The Dublin Progress and Telephone (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 33rd YEAR, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, October 8, 1920 Page: 1 of 8
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THE DUBLIN PROGRESS
ifts'sj'1
Guaranteed Greater Circulation Then
Any Other Rreth County Newspaper
AND TELEPHONE
33rd YEAR No. 24.
ERATH COUNTY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1920.
EIGHT PAGES
Prospects Bright For
Iowa Bankers Well
The Harris No. 1 well of the Iowa
Banker* Oil Company, one mile west
of Dublin, aet the eight Inch casing
this week at a depth of 1,737 feet,
completing this yesterday and pro-
ceeding with the drill today.
The Harris was spudded in five
weeks ago and from the first have
been drilling in sand and blue shale,
over half of which has been sand. This
formation la very much similar to that
encountared in the biggeet gushers
of tbs Desdemona field, except there
is more sand than at Dssdemona.
_ of oil
with ample gas. Much difficulty has
been encountered on account of num-
erous heavy strata# of water, eleven
of which have been passed through
and one of these salt. Nona however
hare been found In the last several
hundrsd feet. It was necessary to
set the twelve Inch casing at 336 feet
and the ten Inch at 670 because of this
abundance of water, said to be enough
to supply Dublin many times over.
The drill has made remarkable pro-
gress however, as evidenced by the
present depth of nearly 1,800 feet.
The standard rig being used is the
property of the company and the drill-
er is a gentleman who brought in
many of the biggest gushers in the
Desdemona field, as well as in other
Texas fields. He asserts (hst he has
never drilled a well with truer geolo-
gical formation fot both heavy oil and
heavy gas production. This too co-
incides with all the numerous geolo-
gical reporta on the territory, of which
the Iowa Bankers hold around 2,500
acres.
As a result of these conditions
leases throughout tl^ts locality are
MAMMOTH SUNDAY SCHOOL
ANNEX FOB METHODIST
CHURCH CLASSES
Probably the most active religious
body i^ all this section is the Judge
Hickman Men’s Bible class at the
Methodist church. Out of this insti-
tution has come the necessity for a
Sunday school addition to the church
approximately equaling In capacity
the handsome church edifice itself.
Prompted by this need and the liberal
spirit of Judge Hickman and the mem-
Ttershlp of hts students, the class has
promised to supply a fund of *15,000
If the other classes of the Sunday
school and the entire church member-
ship itself would produce a like
amount, for the building of a *30.000
Sunday school annex to the church.
Committees from the Men’s class were
put to work to show their sincerity
and it is now announced that the pri-
mary *15,000 has been pledged and is
ready on call. The church and the
other classes are now active In a de-
termination to meet the requirement
and erect the needed structure and
It appears very certain that It will not
be a great while until plans will be
ready for adoption and construction
will follow.
DANGEItOCS TREE PEST
NUMEROUS IN THIS LOCALITY
advancing rapidly In value and are
changing hands, also, always with
an advance price over former sales.
The company have two good pro-
ducers in the fiipe Springs shallow
field and have another well under the
drill there, though their acreage In
that field la not heavy.
The oltlcers of the company are A.
B. Richards president, W. C. Falcon
vice-president, F. G. Bryuer secretary.
G. H. Jameson treasurer, L A. Houg,
general manager and Fred D. Spratt
of Dublin general field and operating
superintendent. The stock holders
and officers of this company are chief-
ly prominent bankers of various cities
in Iowa, though the president is an
experienced oil operator at Ft. Worth.
Roy F. Barger of Lehigh, Iowa and
W. C. Dillon, President of the Dillon
Lock Co,, of Fort Dodge, Iowa, were
Dublin this week In company with
M. Edwards sales agent for the
ers with headquarters In Mlnneo-
After an Investigation of the
r.cte and the affairs of the com-
they both Invested heavily In
of the company.
