The Dublin Citizen (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1993 Page: 4 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 26 x 16 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:
Page 4
The Dublin Citizen
Thursday, February 25, 1993
NEW LEFTOVER UNITS
Fpur - 1992 Olds Delta 88 4-Dr
1992 Olds Achleva 4-Dr
1992 Olds 98 Regency 4-Dr
1992 Olds Silhouette
1992 Chev.-Full Size Conversion Van
Seven - 1992 Chev. Full Size Pick-Ups
1991 Olds Cutlass Supreme S/L 4-Dr
1991 Olds Calais S 4-Dr
1992 Chev Astro Van - Demo
1992 Caprice Classic - Demo
USED CARS
1992 Buick Roadmaster, fully loaded, 14,000 miles
1992 Pontiac Grand Prix, 2-Dr, fully loaded, 15,000 miles
1989 Chev Celebrity Eurosport, 4-Dr., V6, 57,000 Actual Miles
1985 Chev Caprice Classic, Fully Loaded, 53,000 Actual Miles
1992 Chev Beretta, 17,000 Miles, Loaded
Two - 1992 Pontiac Grand AMS - 4-Dr, 13,000 miles on each
Two - 1992 Chev Cavaliers - 4-Dr, 13,000 miles on each
1991 Olds Delta 88 Brghm, 4-Dr., fully loaded, 40,000 miles
1992 Olds Clera 4-Dr. V6, fully loaded, 17,000 miles
1992 Olds 98 Regency 4-dr, fully loaded, 13,000 miles
1992 Buick Century 4-dr, fully loaded
1993 Buick LeSabre 4-dr, fully loaded
1992 Geo Prizm 4-dr, 15,000 miles
1991 Chev. Corsica 4-dr V6, fully loaded, 29,000 miles
1992 Olds Delta 88 4dr, fully loaded, 7200 miles
1991 Buick Century 4-Dr, fully loaded, 8,700 miles
1992 Chev. Corsica 4 dr V6, fully loaded, 10,000 miles
1989 Olds 98 Regency Brghm 4-Dr, fully loaded, 59*000
1990 Olds 98 Regency Brghm 4-Dr, 30,000 miles
1991 Pontiac Grand AM LE 2-Dr., cruise, tilt, 18,000 miles
1989 Olds 98 Regency Brghm 4-Dr, loaded, 46,000 miles
1991 Chev Lumina 4-Dr, fully loaded, 14,000 miles
1984 Mercury Marquis 4-Dr, 64,000 actual miles
1986 Pontiac 6000 STE 4-Dr, Fully loaded, very clean
1987 Dodge Omni, good economical work car
1989 Chevrolet Corsica, 4-Dr, 30,000 miles
1988 Buick Regal, 2-Dr, 37,000 miles
1990 Pontiac Grand Am 4-Dr, 32,000 miles
1987 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 2-Dr, 52,000 miles
1986 Oldsmobile Delta 88, 2-Dr, 42,000 miles
1985 Buick LeSabre Ltd. 4dr, 54,000 actual miles, loaded
1985 Oldsmobile Toronado 2-Dr, one owner
1984 Cadillac Seville, very clean
1984 Oldsmobile Delta 2-Dr, fully loaded
1984 Pontiac Bonneville 4-Dr, good economical work car
1992 Cadillac Sedan Devllle, fully loaded, 13,000 miles
USED PICKUPS
1991 Ford Explorer, 2WD, loaded, only 45,000 miles
1992 Ford Aerostar van, air, automatic, 48,000 miles
1987 GMC 1/2 ton, LWB, auto, V8, 52,000 miles, nice
1991 Chev 3/4 ton, X-cab, 4x4, 56,000 miles
1988 Chev 1 ton cab & chassis, automatic, 60,000 miles
1990 Chev 1/2 ton, V8, automatic, 23,000 miles
1988 Chev 3/4 ton Suburban, 49,000 miles, a RV Special
.1990 Chev. Conversion Suburban, loaded, 49,000 miles
1992 Dodge Dakota Club Cab 4x4 V6, 17,000 miles
1990 Chev Crew Cab Silverado, flatbed, loaded, 39,000 miles
1991 Chev. S10 LT Blazer, 4dr, fully loaded, 22,000 miles
1990 Ford 1/2 ton 6 cyl. SWB, 56,000 miles
1987 Nissan Pathfinder XEV6, very clean
1991 Chev. S10, 4cyl 5-speed, 48,000 miles
1989 AmeriCoach Motor Home, 22,000 miles, very clean
1991 Chev. S10 Blazer, 2-dr, fully loaded, 28,000 miles
1991 Jeep Cherokee 4-dr, 4 Wheel drive, 12,000 miles
1991 Chev. S10, V6, Auto, trans., 18,000 actual miles
1991 Chev. 1/2 ton EXT Cab Silverado, loaded, 16,000 miles
1990 Chevrolet S10 Blazer, 4x4, 33,000 miles
1988 Chev. El Camino, fully loaded
1989 Mazda SR5 Pup, 32,000 miles
1987 Chev S10 Ext Cab, auto, air cond., good work truck
1989 Chev 1/2 ton ext. cab Silverado, conversion, 30,000 miles
1992 Chev 1/2 ton ext. cab Silverado, loaded, 19,000 miles
1990 Chev Astro Van, fully loaded, 40,000 miles
1989 Chev Suburban, fully loaded, 49,000 miles
1988 Chev. 1/2 ton 350-V8, auto air power, 58,000 miles
1989 Chev Astro Van, fully loaded, 42,000 miles
1986 Ford Ranger, economical work truck :
1988 GMC Suburban, 58,000 miles
1987 Ford, 3/4 ton, 4-wheel drive, XL
1987 Ford Bronco II, fully loaded \
1986 Isuzu Trooper II, diesel, 4x4
1989 Ford 1/2 ton Super Cab 4x4, loaded, 52,000 miles
1988 GMC Suburban, fully loaded, 71,000 miles
1977 Ford 1 ton flatbed, good work truck
1991 Chev. Astro Van, fully loaded, 18,000 miles
BAYER ROTOR
eOMKU V. SVC.
