The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, February 1, 1935 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Sealy News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Virgil and Josephine Gordon Memorial Library.
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vi
$
THE SEALY NEWS, SEALY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1935
AT THE CHURCHES
/
E. L. Unger, Pastor.
English.
Bohemian
is
closed at birth by a congenital
of
Howard
Rev.
Reece
4
#
New suits, dresses and
hats arriving daily!
f
baby girl born without a throat
opening was ended today by
death.
Harbingers
of
Spring
%
s
Mrs. Emily Kersten and Miss
Bessie Konescheck were visit-
ing the capitals of Austin and
Waller counties Tuesday.
New York also knows such a
thing as a dog laundry which
calls for and delivers. And per-
haps you’ve already heard of
dog caterers. They bring com-
plete meals, specially prepared
for the dog of each variety and
condition of health. And they
do practically everything but
tie a bib on the dog.
Immaculate Conception Church
Services every second, fourth
and fifth Sundays.
4
◄
4
*
By Huisache Quill
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
AMBLING
'f^QUND
NEW YORK
L whuuGu KENNY
Lutheran Church
Services for Sunday are as
follows:
Sunday School at 9:30.
English service at 10:30.
The Ladies Aid will meet at
the home of Mrs. O. Goebel.
A hearty welcome to all.
W. M. Schreiner, Pastor
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:<
Simplicity
At the Baptist Church
Sunday School at 9:45 a. m.,
in the R. W. Hackbarth build-
ing.
W. M. S., Wednesday, 3 p.m.
sermon.
Daily Mass 8 a. m.
Saturday, 7 a. m.
Confessions Saturday, 5 pm.
Everyone cordially invited.
Rev. C. . Kunc.
around in the summer and be-
come fake mountains!
New York knows’more four-
flushing tactics than most any
city in the country. You can
still rent a sixteen cylinder car
and liveried chauffeur by the
hour or day. And you can still
rent a complete office with a
full staff of secretaries for as
little as a week. Or would you
like an apartment that looks
like two floors—at the price of
one? Get ones of those with a
stairway that runs to a door in
the wall. The door will never
open.
MASQUERADE
Dance
AT PETERS
Hacienda Schuetzen
Verein
Saturday,
Feb. 9th
*
v
Make ready for Spring
NOW! ! !
POETICAL SOUL OF AN EDITOR
(Note—Upon a recent visit to Sealy, H. M.
Shannon, versatile editor of the Texas Coaster,
of Richmond, who, by the way, is also a good
Linotype operator, seated himself at our type-
setting machine, composed and set into type the
following within a few minutes:)
There must be fields somewhere beyond
As fair as we have known—
Fields where the crimson autumn flames
By gentler winds are blown—
Fields where the snows of winter days
Lie just as white and white and clean,
And where the sweep of summertime
is just as deep and green.
There must be fairer fields somewhere
Beyond this wayside inn
Of life as we have known it here, 16!
With all its care and sin.
Perhaps we’ll find new glory there,
Unmarked by greed or shame,
Where one may keep his honor clean,
And still know wealth and fame.
Somewhere beyond the tall sky-line
That crowns our waning day—
Beyond the low green borderlands
That hold our flesh at bay—
Beyond dim hills when twilight falls,
Where star-swept rivers flow—
There must be fairer highways there
For restless feet to know.
What if the way is long and rough
And hills are swept by gales?
No bold heart fears the tortured trip
To far, uncharted trails,
And if, throughout the long, dark night
No ghostly shadows creep,
Thank God, beyond the tumult here
We’ll find eternal sleep.
speaking to the congregation
at both the morning and even-
ing hours. The public is cor-
dially invited to attend these 1
services.
0-
pulpit at the local Baptist
church on Sunday, February 3,
4
1
4
H
-
I
Singleton, Texas, will fill the V We understand that exten-
"h sive improvement on the home
of the Lutheran pastor, Rev.
►
►
►
►
, merchandise d e p i cting
► the season’s newest styles
, and colors.
►
►
►
►
►
►
HELP KIDNEYS
TF your Kidneys function badly
I and you have a lame, aching
back, with attacks of dizziness,
burning, scanty or too frequent
urination, getting up at night,
swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic
pains . . . use Doan’s Pills.
Doan’s are especially for poorly
functioning kidneys. Millions of
boxes are used every year. They
are recommended the country over.
