Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 135, Ed. 1 Friday, June 6, 1980 Page: 18 of 18
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II—THE NEWS-TELECRAM. Sulphur Springs, Texas, Friday, June 4,1910,
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Rodeo royalty
Jill Odell, 5, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Odell and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Billy Gregg
of Dike and Mr. and Mrs. J.L. Odell of Como, recently was named Junior Queen of the 20th annual
Winnsboro Rodeo. Contestants were judged on horsemanship, appearance and personality.
Marker ceremonies set
at area Baptist church
Dedication and unveiling of a
Texas Historical Marker will
be held at the Cypress Baptist
Church and Cemetery on High-
way 37 by the Franklin County
Historical Commission and
members of the church and
cemetery association at 2 p.m.
Sunday, June 15.
»
I Jinny Ramsay, Judge of the
8th Judicial District, will
deliver the dedicatory address.
Pastor of the church, the Rev.
J. Ivey Miller, will give the
invocation and Virginia Joyner
will direct the hymns.
BE. Ingram, a deacon in the
church, will extend the
welcome and introduce guests.
Gertrude Mattingly Banks will
give a history of the church and
cemetery. Others appearing bn
the program will be Dwight
Hightower, Doris Meek,
Chester Birdsong and lindsey
Hill.
The Associated Cypress
Baptist Church was founded on
Aug. 28,1851. The congregation
constructed a meeting house on
the property owned by Spencer
Shearer. In 1862 he deeded the
six acre site to the congregation
for a church and burial ground.
One of the earliest marked
headstones is that of Jane
Willis Huggins (1837-1854).
According to local tradition,
Confederate troops trained on
the church grounds during the
Civil War, 1861-1865. The
present sanctuary replaced the
original in 1953.
Members of the church
helped found the Mt. Zion
Church which later began the
First Baptist Church in Winn-
sboro. Descendants of many of
the early founders are active in
the congregation.
memorial service followed
by a dinner on the grounds will
begin at 10:30 a.m. preceding
the dedication program in the
afternoon.
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KING GEORGE SCOTCH
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CANADIAN MIST
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*AI! Prices...Phis Tax
Prices Good Friday & Saturday
702 £ulv«r St. Commerc*, Taxes
^ | ^|( .
OPEC tries
......”
to decide
on prices;
consumer
to pay tab
ROME < AP) — The Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries is trying
— for the fourth time in 15 months - to
reunify its oil prices. Industry sources say
that consumers could pay more as a result.
Oil ministers of the 13-nation group will
meet in Algiers, Algeria Monday to try to
put their prices back in line.
The ministers may also put final touches
on a long-range plan that would call for
automatic oil price increases linked to
world inflation, growth rates and currency
fluctuations.
But the ministers would have to agree on
a unified price structure to serve as a
starting point before their long-term price
plan could take effect.
OPEC’s crude prices have been ih
disarray since early 1979, when militant
members began to add "surcharges" to
their previously-agreed prices. As a result
some members are currently asking as
much as $7 a barrel more than others for
virtually identical grades of oil.
Iran, for instance, has fixed a price of
135 a barrel for its light-quality crude.
Saudi Arabia, however, charges only $28 a
barrel for its Arab light oil, which is
practically the same as Iran's. A barrel
contains 42 gallons.
\ Oil ministers of both states said last
month that they did not believe OPEC
could reach agreement at Monday’s
meeting. Saudi Arabia’s minister Sheik
Ahmed Zaki Yamani reportedly said
OPEC "hawks” would have to lower their
prices to permit an accord.
Saudi Arabia, the world's leading oil
exporter, accounts for almost a third of
OPEC production. Saudi leaders believe
the militants will eventually have to
reduce their prices because of weak
demand for petroleum due to abundant
supplies.
i
Oil companies in Japan and Europe have
already refused to buy Iranian oil on
grounds that it is overpriced. But oil in-
dustry sources doubted that Iran or other
OPEC militants will be willing to lower
their prices, at least at this meeting.
“OPEC has always tried to unify its
prices by raising them,” said a leading
Italian oil company’s crude buyer who
declined to be identified. He noted that
despite the large quantities of available
oil, free-market or “spot” prices are
currently closer to Iranian than Saudi
levels.
Industry sources speculated that the
Saudis would raise their prices at Algiers
to demonstrate their desire for unity but
would not go as high as the militants. The
sources suggested that a boost of between
$2 and $4 a barrel was possible for Saudi
oil.
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It’s a
Del Monte
TOMATO
SAUCE
Day!
Friendly Service, Fine Foods
And Reasonable
Prices, Too!
8
El Chico
FROZEN
DINNERS
1
U.S.D.A. Froth Droned
WE
GIVE
FRYERS
Docker
Premium Grade, Quality
BACON
Carl's
Country Style
PORK
SAUSAGE
V
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Giant
TIDE
Deterfent
I
i
Mountain Grown
FOLGER'S
•COFFEE
49
'AQlJUl'M
Piggly Wiggly Grade ‘A‘
MEDIUM EGOS
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Unit 1
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mom
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1-lb. can
PigjjylTijjIy Cream Style ~
GOLDEN CORN
or Whole Kernel
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nilgers
coffee
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dozen
Cabtlfil*
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i MILK
Regular or Diet
PEPSI
COLA
June 6 & 7
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 135, Ed. 1 Friday, June 6, 1980, newspaper, June 6, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824833/m1/18/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.