In 1898 there was again a big fire in the village. Almost the whole village burned down, only a few marginal houses remained. Wars and fires were a great danger and fear for the population. The soldiers plundered, looted, took the crop and the farm for their own use. The fire was a frequent guest, because straw-covered houses and all other farm buildings were good food for him. To protect the crop from these two greatest enemies, the people hid it in pits. They were called cereal pits. They were in the shape of a round or oblong bottle. They were dug in hard earth. The Holíč estate had economic centers built. The main one was in Holíč, others were in Gbely and Radošovce. The general administration consisted of a mayor-fojt, a farmer and an oath. The will, by which Anna Mária Havránek transfers the mill to her second husband Ignác Dechet on March 18, 1784, mentions the mayor Jura Kapitan at that time. Fojt Martin Vanijek is on the land register from the same year. The indictment against Holíčanov due to the Žabinec pasture is signed by the mayor Martin Kotvan. The census and estimate of Anton Havel's house includes the mayor Jan Mažar, the lord bailiff Pavel Vanek. The purchase of the Captain's House and the property belonging to it on 5 February 1848 is requested by the mayor Jan Štepanikum.
No record was found of the fact that the army was near Havel. It was probably a lordly mob, which by the abolition of serfdom in 1848 expired. The last men's boss was Pavel Havel. Until the First World War, Buchta and Hollý are mayors. No other magistrates are known.
The Urban Charter dates from 1784. The Urbans were divided into Half-Quarters, Circleers, Semicircles and Domkars. The semi-squirrels took 1 1/6 of the wood hurry, the roundabouts took 1 wood hurry, the semicircles and the Domkári only 1 hurry.