The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1972 Page: 2 of 8
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THE WEST NEWS - WEST, TEXAS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
' VISITORS
Guests in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Prank Hubik, Monday,
were Maj. Dolores Hubik and
Mr. Mr. Edd Hubik of Gardena,
Calif., Clara Klodz.inski of An-
derson, Mrs. Joe Prnka of Le-
roy, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hubik of
Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. Anton
Foyt am aciner of West.
Mrs. Frau:: and Mrs. Joe
Hubik served dinner to the
guests.
Mr. and Mrs. George McMa-
han and Gregory of Manor,
spent the weekend with his
mother, Mrs. Hollis McMahan.
Mr. and Mrs. Marl McMahan
and Arthur and Mr. and Mrs.
David Ferguson of Cedar Hill
spent the weekend with their
parents and grandparents. Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Littleton. Also
visiting- with them on Sunday
were Mr. and Mrs. Ray Morse
and Lori, Becky and Dunnie
Storie of Waco.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Schiller
Teresa and Rebecca from Bren-
ham and Mr. and Mrs. David
Patton, David, Jr., and Chris
from Garland visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Jerome Lednicky, Sr.,
this weekend.
Miss Clara Klodzinski from
Anderson is visiting with her
cousins, Mrs. Anton Foyt and
Mrs. Frank Hubik.
♦ ♦
Mr. and Mrs. James Quilter of
Dallas visited recently with Mrs.
Aug. Morris. The Quilters were
enroute home from a 14-day va-
cation to various parts of Mex-
ico.
* *
Mrs. Tim Holloman visited in
Poteet, with Mrs. J. J. Koemel
during the weekend. She re-
turned b> way of Lockhart, and
visited there with Mr. Hollo-
mans relatives.
* *
Mr. Ed Hubik and daughter,
Major Dolores H. Hubik of Gar-
dena,, Calif., visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Hubik, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Dolezal and Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Ihlenfeldt of Waco.
They also attended the VFW
barbecue where they visited with
Dolores’ cousins, Mr. and Mrs.
Toby Matula, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Matula and Mr. and Mrs. John
Kalins of Abbott.
Religious Services
For All Faiths
The deep meaning in religious services bring comfort
and enlightenment. Our individual services respectfully
pay tribute with dignity. Have confidence In our
experience.
Marshall & Marshall
Funeral Home
Hillsboro and Whitney
Local Items
Mrs. Edna Simek of Schulen-
burg. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Krenek of Abbott and Mrs. Jose-
phine Sulak of West attended
| the funeral services held for
Mrs. Annie Parma in Ennis,
Wednesday, Oct. 18. Mrs. Parma
was an aunt of Mrs. Sulak and
Mrs. Krenek and a great-aunt
of Mrs. Simek.
♦ ♦
Willie C. Thompson of Berk-
strom AFB: Austin, was injured
in a one-ear accident in IH 35,
Saturday morning. He was
taken to West Community Hos-
pital by Kotch Funeral Home
ambulance for medical treat-
ment.
* *
Mrs. Leo Gerik was admitted
■ to the West Community hos-
pital, Friday morning, Oct. 20.
* •
| The Raymond Finn family
spent Saturday in Ennis attend-
i ing the wedding of Debbie Mi-
kula and Gary Reeves at St.
j John's Catholic Church and al-
] so the supper and dance at the
SPJST Hall, Darlene Finn was
a bridesmaid.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Barton
and Mrs. Loiuise Lucien and
Sandy and Mr. and Mrs. Tommy
Hennig and family, all of Dallas
attended the wedding dance
Saturday in Ennis for Debbie
Mikula and Gary Reeves.
DRAMA CU B SELLS
TUTERWARE
Drama Club is selling Tupper-
ware as a fundraising project.
Orders are being taken for va-
rious Tupperware items until
November 10 Delivery date of
Tupperware items is November
24, so that students can distri-
bute them during the Thanks-
giving holidays.
Not only will the Drama Club
be making a profit but also in-
dividual mcmbeis. The club will
be divided into two teams,
headed by team captains. The
team selling the most Tupper-
ware will be given a prize. Indi-
viduals will also be able to earn
prizes- Tupperware will award
the top seller in the club with
a prize depending on how much
he or she sells.
Money raised from the sales
will be used for the expenses on
the UIL play in the spring. Pro-
fits will also be used on var-
; ious plays the club plans to see
during the year.
LONSWILLED!