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
4- ♦
4 PROCLAMATION BY MAYOR 4
4 - ♦
4 By proclamation of the gover- ♦
4- nor of Texas tomorrow, Satur- 4
4 day, October 9th, is designated ♦
4 as Fire Prevention Day and the 4
4 request of the governor la that 4
4 the special attention of all per- 4
4 sons should be directed that day 4
4 toward examining flues for safe- ♦
4 ty during the winter, removing ♦
4 rubbish that might become the 4
♦ cause of * conflagration, pro- 4
4 tiding safety cans properly DAN- ♦
4 HER labeled Into which *11 gas- 4
♦ ollne on the premises should ♦
4 be kqpt. preparing safety place* ♦
4 for the keeping of matches and ♦
■4 tke proper cautioning of all the ♦
♦ users against permitting match- 4
4 sa or places of matches being 4
4 left scattered sboutc^r dropped ♦
♦ here and there add for general ♦
♦ observation and planning agatnst 4
♦ every fruitful cause of dlsas- ♦
♦ trlous fires. Mayor* of all cities ♦
♦ aft aakad to call attention of ♦
♦ their eUiaensblp to this matter 4
♦ A Mayor of the city of Dublin ♦
4 I hereby proclaim the day and ♦
4 invoke the careful attention of ♦
♦ the paopla of Dublin to thla moet 4
4 important matter to our town and 4
4 people and suggeet that not on- 4
4 ly Saturday but all the coming 4
♦ week be given over to epeclal 4
♦ attention to every fire haaard 4
♦ and that every cltlaen carefully ♦
fund put Into effect 4
_> 4 plea* for caring for the Item# ♦
and that especially 4
4 thue be at one# examined aad 4
where found to be 4
• . We can make a good ♦
to say nothing of saving ♦
iom, aad poaalhly saving 4
k by responding to tots appasl ♦
D. W. MHIMHAN. ♦
Major of Dublin 4
► ♦♦♦*♦♦44 4 4 4
Throughout the state for some time
the state department of agriculture,
horticultural division, has been warn-
ing property owners of the presence
and rapid spread of a dangerous peat
known as the Italian Asp or Poison-
ous Slug.
These insects, or whatever they may
be called in the anlmail knigdom. are
much like a caterpillar in that they
have stmilar fuzz or stiff short hair on
them but they are much shorter than
the ordinary caterpillar and are more
bulky, besides being slightly larger
at the head end than at the tail. They
vary In color from a light mouse color
to almost black and they appear harm-
less enough. However they are very-
dangerous and In additional to de-
stroying trees they1 have a poisonous
sting which has In several Instances
withiu the state caused deaths, In
many more cases thrown the vlctjm
into convulsions. In more causes
brought on a considerable fever of a
day or two duration and in still more
cases proved only an irritation of a
few daya like a bee or red ant sting.
They hatch in various trees but in
this section are most frequently found
or are in large numbers found on mul-
berry, hackberry, pecan and apricot
trees. The state department warns
that after they Infest a tree very
thoroughly they will then, some of
them, fall off and seek shelter within
the house and on furniture. J. Sex-
ton who has been doing much work
in Dublin in trimming and spraying
trees, called attention of a Progress
reporter one day this week to the
presence here of a great many of the
pests, largely on the hackberry trees
about town and at the school house
and other places. He exhibited a
small box full of them which he said
he bad procured from various trees
in town during his work of the week
In spraying for trie bores which are
also very numerous and are doing
much damage. The Progress man
went on a trip of inspection of his
own hackberry trees and the quest
resulted In the discovering of one of
the Asps which he brought to the
office for Inspection of anyone Inter-
ested Mr. Sexton from time to time
receives Information from the depart-
ment, being known as a man Interest-
ed In proper tree culture and care and
he has had Information from Austin
concerning the A*p and Itskdangers
and the methods to spray trees for
their extermination. The department
says It is very important to Texas that
prompt and vigorous measures should
be taken and local druggists have
ordered the proper material for use In
spraying. The Asp Is found Chiefly
sticking to the lessee Of the tree but
the specimen In th# hands of the
Progress was gotten from s spot of
cement placed in the body of the tree
to fill a bole and prevant decay. It
waa covered with web Indicating It
was in the proceaa of hatching or had
hibernated for the winter.
