Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 76, No. 65, Ed. 1 Monday, May 3, 1965 Page: 9 of 34
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Des Moines
Houston
report also carried
San Antonio
un-
Soon:
3
Chicago
1
Camrick
Brownsville
2
Area Well
9
Fort Worth
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' Here’s how Chrysler Corporation’s 5-year/50,000-mile engine and drive train warranty protects you:
333
8
Carter
th.
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C
Sioux Falls
VVV‘1
$
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COULD MEAN EXTRA DOLLARS
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ON YOUR CAR
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See your Chrysler, Plymouth or Dodge dealer today.
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be
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AAA VA
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12,755
FORECASI
", V, v, V, • 0 \» • \f V -V -- ~-V/- L~-W/- . - . '
$#/0020920#/#0.%*0N*/M%0A*AA*
43 f ■ '. . . . o Oc 000 00000 N c > . EI • 1 ______ :lm*
Service for
Amarillo
Shreveport
Fort Smith
Corpus Christi
Dallas
tories likely will
changed from 1964.
CHRYSLER
CORPORATION
44
35
860,000
year.
The
SW
•t 1,
1-13
Kansas City
Lubbock
will pull the domestic petro-
leum industry along with it
to another record year in
1965.
That was the conclusion of
the supply and demand com-
mittee of the Independent
Sheue
Flurries
1965 automobiles, provided the owner has the
engine oil changed every 3 months or 4,000
miles, whichever comes first, the oil filter re-
placed every second oil change and the car-
buretor air filter cleaned every‘6 months and
replaced every 2 years, and every 6 months
furnishes to such a dealer evidence of perfor-
mance of the required service, and requests the
dealer to certify (1) receipt of such evidence
and (2) the car's then current mileage.
50---
itin
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4
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AP:VAToN
alo Vester-
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fleld, WM plugsed at
tfre:
et $g
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BUYA
’65 PLYMOUTH. DODGE.
CHRYSLER OR IMPERIAL
WITH THE
STRONGEST PROTECTION
ON ANY AMERICAN-MADE
CAR.
50.000
MILE
Chrysler Corporation warrants for 5 years or
50,000 miles, whichever comes first, against de-
fects in materials and workmanship and will
replace or repair at a Chrysler Motors Corpora-
tion Authorized Dealer s place of business, the
engine block, head and internal parts, intake
manifold, water pump, transmission case and
internal parts (excluding manual dutch), torque
converter, drive shaft, universal joints, rear axle
and differential, and rear wheel bearings of its
1 shanRohber syen3wb8w
52-, In the Sho-VeTum IFH,
mi. date
:k.
enn.
U Minn.
k.“;
• Neb.
Piz.
thrush Tyedey. Cooler and windy. High
’''PANHANDLE OKLAHOMA - Ciear te
partly cloudy cooler through Tues-
dav. High VL low 4s.
NORTH CENTRAL TSXAS - Partiy
cloudv, warmer and thundershowers M
TEMPENATUEE AMO SRI
Hlo fimSratera .V
Minneapolis
St. Paul
St. Louis
I
CHRYSLER CORPORATION
_
---—Tmmmnm-mnmnhh
•I
1
precipltation for
clpltatlonfor 14
3:7. B2,w
wiloMT
522#,”:4 p.m.
•: i"s a.m. sets:
Completed
Jack Grace Production Co.
completed the No. 1 Mounts
in C NW-NW of 31-1n-21eCm,
in the Camrick district of
Beaver County.
Upper Morrow perfora-
tions at 7,528-37 feet pumped
86.68 barrels of 40-degree
gravity oil with 10 barrels of
salt water in 24 hours. The
4%-inch pipe was set on bot-
tom at 7,552 feet.
Twite ounty — Lee Drew abandoned
22,08. afin-
Figem Shew te- Temp
Uni Taeidey Maring
Hiehmsa amperture on record in 70
Lowe»t temaaratero last night, 41.
owest femperefure a year we last
ntohf, 51. _______________________________
tow 35.
sunnisE AND
Rises tomorrow at
p.m. e ,
Begins: s:6,Am.
Phase: New,RT
11:11 p.m. •
f . ex > m 11 n . o 11
wreww®- U ■ 5 g
Nashville
Memphis
Newark
cent of 371,000 barrels daily
from 1964, which had an in-
crease over the previous
year of 308.000 barrels per
day of 2.9 percent.
The forecast is virtually.'
ity — Goff on No. 1 McNell
E sw at U-14n-14w. abouf 4
ch Sioe":toormBftm2t
tya-,Ag"NagsswPrarustign
"258traarfogwtabofhe
egaim
CAN’T
SLEEP?
If add indigestion keeps you up,
settie yourseif for slaap right .
away with TUMS antacid tablets.
