The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 186, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1964 Page: 2 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 24 x 18 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:
- ■TtfWaaaKr’n
12 THS CUERO RECORD, Friday, Aug. 7. 1904
PERSONALS
Jack Howerton accompanied
Cheater Evans, publislier of The
Edna Herald at Edna, to San
Antonio this morning to attend
funeral services far Henry
Natho, owner of Natho Paper
Co. in the Alamo City
Maxine Tubbs and Marian
Aronatein are in Austin for
orientation at the University of
Texas.
Mrs. J. D. Fanett of Cuero
and Miss Agnes Abernathy and
Mrs. Effie Buchring of Yoakum
left Thursday for San Antonio
where they boarded a tr?>in
Thursday evening for San
Francisco, Calif. They will at-
tend an international conven-
tion of Delta Kappa Gamma
next week. They plan some
tours while away.
T. B. and Dave Brantley
were in Yorktown Wednesday
to attend the rites for Albeit
Block
Congratulations to Caroline
Cheatham who U nine years old
today. She is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Cheatham.
UIW YOU* WATCH
A NEW FACE
Replace Wora-oat
0*4 Watch races sad
Crystals, New.
Kerning & Wagner
JEWELERS
Lester Frees
WATCH REF ASM
Caere. Texas
Today thru Saturday
WILL HAUNJ yO'-'I
g
IwHSa*6
• « sac* uia woeuctios i iwntsa kujui
Plus
Bm Otflee Opens 1:45
sad S:tS p.m
AdeMs dBe—Children the
BlALTOe
Hospital Notes
BURNS HOSF1TAI.
Admissions: Mr*. O. L. Dav-
is, Gerald Dedear. Mrs. Wayne
Russell, Mrs. Eugene Behrens,
and Gus Lenz.
Dismissed: Mrs. Jerry Ilanys
and Mrs. Guilford Tully.
CUERO HOSPITAL
Admissions: Joe Trevino.
Dismissed: Henry Johnson,
Mrs. Mary Dabney and James
Allison
I Obituaries..
HENRY A. NATHO
Funeral services for Henrv A.
Natho, 63, of 322 Hicks, San
Antonio who died Wednesday,
were heki Friday at 10 a.in.
Rites were conducted from
Mcdaugberty Funeral Chapel
In San Antonio, the Rev. Arthur
Holm officiating. Burial was in
San Jose Burial Park.
Mr. Natho was the owner of
Natho Paper Co.. He had lived
In San Antonio 48 years and was
a member of the I Ait he ran
Church. Hermann Suns. Har-
monia Lodge No. 1. S. A.
Manufacturers' Assn., Chamber
of Commerce, Printing Indus-
try of San Antonio, National
Paper Trade Assn . and South
Texas Press Assn
Surviving are his wife, Mrs.
Edna Natho: son. Leslie Henry
Natho: daughter, Mrs. James
(La Verne i Ridder: grandchild-
ren, Leslie Sue. James Henry
and Cynthia Anne Natho. all of
San Antonio; sisters, Mrs. Theo
December, La Grange: Mrs. A.
L. Tweedle, Bloomfield, N. J.;
brothers. Herman Natho. San-
dia; and Robert N«*tho. San
Antonio.
Mr. Natho was weH-known in
Cuero havLig traveled through
here in ervmection with his
business for many years
| Sub Damaged
On Highway
PORI, Finland (UPD-A West
German submarine has been
damaged in a Finnish "high-
way” accident.
The accident - (nssibly the j
first traffic mishap involving a
sub - occurred Wednesday when
the road near here collapsed
beneath a truck carrying a
German one - man sub. Biberia.
to a fair here.
No one was hurt and officials
reported only minor damage to
the truck and sub. which ap-
peared at the fair as scheduled.
MISSIONARY KILLED
WASHINGTON - HTP - T h e
State Department said Thurs-
day an American missionary
has been reported killed by
Congolese rebels near Kabinda
in southern Kasai Province.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Toma-
nec and children, Rosanne and
Johnny, will leave Saturday for
a vacation trip to Florida
Helen and Greg Fetters have
returned from a vacation and
fishing trip to Corpus Chris ti
While there they sad they met
up with Ashford Manning of
Huntsville, a eousin to the Pete
Howertons
Mrs. John Sheads and child-
ren, Timothy Sheads and Lin-
da. Terry anti Billy Kruse of
Dallas are spending the week
with her sister-in-law, Mrs. A.
W. Schnffiw anil Mr Schaff-
ner.
A NUMBER of people In this community will face death dur-
ing this month. That death could occur in your family. Are
you prepared with sufficient cash to meet the immediate
needs of your family? Consult wiUi us about funeral insur-
ance
FREUND FUNERAL HOME
cm 5-4MJ—or—cm inn
Acquitted Men
Banged in Head
HERTFORD, England (UPD
--Sharon Timms, 18, was fined
10 pounds (|28) for hitting Jo-
seph Lee on the head with a
policeman's nightstick after he
had been acquitted of raping
her.
Miss Timms admitted she
waited outside the courtroom
for Lee after his acquittal and
knocked him out with the night-
stick because he was "looking
pleased with himself.”
"I am not sorry I did it." she
said. "The law was not fair so
I took it into my own hands ”
LOCAL GRAIN MARKET
tUERO ( AMR GRAIN MKT
Sehaffner’a (no
Mflo ........... .... 1.75 cwt.