218 E. Grand, Comanche 1-800-843-5230
5
L 1
Old photographs set mood ’
for Pendergrass birthday party
By RUTH BARTON
It wasn’t the Beach Boys who
sang “She’s a Little Old Lady from
Dublin, Texas," but the adaptation
did set the tone for the 90th
birthday celebration for Ruby Pen-
dergrass. Her grandsons, Hal and
Lan Pendergrass and great-grand-
son, Seth Pendergrass, all of St.
Louis, Mo„ sang lyrics like this:
No better conversation that this
little lady fosters. As for curiosity,
she never lost hers; She’ll talk
about hummingbirds or poetry, Or
even existential psychology...
More than 75 guests gathered last
week for a reception honoring Mrs.
Pendergrass at the Patrick Street
Church of Christ Annex.
Ruby Templeton Pendergrass was
bom Feb. 10, 1903, at Sterling City,
but moved to Loraine when she was
four years old. A photographic
display of her life set up at the
party showed her as a teenager
going horseback riding with friends.
She also remembers riding in
wagons across open prairie in areas
where there were go roads.
She attended Abilene Christian
College for a year and taught
school for a year. One of the
photographs on display was a
school picture of her first - and as
it turned out - only class.
She married John William Pen-
dergrass on Oct. 31, 1922 and
moved first to Dexter, N.M. and
then to Sweetwater where her hus-
band built a gabled house out of
rocks he gathered from the sur-
rounding hills. Daughter Marian
Michael’s large oil painting of the
house dominated the display of
pictures. That house figured pro-
minently in the anecdotes and
reminiscences by friends and family
It was a clay of sharing memories for Mrs. Ruby
Pendergrass when her children honored her on her 90th
birthday. Shown with Mrs. Pendergrass, center, are Mrs.
Wade Cowan, left, and Mrs. Pendergrass's daughter,
Marian Michael of Austin.
which were presented to Mrs. Pen-
dergrass in a memory book. Nieces
remembered the large basement
with its 30-year run of Saturday
Evening Post magazines. One niece,
Mary Lou Griffin of Hermeleigh,
wrote a poem, “Reading from
Rooftops," about an occasion when
Benton Templeton found his sister,
Ruby, sitting on the roof, reading
stories to her children.
Many of the tributes to Ruby
Pendergrass stressed her sense of
humor and her intellectual curiosity.
In addition, many of the guests
commented that Ruby had descri-
bed herself as well as her mother in
a poem she had written about her
mother. Belle McGee Templeton,
more than 50 years earlier:
Not piously good, not long-faced
or sad,
But perky and funny and a little
bit bad.
Not given to lectures on right
ways of living
But free of hand, free of heart,
loving and giving.
The photographic display of Mrs.
Pendergrass's life also featured her
travels: pictures of her in Saudi
Arabia with camels crossing the
desert; pictures of her deep sea
fishing; pictures of her climbing the
Acropolis in Athens when she was
78 years old.
Mrs. Pendergrass moved to
Dublin in 1968. Her sister, Mary-
belle McConnell, lives in Bunyon
and two sisters-in-law, Agnes Tem-
pleton and Winona Templeton, live
in Dublin.
The party was hosted by Mrs.
Pendergrass’s childien: Pat and
Anita Pendergrass of Austin, Lewis
and Corinne Pendergrass of Penn-
sylvania, Wolfgang and Marian
Michael of Austin and Tom K and
Ruth Barton of Colorado. In addi-
tion, four grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren attended.
Come
see
(and hear)
for yourself
Let us introduce
to The Talking
Citizen's unique
information system.
you
Newspaper, The
and exclusive new
Join us at The Citizen office
from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Thursday, March 4 to hear how
The Talking Newspaper works - and how it can
work for you.
v
t.A
We’ll be signing up advertisers for free Talking
Newspaper for the month of March and will have a
drawing for a FREE six month contract for a lucky
advertiser. We think The Talking Newspaper is the
most exciting communications tool which has come
to rural America in a long, long time. We think you’ll
think so too!
| x-
The Dublin Citizen's Talking Newspaper - come
hear the details at The Citizen office on March 4. And
be looking (and listening) for full Talking Newspaper
service the following week. It’s as simple as dialing
445-INFO.
I UlttN
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.
Wright Parham, Karen. The Dublin Citizen (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1993, newspaper, February 25, 1993; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth761703/m1/4/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.