Today’s good testing TUMS ata
fortified - .pood soothing, high
potency relief... neutralize all ex-
cess add... release you from the
grip of an odd-irritated stomach
-completely. gently, on the spot.
You can sleep again. wouldn’t
you like,thatr
Ruiakty affective,
afk--*0^—11 roliW
negn plenV} vVV‘
3rltpack-309 •
ers affecting M
barrels daily this
Ardm8t
ARtueuerw
Tulsa
New Orleans
Omaha
Oklahoma City
Wichita
Petroleum Association
WHEN YOU TRADE,
THIS EXCLUSIVE WARRANTY
CAN BE TRANSFERRED-
-t 11
made last fall at IPAA’s
I
, Houston meeting.
Domestic production of
: crude oil won’t increase at
the rate of demand because
natural gas liquids growth
and residual reports will
pick up at a higher rate, the
committee said.
It forecast production of
crude and condensate at 7,-
849.000 barrels daily for the
year, up 2.4 percent from
1964 and another record.
The committee looks for
domestic gasoline demand to
average 4,745,000 barrels a
day in 1965, a gain of 3.6 per-
cent over 1964. Demand for
kerosene and jet fuels—
largely because of increased
jet fuel both commereially
and for the military—is ex-
pected to jump 6 percent to
. • U-
. I' .
. , 1
Li
■ »*• t
‘fliLaAHIINIIH. iiyj '
lll
a
A
l endine at “2
STATE STAT
OKI*. 1
Lig
d •
these elements:
—Refinery runs are ex-
pected to top 9 million bar-
rels daily this year.
—Inventories are consid-
ered more than adequate,
even in the face of substan-
tial increases this year in to-
tal petroleum demand. New
supply in 1965 will approxi-
mate total demand—that
means year-end 1965 inven-
—All elements of new pe-
troleum supply will set new
records this year. Of these,
total imports will have the
highest percentage gain at
about 5.5 percent over 1964,
assuming existing federal
import policies continue.
The report in general
showed the committee’s
preoccupatioh with the do-
mestic economy as a whole.
Business expansion now is in
its 51st straight month.
Oil Reports
I.' W
Partiyicioudyi,anow
Eujadd
America, whose new report
was released Monday-at the
mid-year IPAA meeting
here.
The committee forecast
. » I ip II
Tuesdav: Thu
2n ##
zonto. 13 2
859rayu Sarfes .
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES Monday, May 3, 1965 9 ’
Oilmen Expect j
Sa
_ N
Beak Business
IIIi- J'l
MIS. Weather Bureau Airpert Statien)
OKLAHOMA CITY AND CENTRAL OK-
LAHOMA-Partty cloudy through Tues-
SeronmThndennowrr
Tuesdav. A linle cooler Monday nioht and
Tuesdav. Lake wind warnings areinet-
fact tor southerty wind, 20135 miles an
hur Hlah M low 55
OkLAHONALParti cloudy through
' 1
• • "illj .
2
-
percent of southwest portion Monday an
ernoon and evening. Thunderstorms af-
fectine 60 drcent 1 west bortion Tues-
day. Cooler northwest Monday afternoon
and west and north Monday nioht. Low
Manday night 45 northwest to 45 south-
esst. High Tuesdey NUM
EXTENDED — During the next
tempertures will averge naar
exct 2 > 4 -■>»»». normal
soutKasf. Normal hlghs 7 northwest to
5‘soufheast. Normallows 44 northwest to
skFwda"*besrk.s
T ,">2 {
%$
••
11 ' . • .
t
of unchanged from the one
Semiiole County — Forest ON Corp.
NEoFlthz.N /ho VSnowo Dora flol^
pumping a barrel of oH with an uhdefer-
rom
gEn“ezn75f H. Foster and J L
sme
nn?w, in me 222", was plusged
A’ranrgooun, Marton ON. No 1
"SeRIESUA, — Joa N . C hemal in No.
1 Sfeokey unit In C SE SE of 18-5-1;
Uo’faat and cemented srenckoprga at 7,
_
M q”.
.'HUI'’ V ’, .
OKLAHOMA - Partty
T uesday with thunder-
■ 30 percent af area
D-
. e.
1.
I Cool Spell Riding
I •
Showers Into State
P.NHe j.g
efreme west to .,75 to J.» eitewttre
occurrine a, satfed thundershowers
^T^'sTm Whoma e-
Sma.brpenhawafdrcneefz
New York
Washington
A
temperature on record in 71
date. W.
cumulated preciplelon to hu
By Walt Radmilovich
Assistant Oil Editor
DENVER—Continuing its record domestic petroleum
unprecedented p e a c e-time demand of 11,230,000 barrels
growth, the general economy daily this year, up 3.4 per-
i .
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 76, No. 65, Ed. 1 Monday, May 3, 1965, newspaper, May 3, 1965; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1843895/m1/9/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.