The longest will on record was
that OF MR a FREDERICR COOK. IN
THE EARLY YEARS OF THE .XNTt'KY:
IT CONSISTED OF <55940 V\ .MOA
CONTAINED,IN EC'JND
writ i impc, ! _
Accent On Health
HH'UfY’S INSTANT
COZOA
MIX
BANCH STYIE
CHIHl 19 Oi. Can
mm
SUPER SAVE
MARK E T S
Old Abilene Town
Plate To Visit
If you're planning on zinging
east to west, or west t.o east, a-
cross Texas on Interstate 20, or
| if you're just milling around
smartly between Forth Worth
and Big Spring, or Wichita Falls
and San Angelo, — and you
don't stop by Old Abilene Town,
you're missing a bet!
The town, on the Texas Forts
Trail, is owned by one man —
his name's “Casey". And, when I
you stop in Old Abilene Town,
as you gaze down main street,
you can almost hear the jing-
le of spurs and the hollow thud
of boots on the old boardwalk,
the creak of wagon wheels and
other sounds of yesteryear. So-
methin’ about it will get you.
It might be the good food at the
Golden Stagecoach Restaurant,
the reasonables prices, the an-
tique cars, the silent movies, a
shoot out or the prairie dogs.
The prairie dogs are a good
example of what happens in
Old Abilene Town. Casey tho-
ught, it would bo good to hare
prairie dogs for visitors to view,
so he got some of the critters.
They soon dug out of their com-
pound, but they discovered they
liked the place — so they sta-
yed. Now. prairie dogs are seen what’s the biggest communic-
seamperring about, going from 1 akje disease problem in Texas
burrow to burrow, on Old Abi- today?
lene’s Main Street. J Diphteria? Polio? Measles? Ru-
henna
Like the prairie dogs many ^ serious dlseases and
a traveler ha stopped byOK , threais if the im-
Abilene Town for a quick stretch munization ]evels decline. But
and ended up wanting U stay highest priori-
iongcr. Tnc towm open S a.uL - ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ nation
9 p m., is in a u t. o right now are vcneral diseases,
baet:°To0,U—dmfvil,; says your State Health Depart-
who vearn to return for a Ion-.nlen ■
gor stay Cascvs tickets, $1.251 If that comes as a surprise,
for adults and 75 cents for child there's a reason. VD is some-
1U1 u thing people are unaccustomed
ren ere good for a whole year , It Uas always
There's no admission for the <u h •
Golden Stagecoach Restaurant, been there, silently exacting its
Coffee Shop or Last Chance Sato ‘0‘ as dangerous er.ppler and
ton TOcseplaces re. in a way, ^ler. But venerea disease sy-
previews of Old Abilene Town. Phy«s and gonorrhea, so the
1 ! diseases keep occuring — and
In the Golden Stagecoach I Sprea(jjng under a mantle of
you dine you can view si en sf?(,recy fear and social stigma,
movies, featuring such lavoriiesj Thp Texas state Department
a,s the Little Rasea>s, in.d |1S •< n with federal assistan-
ce piano music or guitar pickm ^ llas started a state-wide pub-
and singing. In the Inst - ranee awareness campaign to let
Saloon you can belly up to a jjle pUblic know what is hap-
beautiful bar that in its youn- jn _ and what can be done
ger days in Gonzales, Texas s op
ped a bullet or two. The holes aDout lC’
are still there. Let your imagine-. In addition to public service
tion wander on the subject of advertisements in the state's lo-
how they camp to be. cal newspaperes, and a radio
The Old Abilene menu is har- and television campaign, the
dy not fancy and prices are State Health Department plans
amazingly reasonable. A coffee to conduct a series of seminars
shop breakfast of two eggs, a or confciences.
The first conference for health
professionals and community of
THE WEST NEWS
for your own
PROTECTION..,
BUY U. S. SAVINGS
BONDS! PAYROLL
SAVINGS PUTS MORE OF
Trie PUBLIC DEBT INTO THE
HANDS OF REAL SAVERS
AND HELPS THE TREASURY
KEEP our economy
%***f*><meouA*
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
SHORT-WILLED!
...AND THE BRIEFEST WILL
WAS PROBATED IN
ENOLAND, 1906. IT SIMPLY
SAID: “ALL FOR MOTHER"
(THORN VS. PlCkENS)
Cechoslovak Publishing Company, Publisher*
Published every Friday and SUBSCRIPTIONS
Mitered as second class mail
matter at the post office at f^
West, Mclennan County, Texas
76691. Payable in Advance
Pictures to be published should be turned In no later thu
Saturday. Charge for making mats of pictures is $4.00 for onei
column cut. and S8.00 tor two-column cut.
_____*2.50
______ $4.M
several purposes, but there are
two or three major ones. First, j
the extend of the problem must |
be made clear to everyone, along '
with the knowledge the method
of transmission — from one in-
fected person to another per-
son through intimate contact.