Ask your neigMorl
DOAN’S PILLS
St. John’s Episcopal Church
Services in St. John’s Epis-
copal church will be held as
follows:
Evening prayer and sermon
on every Tuesday night at
eight o’clock.
Holy Communion and sermon
on each fourth Sunday morn-
ing at nine o’clock.
The public is cordially in-
vited to attend all services in
St. John’s church.
F. H. Stallknecht, Pastor
For years New Yorkers have
been nickel hoarders. Subways,
street cars and cross - town
= Music by =
= Lindy’s Orchestra =
of New Ulm =
S Admission, 25c
E Old time music till 11— =
= then mixed =
—PRIZES— =
= 1st Prize Ladies $2 =
= 2nd Prize Ladies $1 =
— 1st Prize Gentlemen $2 =
E 2nd Prize Gentlemen SI =
= You Can’t Afford to =
= Miss This Big Frolic! =
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE
It’s still against the law for
ticket speculators to operate
their “scalping” tactics in New
York, but so long as there is a
hit, show in town, they con-
tinue. For anything but the
biggest hits, you can usually
get a ticket at the box office
ten days in advance at the
longest.
Modern apartments in the
DISTRIBUTION . faulty
I tried to buy some Northern
Spy apples in a neighborhood
grocery the other day. All I
could yet were fine-looking but
—to me—tastless western ap-
ples, shipped from 2,500 miles
away. Northern Spies grow
only 250 miles from the New
York market.
The same day my wife want-
ed some Florida oranges. None
of the nearby stores had any
but Californias, which we hold
inferior. They had come 3,000
miles; Florida is only a thou-
sand miles away.
Organized distribution versus
unorganized marketing is the
answer. Uncle Sam is paying a
lot of attention these days to
agricultural production. It
would be of far greater public
service to reorganize the distri-
bution methods of food prod-
ucts.
■ '
11
◄
4
•
4
4
4
4
4
4
/ <
, 4
■ 4
4
4
4
4
4
4
Anathema to me, is the cus-
tom of apartment lobbies, not
only of installing fake fire-
places, but also fake electric
fires that neither look like the
real thing nor feel like it!
CRIME . too much
I think I can see signs that
the public mind is becoming-
aroused over the prevalence of
crime. The enthusiasm over
the successful work of Federal
agents in “getting” Dillinger
fllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!
and other outlaws indicates
that those charged with law
enforcement need not hesitate
to adopt drastic measures.
It would be easy to wipe out
crime if crime could be divorc-
ed from politics. Too many poli-
ticians and political organiza-
tions are in cahoots with crimi-
nals. The police commissioner
of New York remarked the
other day that he and his men
could round up every impor-
tant criminal were it not for
the political protection those
felons have managed to ob-
tain.
Loopholes in the laws should
be stopped up, but lawmaking
is in the hands of politicians,
and courts are bound by the
laws. The tendency to regard
any law, whether it is backed
by public opinion or not, as
more sacred than human lives
and property, has been carried
too far. I believe the reaction
is setting in.
“Daily Dog Walking Ser-
vice, Inc. A service for dog
owners. $5 a month up.”—From
the classified section of a New
York newspaper.
St. John’s Episcopal Guild
with sponsor a benefit Bridge
at the home of Mrs. M. E. Ball,
Friday evening, February 22.
Contract, Auction, Forty-two.
Prizes and refreshments. For
information, or reservations,
please call Mrs. Ball at 22, or
phone 16 or 34.
►
• True the robin and violet
, make early announce-
• ment of Spring’s ap-
, proach, but so do our
► windows. And inside our
► store there will be found
medium price class rarely have
fireplaces. So New Yorkers—
Everyone admires the simpler
things, they are not tiring,
they are more beautiful, more
durable and much easier to
attain. We do sometimes, per-
haps, enjoy elaborate things
for a while, they may cater to
our fancies for a change, but
involuntarily, we come back to
simplicity. Story writers are
taught to stay within simple
use of words and language,
many famous photographs are
of common-place things, homes
of simpler furnishings are
more inviting (and leave the
guest more at ease) and a per-
son with simplicity in their
bearing has more friends and
truer ones.
I was surprised when I learn-
ed of the simplicity scheme
which was carried out in the
building of the Capitol at
One great man went so far
as to say simplicity is an art
and I like to think of Lincoln’s
words, “God must have liked
the cummon people otherwise
he would not have made so
many?’