All trees should bs apraysd as soon
aa th# material can be had for th#
purpose
eVin NAMED
At NT1N B^IJ(TOrr!(nr|EMrrT
jfe:
FRISCO SHOPS AT DUBLIN NO PROFITEERING IN THIS ACT i
MILL COMPLETE IN SHORT TIME DUBLIN BAKER REDUCES PRICE
-— •! —-- I
The turntable at the divisional Wt P. Hallmark, always progressive |
yards of th© Frisco and the Jake and ever conservative, demonstrated
Hanion roads waa completed Wednes- again the present week that he Is ■
day and there Is sufficient trackage ever ready to do his hit and without
laid now to make the place a bus> special .prompting. The problem of
Dublin Oil Refinery
<11
section and the use of the table much
In demand. Yesterday the work be
the high cost of living haR been one
that all have seen must of vital ne-
Delivering Products
ga^C on the twelve satll roundhouse ceeslty react more nearly to normal
and as material la now on the groundj conditions, but eacb enterprise has its
be co’mplcted In forty days!own peculiar problem at a coat ex-
®®4ssss
tbo tfulvaralty of T*^V
Ralph Btslner of Austin, rtslgnod.
It will
and the management gave out to a re-
porter that the shops will bo ready
for full service within sixty days, bar-
ring accidents.
After that time all the divisional
repairs of every sort now being made
at Brownwood, Ranger. Breckenrldge
and Ft. Worth will all come to the
Dublin divisional shops antf an In-
flux of from two hundred to three
hundred families of the working men
of the line will have to be arranged
for In Dublin.
The Progress has also private Infor-
mation from a most reliable source
that prospects are very good for sever-
al of the big men of the Jake Hamon
line moving to Dublin to reside. In-
cluding the possibility of general of-
fices here at some no distant time.
pense not to be avoided, presenting
tbo difficulties of reducing the price
of their own particular product until
thair source of supply first came
down in price to an extent to safely
Justify a reduction. Mr. Hallmark
operates a very extensive and valuable
baking buainesiWn Dublin and he has (
for some time been banding out to
The Dublin Oil ft. Refining Co., by
long odds the biggest and most im-
portant enterprise in Dublin began
permanent producing operations Tues-
day and at this date there is a con-
siderable storage of gasoline in the
tanks and the white fluid is pouring
Into the containers at a rapid rate.
There is no second band and no
shoddy material in any part of th*
machinery equipment or buildings in
the Dublin refinery. Every item has
been purchased the best that capable
and careful purchasers were able to
buy and at the right figures.
Notwithstanding the refinery equlp-
, ment has been bought largely under
! war time conditions, it Is known that
DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN FUND
Every democrat should know that
the national committee has large de-
mands for financing legitimate ex-
penses of the campaign and that these
funds are short, likewise that the re-
actionary republicans are gathering
millions from big business throughout
the country as a means of heavily pre-
senting a campaign that will mean
further lease of life to these profiteer-
ing concerns and further markets
throughout our country and the world
for munitions of war. No presidential
election In the history of America
has ever meant so much to each Indi-
vidual and to the mothers and sons
of this country as the present one.
The success’of the national ticket de-
pends, In a large measure, on the
fundB raised In the south to spread
the gospel of democracy and peace.
One dollar each from many people
means much, five, ten dollars, one
hundred each means more, but one
helps.
The Progress, upon suggestion of
the national committee, will receive
contributions of any amount and for-
ward at once to Southern headquarters
of the national committee. Columbia.
8. C., with a statement of contribu-
tors and amounts given; The follow-
ing have responded:
J. S. Daley.—_________________*5.00
CENSUS FIGURES OF INTEREST
GIVEN OUT DURING WEEK
Population announcements for Tex-
as counties and towns, made during
the past week under the fourteenth
census, give figures as follows:
1920
1910
l»Tf«>
Dublin
3.229
2,551
2,370
Stephenville
3,891
2,561
1,902
Stepbenville
Precinct
8,305
7,987
7.729
Dublin
Precinct
5,873
5,579
5,092
Precinct 3
2.096
3.444
3,386
Precinct 4
2,452
3.069
2,917
Precinct 5
1,350
1,578
1,451
Precinct 6
1,499
2,021
1,734
Precinct 7
4,432
5,505
4,459
Precinct 8
2,378
2,912
3,195
Texas
Ultles and
Towns.
Pop.
Dec.
Inc.
San Angelo
9,392
929
0
Belton
5,098
0
934
Temple
11.033
0
40
Ranger
16,205 No Prev.
Reod.
Carbon
741
0
362
Cisco
7,422
0
3,012
Desdemona
3,008 No Prev.
Reed.
Eastland
9.368
0
8,513
Gorman
3,200
0
2,237
Marlin
4,310
0
432
Counties
Pop.