Early diagnosis, early tieat-
And, thirdly, it will stress the
necessity for immediate treat-
ment should disease symptoms
appear.
nrent and good epidemiology in
tracing VD to its source are
three essentials in curbing this
VD epidemic, says the State
Health Department.
FRANKS
.2-0,. PA* 49C Cl
,z&,
\Juu iH-y
Mil 25< B
99* B j
-
j' 4-or IAN MAXIM NOW
6000 THN0U6H ’0-J1
Olives,
stuffed,
5 oz. - 45c
fmL B°’
y/l/7*EVt.:i 1 W IK I - 00 »-■*«'• »>
pure cane
SUGAR
t£il 20$
With •-■5 C Ou** N *>»N
VOyj •>.! » l- -B c»*» o*
Mukukmk' ,
■ attain Mf* I
AT. turn $ A VI MATS -
! 69C ^ „ Con
Ml 4HEIIIHBS lO-jV-n t J, h J
' PEL MONTE UGHT CHUNK
i —“ “ “ “ “
i
MEXICO
Oranges, 4-lb. bag - - 49c
WHITE SWAN
Peaches, No. 2\ can - 35c
meterc.ent
Cheer, king size---$1.25
BORDEN'S EAGLE BRAND
Milk, 14-oz. can ---39c
MINER
Pancake Mix, 2 lbs. - 49c
WHITE SWAN SOFT
Margarine, 1 lb. - - 33c
BOLDEN NIP — C OZ.
Orange Juice - - 5 for $1
WHITE SWAN, Cl T
Green Beans - - 4 c?*~3 $1
WHITE SWAN
Mustard, 16 oz.----21c
BETTY CROCKER
Cake Mixes-----35c
15EFFY CLEAN-UP
Lawn Bag, 5 ct.----69c
BANQUET
Pot Pies------5 — $1
CHEF CHOICE CRINKLE CUT
Potatoes, 2-lb. - - 3 for $1
ST. JOSEPH 36s
Children’s Aspirin - - 39c
LICHNOVSKY Grocery
lai’L’c picae of ham ( none of the
paper thin stuff either*, with
' * ........... piUiL-WSlLAIiaiS a«*u v uimmumjr
hash browns and toast for $1,10 ficlals ig sciiedu!ed September 20
“ <hnm ba‘ -21 at the Royal Coach Inn in
or hotcakes and meat (ham, ba-
con or sausage) for 95 cents in
the “best buy” category.
The Coffee Shop opens at 7 a.
m. Tne dining room hours are
11 a. m. — 2 p.m. and 5-11 P m.
with an extra added on Friday
and Saturday night.
Dallas, it is jointly sponsored by
the State Health Department
and Blue Cross — Blue Shield
of Texas. All participants will i
be provided with an informati-1
on kit, a distillation of the most1
current authoritative literature
I jiW
HI Diumu.y I riuiCJ.ll/ uuuiuiuauvu lUClWYlllL.
Inside the gate at Old Abilene ■ pU(. together by the American
.......<!"J " rnn,n .social Health Ass’n.
i The seminar is a high-level
one, with separate sympposiums
for physicians and pharmacists.
The program is accepted, hour
for hour, for a maximum of 15
and half elective hours by the
American Academy of Family
Physicians,
Keynote speaker at the confe-
rence will be Dr. J. D. Millar,
chief of the Venereal Disease
Branch of the Center for Dise-
ase Control ’n Atlanta. Ga. Dr.
Town, visitors find a long main
street with buildings on each si-
de to explore. Among them arc
the general store, the bank, sa-
loon, mystery house, antique car
exhibit. Heritage Museum, and
school house.
In the museum one can wan-
der for hours. It houses an un-
classified variety of memorabilia
antioues a batch. a crank or-
gan (without the monkey), an
old electric cigar lighter that
SWEATER SCOOP—It’s the
year of the sweater. And for
tops in comfort, here’s an all-
cotton pullover with a U-
neck for showing off the shirt
underneath. It’s teamed with
a slim line skirt of plush all-
cotton. corduroy. By White
Stag.
Super
Star lblue
MOTOROLA Qiiasai'
Portable Color TV
WITH SOLID STATE HIGH VOLTAGE RECTIFIER
Remote Control Tuning
/jk
' y
Motorola makes remote control easy by elimi-
nating the complicated color adjustment buttons
from its transmitter. All you do is turn the set on
- or off. .. change VHF channels . .. adjust volume
from your easy chair. Insta-Matic Color Tuning at the
set helps handle the color balancing.
• Insta-Matic Color Tuning
Push one button on the set to automatically
balance the color hue, intensity, contrast, brightness...
and you can even activate the automatic fine tuning.