*--:---
busses, to say nothing of nickel
candies, automatic restaurants
and others, require nickels.
And now New Yorkers have be-
come penny hoarders, too. For
nearly everything but food is
ENTERTAINERS . rich field
Young men and women
sometimes ask me for advice
in shaping their careers. That
is always a compliment, but I
am not always sure that I can
give them any advice of real
value.
If the inquiring youngster
has any talent for public en-
tertainment, however, I always
advise him to follow that line.
The big money flows into the
pockets of those who can stir
people’s emotions, not to those
who try to stimulate their
minds. If you can make people
laugh, or make them cry, stir
them to sentimental blissful-
ness or arouse them to anger,
you have something for which
they will pay you more than
they pay Presidents or heads
of big corporations.
Where are the largest salar-
ies paid? In Hollywood, to the
great screen stars. Who gets
the big money for writing? Not
the serious thinkers whose
books contain, sometimes the
distilled essence of wisdom, but
the humorists, the romantic
novelists, the story-tellers—in
other words, the entertainers.
In music, in all the arts, in the
theater—even in the pulpit—
the ones who get the money
are the ones who are most
skillful in playing upon the
human heartstrings.
I know a Negro tap-dancer
who earns more money every
year than any bank president
I know. He has the essential
quality of showmanship. So if
I see signs of showmanship in
any youngster I always advise
By Durries Crane,
Famed Hotel Food Manager
Different types of club sand-
wiches are known almost ev-
erywhere, but few know how
the sandwich was originated.
The story is that a club man,
arriving at the club too late
for service, went into the pan-
try to forage for himself. He
found some cold chicken which
he sliced, some bacon which he
broiled and some bread which
he toasted. Then with lettuce
and mayonnaise he proceeded
to make himself the sandwich
which has since become famous.
Whether or not this version is
correct makes little defference
for the fact remains that the
club sandwich today is the fa-
vorite of thousands.
The club sandwich usually is
eaten hot and is so large that
it constitutes almost a whole
meal in itself.
Club Sandwich — Slice bread
into thin even slices and toast
to a delicate brown. Spread
with butter and mayonnaise,
and cover with a crisp lettuce
leaf, more mayonnaise, slice of
cold breast of chicken, season
with salt and pepper, add slices
of crisp boiled bacon and a let-
uce leaf dipped in mayonnaise.
Serve with stuffed olives if de-
sired.
Bridge Luncheon Sandwich
Loaf—Trim the crusts from
the four sides of a loaf of
bread and cut the loaf length-
wise into four thick slices.
Spread with butter and put the
slices together to form a four
decker loaf with three differ-
ent colored fillings. Minced pi-
mento with mayonnaise, cream
cheese with cream, and minced
parsley with mayonnaise may
be used for the fillings. Press
the slices together firmly into
loaf and spread the outside with
cream cheese softened with
milk or cream. Chill an hour
and slice at table to serve.
Banana Sandwich — The ba-
nanas must be ice cold. Cut
them into slices and dip the
slices in mayonnaise. Lay the
slices on bread and spread with
cream cheese mixed with just
enough cream to make it spread
easily.
Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Clark are
preparing to move to their
farm home south of town to-
day. For the past several weeks
they have been domiciled in the
Kubricht building on First
Street. They plan to leave in
the Spring for North Dakota
for an extended visit with rela-
tives. Mr. Clark, having rented
all of his land, will be prepared
to spend a real vacation in the
North.
/ ---------------
W. M. Schreiner, will begin
soon. A double garage will be
erected with hard surfaced
driveway, and the home will be
piped for natural gas.
Meyers Memorial M. E. Church
Sealy Sunday School 9:45
a.m.
Mrs. Roddie O’Connor, Supt.
Preaching at Sealy every
first and second Sunday even-
ing 7:30, and every third and
fourth Sunday morning at 11
a.m. Church treasurer, Carl
Schaer.
Ladies Aid Society of Sealy
meets the first Thursday of
each month 3:30 p.m. Mrs. C.
C. Luhn, president.
Peters Sunday School 9:30
a.m. Mrs. Lillian Balke, Supt.
Preaching at Peters every
first Sunday morning 10:30 a.
m., and every third and fifth
Sunday evenings 7:30. Church
treasurer, Ben Kibbler.
Everybody cordially invited
to all services.