Dec.
Inc.
Brown
21,682
1,353
0
Coleman
18,805
3,813
0
Eastland
58.505
0
35,074
Comanche
25.748
1,438
0
Erath
88,385
3.710
0
Bell
46,412
2,794
0
Hamilton
14.676
639
0
Jones
22,3*3
1,976
0
Palo Pinto
33,431
0
3.935
8hackl*ford
4,960
0
769
Taylor
24,081
3412
0
States
Population Increase
Texas
4,661,037 764,485
New York
10,384.144 1470.630
New Jersey
3.166474 618407
Idaho
431.436 10*433
United States
105,683,108 13.710442
DUBLIN COUNTRY APPLES
EXHIBIT AT DALLAS FAIR
Albsrt Pair won bins ribbons and
tha prise money on firs varltiss of
apples at tha county fair at Stophsn-
vill* last weak. Th* prists received
aggregated 116.86 on beet showings
of Mammoth Black Twig, Striped Ben
Devi#, Red Ben Dnvls. Wine Bap aad
ttagktop. Mr. Pair has Mat tbs
complete exhibit to tbs Online fair
and be to expecting the product of bis
Broth orchard near Dublin to attract
more thaa passing notice there
Tuesday morning the plant was fir
©d up and the smoke from the impos-! the market price today for the
us the staff of life at the war price j |ng looking smoke stack floated mys- plete plant Is greater than the sum of
! tieally across the prairie to the east money that has been expended. To
Early this week without 0f town. Interested citizens were. this search for proper material sit
previous announcement he reduced out during the day in large numbers proper prices, as well as to the slow
to compliment th© management on {-transportation facilities, has been due
getting things going and to observe much of the delay the management
operations of the plant
of 12c a loaf retail and 10c a loaf
Wholesale. Eiirlv this w©«k without !
Jthe price I0e retail and 8 1-3 cents
wholesale, a reduction of more than
twenty per cent In the chief Item of
has encountered in the long and
’ - . vj/thaiiuun ui iuu piam. cuwuuieruu li
ST:T’ i ° ,h, Th. orator,
the reduced price decided^ upon by - Rau(fe8 Jnl0 gtorage and by 6 p m Acuities In such an undertaking are
Ir. Hallmark and amounted to but a ong of the flve thougand barrel tanks' ver.v many, but these have been much
small portion of the percentage o te- he|d about barrels Of the fluid, aggravated by the unsettled conditions
This product was slightly off color as ] following the war.
While the reporter was at the plant.
Tuesday evening In company with \
duction which he has made.
VETERAN RURAL MAIL CARRIER
RETIRES AFTER LAPSE OF YEARS
is the custom in the first run and
Manager MaGee said this and the Tuesday evening In company
product of the first few days would be ; ofber citizens who greatly appreciate
run over again for clarification, after !thl* wonderful enterprise as a Dublin
which the production would be per-1 Institution, a wire was handed
handed Man-
fect on the first run through the J a8*r MaGee to the effect that the
be delivered into the proper ! *ome time to K«t direct pipe line con-
I nectlon for crude oil. had developed
A. I* Morgan, pioneer rural mall
carrier out of Dublin, retired from
the service August 20th. following a gtl||g aRd byproducts would be-! efforts which had been under way for
regular employment covering a per- j Jn ^ 1 .....-
tod lacking but twenty-five daysi of tanks sirauitaneoualy with the gas
funding out a complete seventten int0 ltg own re<;epticlleg. The ! satisfactorily and that connection
years. When the first rural mall plan, started up without a hitch in would at once be made with the nearest
route was established out of Dublin detall evcrv pan of tbe great
t» 1903. a very short time after the. gygtwn 0f refining and the ponderous
pumps, tanks, stills and other equtp-
_ . _ . „ . , ment operating perfectly,
gan took the examination and was Th<? ^pAClty of the plant
appointed carrier on route one the op(,ratlon lg on th(> haMg of one thoU!(.
patrons of which he has since faith- gnd barrelg per day It „ expecled
tolly and satisfactorily served during. (ha( fu„ fapacity wi„ ^ reached
*n.**\® within the coming thirty days or so.
