The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 190, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 11, 1968 Page: 6 of 16
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NOW Serving
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Red
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SUIPHUR SPRINGS Tt X
We’re always a Jump ahead when
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211 East Jefferson
firearms, fled the city, occupied
rural areas, and began waging
a guerrilla-type war against the
army.
SPECIAL
LAY-AWAY
PRICE
By MAX B. SKELTON
AP OU Writer
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - In-
dependent oil men have warned
"In the past three months, to-
tal new supply of oil averaged
P
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Come ust our convenient
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a garage. Make
the
$79"
improvement
you need NOW!
Finance the job here
TESTING MILK samples is an everyday task for Mrs. Wilma
Caidwell, assistant, and Jack Hogan, laboratory technician, at
the North Texas Producers Association plant in Sulphur Springs.
They test milk samples for butterfat. Every producer's milk
is tested for butterfat content. Huge tanker trucks haul milk
from throughout Northeast Texas to Sulphur Springs for pro-
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for the
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dimint
LONDON (AP) - She has
long, sturdy legs and blonde
hair, with a rather big nose ami
tough hands which can deal
with a horse.
She tells her brother off, from
time to time, and manages to be
a tomboy in one moment, a lady
in another, and a sister and a
daughter. Apart from all that,
she has to be herself.
This is Princess Anne, who
will be 18 on Aug. 15.
She is the second child of
Queen Elizabeth 0 and Prince
Philip. Her brother, Charles,
will be king one day.
Anne does not figure on being
queen. If anything happens to
Charles, her younger brother
Andrew inherits the title. So her
finest title Is likely to be “the
princess royal.” That probably
will be conferred on her by her
mother, the queen, on her 21st
birthday.
On her 18th birthday, she will
be in fact part of the royal es-
tablishment on the move wlth-
.. out any complaints. The queen,
and her father, Prince Philip,
have arranged for the royal
yacht Britannia to sail from
Portsmouth to Scotland with
Anne and the prince of Wales
aboard.
By Aug. 15 they either will be
aboard or in Scotlind.
The completion of her second-
ary school last month, for all
practical purposes, could be the
finish of her school learning.
Her parent^ have not yet de-
cided If she should go to univer-
sity. Her brother, Charles, the
prince of Wales and future king,
is at Trinity College, Cam-
bridge.
She took senior levels in histo-
ry and geography at her private
school, Benenden. Anne has tak-
en piano lessons, but that is
Bl
COLLECTION SYSTEM — Powder is separated from air through series of cyclones in this ma-
chine at the North Texas Producers Association plant in Sulphur Springs. This machine can
handle 30,000 pounds of fluid per hour and often operates on a 20-hour daily schedule. Sulphur
Springs is perhaps the only city in the south of similar size that has three separate and differ-
ent milk processing plants (Photo by T. A. Wright)
Anne knows her brother will
be king. But she still sticks her
tongue out at him.
They get along because, as
one palace source put it,
"Charles is basically kind and
he gets along with everyone.”
At 18, she is 5-feet-G and now
out of the awkward stance.
One is inclinded to p o n d e r
about romances for such eligi-
ble girls, but in the case of Prin-
cess Anne there are so few "eli-
glbles” that the question has not
arisen.
Anne is an outdoorsy type.
She likes riding, like her moth-
er, also hiking, fresh air, camp-
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ball
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cessing at the local plant. Huge storage tanks holding more
than 30,000 gallons of milk are used during the peak periods of
work. Work continues through most of the 24-hours of the day
during the heaviest periods of milk production. (Photo by T. A.
Wright).
veutories will develop by Octo-
ber unless domestic crude pro-
duction is reduced sharply.
The Independent Petroleum
Association of America esti-
mates that the August-October
requirement for domestic crude
should average 8,700,000 barrels
a day. This is nearly 600,000
barrels a day below the July
average.
’ The association warns that if nation’s largest trade group for
burdens from inventories are to
be avoided the total supply of
new oil should not exceed 13
million barrels a day the next
three months.
Total supply is derived from
three sources-from petroleum
imports and from domestic pro-
duction of crude oil and domes-
6, Sac. 1—THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM. Sulphur Springs, Texas, Sunday, August 11. 196«.
IMa WT fl Anne Awaits
,4.1J
tic production of natural gas
liquids.
Independent operators have 13.2 million barrels a day, up
been advised they can expect oil 750,000 a day from the same
that extremely burdensome in- imports to average 2,850,000 bar- month last year/
rels a day through October and said,
can expect natural gas liquids "But domestic production was
output to average 1,450,000 bar- up 830,000 barrels a day in this
rels daily. period while imports were down
"This means a requirement 80,000. Inventories continued to
for domestic crude of 8,700,000 rise to 950 million barrels on
barrels a day, about 600,000 June 30, up 54 million barrels
less than July output,” said fromthe same date in 1967. Most
"Executive Report," a monthly of the gains in products stocks,
information bulleting distributed with heating oil inventories up
to the 6,000 members of the 28 million barrels.”
Chase Manhattan
independent oil men. monthly Petroleum Review indi-
Llngering after-effects of last cates no Immediate inventory
year’s Israeli-Arab war continue problems of major proportions
to aggravate petroleum sup- but agrees with independent
plies. The bullet said the closed that current trends cannot con-
Suez Canal and resulting in- tinue much longer,
creases in tanker rates kept im- "The rate of the buildup in
ports below quotas the first half the past two months has been in
of the year. excess of indicated needs.
* Red Guards
Waging War
HONG KONG (AP) -
Guards are waging a guerrilla
about the end of her musical at- w*r against Communist Chinese
talnment. army units in rural areas of
Kwangtung Province while
fresh fighting has erupted in
Canton, travelers from China
reported today.
Remnants of rival Red Guard
tactions have reportedly started
fighting again nightly, after a
brief lull when the army sup-
pressed the fighting.
There was no confirmation of
the reports.
Shots are heard nightly in the
center of Canton, the reports
said.
The army recently cracked
down on the Red Guards, appar-
ently on orders from Pekiig.
Army notices were plastered
Ing, and sports which require throughout the city, ordering all
muscle. This is precisely like Rud Guard factions to hand
her father, the duke of Edfo- their firearms over to the army,
burgh, and it is not far from her The travelers said the Red
Socttish ancestry from grandma Guards disobeyed, kept their
— the Queen Mother.
She will, after 18, get quite a
few jobs. There are so many
things to be dedicated.
FALL COAT
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 190, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 11, 1968, newspaper, August 11, 1968; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1585697/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.