A. E. Hughes, Pastor
When physicians at the
Maryland General Hospital
'found the throat of the infant
not all, thank heaven—are buy- v,p,
ing fake fireplaces, mantles Icmanld
and all. Some of them turn
stricture, they inserted a
(rubber tube “throat” through
an incision in the stomach in
an attempt to save the child’s
life.
Had the child lived, the phy-
sicians would have attempted
to give it normal throat func-
tions by dilating the closed
esophagus.
taxed two percent in New
York City. And that makes
odd amounts. Pennies are in de-
mand.
First Methodist Church
Sunday school every Sunday,
9:45 a.m.
Preaching services every
second and fourth Sundays.
W. M. S. meets every Tues-
day afternoon at 3:00 p.m.
Prayer meeting every Wed-
nesday evening at 7:45.
Preaching at San Felipe each
Friday evening preceeding the
second and fourth Sundays.
The public has a cordial in-
vitation to attend all these ser-
vices.
Havana. I knew it is one of the
world’s most beautiful capitols
and I was more interested in it
when I learned how plain it
was furnished. There is an ab-
sense of statues, there are un-
draped walls. Marble and ma-
hagony are combined in the
structure and the ten front
doors are bronze with plaques
depicting the history of Cuba.
The beauty of this capitol is
cimaxed with a diamond set in
the floor of the lobby. This is
encircled with the gold of melt-
ed pen points used in signing
the contracts of the building.
This in turn is set in an onyx
star and protected under
glass.
them to cultivate it. It
worth more than diamonds.
, -
“Simplicity rules all things.”
I heard this axiom when a child
and it has stayed with me.
DICKENS . on the screen
At last the greatest novel of
Charles Dickens—who was es-
sentially a showman—has been
put on the screen in a manner
which preserves all of its
comedy, its pathos, and its es-
sential humanity. If you who
read this haven’t yet seen the
new show, “David Copperfield,”
by all means go to see it.
Whether you have ever read
any of Dickens’ immortal
stories or not, you will realize
what a wonderful insight he
had into the wellsprings of
human conduct, and how keen
an understanding of the comic
spirit which pervades all life.
I am beginning to believe
that the movie magnates have
really seen a great light. The
realization that there is more
to life than crime and sensual-
ity, and that there is a great
public which is truly apprecia-
tive of the very best that it can
get, seems to have come home
to them.
I hope we have more pic-
tures of the quality of “David
Copperfield.”
I
g I
$) !
1
Mass 8:15 a. m.
sermon.
Mass 9:30 a.m.
; Miss Jennie E. Vick
4 (
: W
THANK YOUR STARS
*******
FOR DELAYED AND
*******
HUNGRY CLUBMAN
DEATH TAKES BABY
> * * * * * *
GIRL WHO LIVED 16
e > > 3 3 3 >e
DAYS WITH "TUBE"
Baltimore, Md., January 28.
1—A 16-day fight for life by a
TODAY and
TOMQBB9
6*K2"
hunk PARKER iTTMfe/ Q
STOCBRIDGEAs+ASA’
CHANGE . constant
No human institution ever
stands still. Nothing else, much,
does, either. Even the solid
earth has sixteen different mo-
tions, pulling it every which
way at once.
All that any individual hum-
an being can do about it, when
he finds social, economic, moral
and political conditions chang-
ing in ways he doesn’t like, is
either to change with them,
doing his best to direct the
line of movement along paths
which he considers more likely
to lead to the general good in
the long run, or else sit tight
and let the world go by.
It is more trouble to keep
up with the world, after a man
reaches a certain age, than to
pull himself into his shell and
refuse to have anything to do
with the new things about him.
But the only way an intelligent
person can get much satisfac-
tion out of life is to be a part
of it, and to try to find what
good he can in its constant
changes.
Some ’ fundamental truths
never change. It is possible to
hold fast to the elemental vir-
tues of personal honor and in-
tegrity, to hold one’s self-res-
pect, in short, and still achieve
a fair degree of contentment,
if not of happiness, in the
midst of a changing social
order.
“I have been young and now
I am old,” wrote the Psamist,
“but I have not seen the
righteous forsaken nor his seed
begging bread.” That is as true
now as if was when it was
written.
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The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, February 1, 1935, newspaper, February 1, 1935; Sealy, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1590908/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Virgil and Josephine Gordon Memorial Library.