when delayed stills and other equip-
tntroduction of the rural mall as a1
pipe line three miles away and crude
oil
■t ment en route shall have arrived and j this situation but Manager MaGee
been placed In position and operation, and the other officials did not propose
, Meanwhile the work of construction to permit It to thus stand and meant
and rain and over good and bad roads
and weather, as they came.,
Mr. Morgan was retired by process
of the law applying to time limit of
service and he will hereafter enjoy a
pension for faithful service, but this
is such a meager sum. something like
fifteen dollars a month, that the veter-
an carrier would much preferred to,fhe p|aQ( wl„ procecd ag ,t has gtart.
continue In the service If stwh were pd on a cont|nuous yun ©f twenty-four
hours a day. seven days a week and
would be supplied directly into th# re-
finery storage at the plant. This de-
velopment Is especially gratifying to
the manegament and will mean many
thousands of dollars profit to tha
stockholders over a situation of ship-
ping the crude by tank cars to the
plant. The refinery had started with
on buildings, tanks and other require-
; nients in addition to those already
i completed or partially completed will
! be continued with unabated vigor and
permitted. Six months after route
one was established and Mr. Morgan
began work five other routes were
established and from time to time
three others have been added. John
Humphries is the temporary carrier
on the route previously handled by
Mr. Morgan, pending a regular ap-
pointment.
EDITOR OF THE PROGRESS
RETURNS FROM PACIFIC COAST
The Progress editor returned Thurs-
day of last week from an outing in
the west, extending as far as Los An-
geles south and west and as far north
as Salt Lake City. Utah. The family
left Dublin early In July by automo-
bile traveling by way of Abilene, Post
Cify. Lubbock. Amarillo, Texline, Trin-
idad, Manltou and Colorado Springs,
Denver. Laramie, Cheyenne. Satl Lake
south and west through Nevada and
Arizona and finally to San Bernadino
and Los Angeles, a distance of 3,040
miles by speedometer. Stops of
around three weeks duration were
made at Manltou. Denvkr and Salt
Lake and minor stops were thade here
and there. Stops along thy way left
but little time t« visit Lbs Angeles
before the necessity of starting on re- i well
turn by the nearer route in order to J
reach Dublin before school began.
This fact and the early beginning of
the ten months school In Los Angeles
prompted the Idea for the family to
remain In Los Angeles during school
term where all could be to-
gether. rather than at once return tb
fifty-two weeks a year. Full capacity
will be 4.000 barrels daily and this
will be reached very soon.
The system is a special patent of
Mr F. R. Magee, who was the con-
structing engineer of the plant and
will continue as Its manager. He is
an experienced refinery man of many
years in the Pennsylvania. California
and Mid-Continent fields and he has
erected more than twenty successful
refinery plants, the major portion of
Which were built since his system was
planned and upon that system. Under
it six distinct products result from
the crude petroleum and nothing
whatever Is lost from the elements of
the crude but alt manufactured into
their most valuable final. These dis-
tinct products are gasoline, naptha,
kerosene, gas oil (a high grade fuel),
wax distillate and steam cylinder
stock which is a high grade steam
cylinder lubricant. There is nothing
more to the crude but a small per
rentage of water and even this runs
off into a saving tank and is used over
again for cooling purposes and supple-
ments three strong wells, either of
which Is sufficient to supply the plant.
Even In the apparently small matter
of water there is no waste, the fluid
once lifted by pump power from the
is cooled over and over with a
simple gravity cooling plant and the
loss is only that of evaporation. A
like system of economy tn operation
and lack of waste of material or pro-
ducts seems to run Ihrongb the entire
plant and to be an extremely notice-
able feature of the McGee system.
The six product* represent two more
Dublin and send the two eldest daugh- j than the ordinary refining system
ters away to school. Accordingly a! which waste* these two valuable ele*
bungalow was leased at 809 South
Veil dome street in the western part of
the city, and with the first day of
school all were busy. The family
safely arranged for and very pleased
for th# prospect of a pleasant winter,
the editor left Lb* Angeles over the
Santa Fe Sept. 21*t, and reached
Trinidad. Colorado, Friday night fol-
lowing. From there a Ford car wa*
driven to Dublin, arriving Thursday
morning at an early hour. The trip
to Loa Angeles waa made In a Big Six
fltudehnker aold by the Highway
Motor Co., In Dublin. Th# Ford car
waa takan along to somewhat relieve
the load on the Studebaker but In view
of the dealra for more »P*«d It was
left at Trinidad. Pinna ara for Mr.
