer Society at the or-
Will a more skilled commander ganization’s twentieth annual
head it? He'll storm with the meeting in Dallas October 13-14
troops. William D. DeSanders of Dallas
Does he really think to take a became Chairman of the Board
cannon-held city with rifles? of Directors.
Yes, says Austin. More than 350 delegates.
He will not see the assault. | members and guests represent-
The night he receives San Fe- ing 185 Texas counties attended
lipe orders to seek U. S. aid in the two-day meeting to review
Washington, this intent man progress of the Cancer Control
asks his war council once more Program in Texas.
: to storm the city. As a highlight of the meeting,
Enroute Washington duty, he L. E. “Lefty” Ross of Quanah,
learns Ben Milam has achieved vice-crusade chairman announc-
what they told him impractical, ed that television's famous
foolhardy. That plan he forced "Hoss Cartwright" will serve as
has,struck Texas fire to resist. the 1966 Cancer Crusade Chair-
Yet ironically, he will be far; man. "Hoss”, whose name is,
from the Texas he built when Dan Blocker, was born in Bo-
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M/1278
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SeDa‛
, , 410 West Front Street - Box 488 - Telephone TUrner 5-3334
-6' SEALY, TEXAS 77474
a—-------------------------------------
entered as second class mail matter in the post office at
Sealy, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1897.
a.n PUBUSHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
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Petrusek, Wilma. The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 21, 1965, newspaper, October 21, 1965; Sealy, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1540654/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Virgil and Josephine Gordon Memorial Library.