Ear com on the farm .. 1.00 bu
mill ... —.................... 1.25 bu
Shelled com .......„... _ 1.3C bn
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH (UPI-USDAl
—Weekly livestock :
Cattle and calves: Compar-
ed week ago: Slaughter steers
mostly steady’: heifers steady
to 50 lower; slaughter calves
mostly 1.00-2.00 lower; feeder
classes steady to 1.00 lower;
week's jsalos included good and
low choice 781-1.147 lb. slaugh-
ter steers 22.00 - 22.25; good
20.00 - 22.00: good and choice
600 - 853 lb. slaughter heifers
20.00 - 21.50; most good slaugh-
ter calves up to 550 lbs. 16.00-
18:00, top 19.50: choice 500-800
lb. feeder steers 17.00-18.10;
good and choice feeder heifer
calves 15.00 - 17.70.
Hogs: Steady; bulk mixed 1-3
grade 190-250 lb. barrows and
gilts 16... 0-17.00; most 2-3
grade 240-270 lbs. 15.50-16.50:
sows must 1-3 grade 310-585 lbs.
13.00 - 14.00
Sheep: Mostly steady: bulk
gixxi and choice wooled spring
slaughter lambs 20.00-21.50, few
22.50: few good and choice
shorn spring lambs 19.00-20.50:
utility and good slvn-n owes
mostly 6.00 - 6.25
TEXAS POUI.TRY PRICES j
AUSTIN (LTD - Poultry: J
South Texas — Steady; un-
dertone firm, supplies barely1
adequate for good demand:
movement normal: broilers and
fryers 3 - 34 lbs. 14.5
East Texas — Steady; un-
dertone unsettled: offering?, and
supplies ample for fair de-
mand; movement norma t: esti-
mated slaughter 420,000 head:
broilers and fryers 13.5 - 15.1.
LATE NEWS
BRIEFS
RESOLUTION ADOPTED
WASHINGTON —(UPD- The
House and Senate approved in
quick succession today an
emergency Viet Nam resolu-
tion upholding President John-
son in any "fight-if-we-must”
measures needed to counter
Red aggression in Southeast
Asia
STATE OF EMERGENCY
SAIGON, South Viet Nam —
CPD— Premier Nguyen Khanli
today proclaimed a state of
emergency, suspending all faws
banning strikes and demonstra-
tions. and decreeing death
without api>eal for convicted
saboteurs and terrorists. "We
can be attacked at any mom-
ent." Kanh said.
REDS CHARGE BUZZING
MOSCOW turo~- The Soviet
Union charged today that U. S.
Air Force planes have been
“buzzing" Soviet passenger
and cargo ships in internation-
al waters around the world.
The official news agency Tass
said a Soviet protest note to
the U. S. Embassy called for
due measures to stop die air
actions which “can lead to
serious consequences."
Tlte daytime population of
the Pentagon i s 25,000 and
sixty per cent of them are
World Almanac.
TONIGHT ONLY
$1.00 Carload
SATURDAY and SUNDAY
English Pubs
Running Dry
TORQUAY. England U'PL —
Putakeepers at this seaside re-
*->rt said today vacationers are
drinking them dry. Some open
their pubs only in the evenings
to keep fr<>m running out of
beer.
"The demand has been fan-
tastic." one pubkeeper said
Returning Students
'Should be Arrested'
[—Bets? C!it*r ,r«u loptfitaity
Abto tad Big Frttirr
To kill a
Mockingbird
-GREGORY PECK
Om allow tag of each feature
WASHINGTON (L’PD Rep.,
Paul Rogers. EVFla., believes,
that the 81 American students !
now visiting Cuba in defiance j
»f State Department rules!
should lie arrested as soon as
they return
He told the House Thursday
that according to reliable re-1
ports the students planned to
return to the United States
"sometime Saturday, or shortly
! thereafter "
rumogsg
Pbosr ( R 5 jtSo
Bos Office Open* Mi p m
IiisMs toe
< V«ir-n f r«
Avoid Cancer,
Smoke Hot End
CARACAS, Venezuela (UPD
—Harvard Prof. L. F. Quigley
says one solution to the tobac-
co problem may be to smoke
cigarettes with toe hot end in-
side the mouth, as Venezuelan
washerwomen do.
Quigley told an international
dental - science convention here
that Harvard researchers are
conducting a study of 300 wash-
erwomen which has produced
the following observations so
far:
— None of those under study
shows any symptom of cancer.
—They do not seem to be in-
convenienced by toe tempera-
ture of the burning cigarette,
which may approach 1.600 de-
grees Fahrenheit. They do have
to remember, though, to re-
move the cigarette and flick off
the ash before it gets long
enough to fall into the mouth.
—Something about this form
of internal combustion • per-
haps the heat, perhaps the nic-
otine - appears to alleviate
toothaches.
! HOOVER NEARS 90
WASHINGTON —(UPD - Pres
I ident Johnson Thursday paid
high tribute to former Presi-
dent Herbert Hoover and call-
ed on the nation to join in ob-
serving Hoover’s 90th birthday
Aug. 10.
Uncluttered lines are appar-
ent in tins tailored punipf
AAAA-AA-B up to 11
See Our Bargains
In Women’s Summer
SHOES
- ?5.9« - $6.90
Bass Shoe Store
Good She That Fit
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.
Mills, Lin. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 186, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1964, newspaper, August 7, 1964; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth696106/m1/2/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.