Mr. Daisy to go to Los Angeles next
summer and return with tha family In
the automobile which waa left In the
coast city for the convantooc# of tho
family. Meanwhile tho editor will
“do too host ho kia do” Going out
tho trip extended through th* sUtoa
of Texas, Now Mexico, Arlaana, Colora-
do, Wyomtng. Utah, Nevada had Cal-
tuents In permitting them to remain
as a part Of the Cheapest product com-
ing from the plant Under the Mc-
Gee system these are separated and
develop the moat valuable products.
The equipment Include* two 160
H. P. boiler*, a 86 K W: Westlnghou*#
light plant directly connected and
capable of furnishing one thousand
40 watt lamps constantly, three
largest capacity atlll# for crude and
and two for gasoline, a battery of
fourteen heavy pumps for handltng
the various products from the pipe
line through tbe storage and out to
the purchaser, three targe wells either
of which are capable oljutpplying tbe
need* of th* plant adfiTThr fire pro-
tection. sixteen largo storage tanas of
capacity, np to 6,000 barrels each, a
600 barrel agitator for spociat treat-
ment In bleaching and purifying ker-
osene. thousands upon thousands of
fad of piping of varying alas aad ex-
tra haavy manufacture, buildings con-
structed or under construction of
brick and material on hand for others
to hens* safely and wall all of th*
•mttwl equipment outlined
to push the effort to get direct pipe
line connection until this was accom-
plished This is now assured at once
and the management are Jubilant.
It is announced that within fifteen
days the refinery would be prepared
to supply gasoline to the local trade,
including the service stations here and
Manager MaGee asserts that no such
gas as he will supply has been known
to tbe trade her© before. The report-
er had the novel experience of return-
ing front the plant to town In Mr.
MaGee * automobile propelled by gas-
oline Just manufactured and being
the first two gallons produced by the
plant. Mr. MaGee said it was by no
means a perfect product at that time,
but the car promptly responded to th*
acceUerator.
The officers of the Dublin Oil ft Re-
fining Co., sre R. J. Lyles of Naah-
ville, Tenu., president; W. T. Cox of
Dublin viee-preiident; Dr. W. D.
Hunter of Nacona, treasurer of the
company; W A. Holt of Dublin, secre-
tary and local treasurer; U B. Corley
assistant secretary; Judge Warlick.
attorney; Mr. Bennett salesmanngor
for Tennessee; W. P. Durbin aaloa-
manager fpr Texas; W. A. MaGee
superintendent and general manager.
No officer draws any salary whatever
except those whose time Is fully and
exclusively occupied In work of the
company and this fact 1* pointed to
with much pride by "Uncle Boh"
Lyles of Nashville, president of the
company, who has spent much time
and money of his own in the organisa-
tion of the company and in combating
the difficulties which his Indomnltable
will has most largely helped to over-
come He is and has for many year*
been president and chief owner of the
Volunteer Manufacturing Co., at Naab
ville, T©nn., where he Is a pioneer and
valuable | citizen and where and
throughout Tennessee he is univer-
sally known as “Uncle Bob.”
Dublin Is proud-of this great Insti-
tution and (he bright prospect* the
future holds for It and those who
hjv© investments in Its stock are cal-
culated to wish they had more of
the same aort of stock.
FINE PUBLIC SCHOOL
BUILDING BEING ERECTED v
AT GREENS CREEK
Construction Is well under way ou
a *19,000 public aoltool building In the
Greens Crook school community north
of Dublin. It la modern throughout
and when completed will be th# finest
community public school In Erath
county. Th* Groan# Crook people
are noted for their progressive spirit
In educational lines.
MHILOH RINGING CONTENTION.
A# Hhllob district singing conven
tion will aost with the Hickey class
on the second Sunday In tk* present
month. October 10th. Tk*
will oonttou* all day with dinner on
tk* ground; All eMgor* and lover*
of mueic art invited.
iff!
mm1
taki
i; i
i
■ V't?
'V ••
m
......■ ■' w r ^ "'s' ’
•' v i|i
feemwimfr ««n wwwct z 'eMHHSSr**^
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The Dublin Progress and Telephone (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 33rd YEAR, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, October 8, 1920, newspaper, October 8, 1920; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth531109/m1/1/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.