• Plug-In Circuit Modules
Solid-state components replace all but four chassis
tubes. If a circuit module ever fails, a service technician
can unplug it and snap in an exchange module.
• Instant Picture and Sound
• Motorola Bright Picture Tube
• Lighted Dial Channel Selector
• Roll-About Cart Included
* 559*?.
ALL
THIS
FOR
ONLY
MOD TT687HW Picture
(DIAGONAL)
SEE THIS GREAT VALUE TODAY!
F. G. GERIK & SON APPLIANCES
still works, a huge French pro-
vincial niafo that, ls sad to_bavr i Millar supervises the federal VD
belonced to the mother of 1 control program affects Texas
lv the Kid, a vintage■ ldde-awnv communj^jes sevrral other fe-
bathtub and oriier things ia-i deral officials will also addres
many have ’’never seen before. thp conforence
Yes. if Abilene is along jour i >php Tpxas yD program will
route, a stop at Caseys own ^ discussed by Dr. M. S. Dicker-
ought to be on the schedule, i gQn chief communicable Dise-
nnd as the Texas Tourist Dote- nsp gpjyjpgg section, Texas Sta-
lopment Ageney notes. Old Abi- tp Department of Health.
just one of the Speakers wiU focus on the VD
problem in Texas, state and lo-
cal VD control efforts, health
aspects of untreated venereal
disease, current research in the
VD field, development of a VD
community educational camp-
aign, and community action
prototypes.
Texas dies have a problem,
along with the other 49 states
in the nation.
In 1971. for example, the num-
ber of reported new eases of
Condensed Statement of the Condition of
The State National Bank
WEST, TEXAS
DAs of close of business September 30, 1971 and October 10, 1972
RESOURCES:
lene Town is
manv interesting adventures a-
waiting travelers along the Te-
res Forts Trail.
n.V.O.S. NO. 78
HOI OS MEETING
Lodge West RVOS No. 78 held
their annual meeting at 2 p.m.
on Sunday. Oct. 15. The meeting
was held at West Waterworks
Building. The officers eleeted to
serve for 1973 are as follows:
Edward J Potter, president:
Frank J. Polansky. vice presi-
dent- Ervin J. Laubert. secre- syphilis and gonorrhea in Te-
tary-treasurer, and Henry Kolar, xas exceeded 55.000. But the fi-
apnraiser. ■ gure is just the tip of the iee-
The current membership of only obout one in five cases is
Lodge 78 is 300 This is an in- actually reported to health of-
creas« of 23 members since Jan. fieials.
1. 1972.
U7Tl£ APS
.7L
i Last year in the UnitPd States
I the number of reported gonor-
rhea cases exceeded 624.000 ac-
cording to the U.S. Public He-
alth Service. In this country it
is estimated that there are a
half-million cases of syphilis in-
fecting people who don’t even
know they have it.
The awareness campaign has
Sept. 30, 1971
Oct. 10, 1972
.................................$ 818 904 17
$ 917.499.14
U. S Government Bonds
.................................. 780.176.25
780,739.03
Bonds of Federal Agencies .........
................................. 1.048,375.00
1,548.375.00
Municipal Bonds .............................
.................................. 43,064 00
40,040.00
Federal Funds Sold
................................... 400.000 00
600.000 00
.................................... 1 00
LOO
Total Cash and Exchange ..............
..................................$ 3,090,520.42
$ 3.886,654.17
Loans and Discounts .....................
..................................... 3.078,453.90
3.505.310.82
Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures 76.893.77
65,278.58
Federal Reserve Bank Stock .....
..................................... 6.000.00
6,000.00
Other Real Estate ..........................
......................... 21.597.19
28,071.95
.................. 1,200.84
3.262.26
Total .....................................................
...................................S 6.274,666.12
$ 7.494,577.78
LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL:
................................... 100.000 00
100.000.00
Capital Debentures
................................... ”0-
100,000.00
.......................... 100.00000
100,000.00
Undivided Profits .............................
.................................. 114.81961
161.340.99
Unearned Interest .........................
.................................. 48.32699
44.711.98
Reserved for Bad Debts ..............
.................................... 66.38969
63.726.06
Reserved for Taxes and Interest
.............................. 18.755 00
22,828.29
Mortgages Payable
...................................
12,000.00
Other Liabilities .............
877.60
DEPOSITS .......................................
................................. 5,826.37483
6.889.092 86
Total ..............................................
................................4 6.274.660 12
$ 7,494.577.78
The above statement ls correct.
JEROME J. LEDNICKY, SR., President
MEMBER OF FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
I
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The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1972, newspaper, October 27, 1972; West, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth715287/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting West Public Library.