The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 249, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 23, 1938 Page: 3 of 28
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938
THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
Sunday Morning, January 23, 1938
Y
Six New Wells
NORTHWEST OUTPOST STAKED
Second Eastland
' BY IRON MOUNTAIN AT AVOCA For Big Spring
IT
Area In Week
• STAMFORD, Jin. n-Ton
total depth of 3,630 feet.
Barns-
Hetion at a total depth of
for
IALL
the pool, Phiips No. r-M. E 37e.
reaming five-inch casing for a
r
5
h or
ot
ot$50ofwhten
MINTER’S
Sun OUNo 1 Snyder. 1,650 from
Beet wishes for a better con-
--
. RHEUMATISM
More than half of the motorists
for 6 ounces prescription Allenru. in the United States earn less than
*30 a week.
Costs about 65 cents - (adv.)
Dance!
T
z
1 (9
* CITY TAX
L
-all
NOTICE
(/ K
i
President’s
All 1937 City Taxes
■
"o
a
Are Due!
□
I •
#
Avoid Penalties And
Collection Costs
Z
By Paying Taxes Before
February 1, 1938
I
r
6b
CITY OF ABILENE
-)
MINTERS
t
I
F
5
P
P
Anson C-C Secretary Has Grounds For
Protest Of ‘Shinnery Pictures And
Calls Attention To Belt's Products
Birthday .
Ball
»30 goes for gasoline taxes
Three out five motorist* in the
63.96
CM
located in section 55-13-Ta&P
survey.
Hickok & Reynolds No. 1 L G
See CRUDE, PE 4, Cal 7
//
li
Mountain No. 2 Snyder in section
36. indicated a westward trend in
with the
pany here
i Vernon,
epresenta-
ralty Cor-
First West Extension Well Flows At
Rate Of 3,852 Barrels Per Day Natural
I
1
survey.
PLUGS BACK
- A mile and a
#
W)
same
aster:
.....sFounzharmachstihttsuzounteat Scout Transferred
a
4
Our buyers in New York have sent us
A glorious collection of new
Evening Dresses for the ,
mnk M Muilink, Misater
teaches
THE REVELATION OF JOHN
OVER KRBC ‘
I d
h
• Chiffons over taffeta slips
• Printed taffetas with bolero jackets
• New allover pleated crepe
• Rouge red, violet shades, hdrangea
blue
Completions in the Chalk exten:
____i area were the Humble No. 6
i DoutKit, 9*0 feet feet from the west
ception of the shinnery.
G. D. Triplett. Secretary
Anson Chamber e Commerce
EllenburgerWell
Half Mile North
Extension Shows
To Hickok Strike
Style Flash • • •----
Minter’s bring you the new
Spring 1938 styles in I. Miller
Beautiful Shoes
♦
east at Abilene in southwestern
Callahan county, encountered a
hole full of water at 3.413 feet
this weekend and was under-
mm
e
feet. It will acidize a showing at
2,142-60.
Humble Oil * Refining com-
pany is completing a two-and-a-
half inch gas line from Avoca to
the field and a three-inch water
line to the field from the City of
Stamford ‛s main line between
Avoca and Lueders. Decision to lay
the lines was held to indicate much
. impending activity for the next
few months
East of Stamford, the Thomas
the south and 330 feet from the
east lines of section 28-30-1s. was
putting in pumping equipment al-
though it was cleaned out from a
640 quart shot to 2,828 feet 36 feet
off bottom.
• . .. __
PAGE THREE
V /
- ’ J
K
their useful existence
As to saying there is nothing *
the shinnery but squirrels. may I
offer your paper a voteof thanka
for helping to provide aqulrrel.1ood
by sending some.oc your repeesen-
tatives to the ahinnery.
Acid Planned On New Work Takes Upturneln southeastern.
New Mexico As Lea And Eddy Gain 11 Tests
A spring favorite
and 330 feet from the north lines
of section 115-36. W&NW._and
Jamison and Pollard Na. 1-B Chalk.
330 feet out of the northeast cor-
ner of section 114-29, WaNW. The
Humble weU topped pay at 2,835
feet and is bottomed at 3 006 feet.
Treated with 1,000 gallons of acid.
It rated 515 barrels the first hour
and 45 35 the second for a daily
potential of 1,110 barrels. Jamison
and Pollard No. 1-B Chalk. topping
pay at 1. 733, bottomed at 2.940
feet and treated with 2,500 gallon*
add tested 934 barrels.
PROBLEM ENDED
Continental No 4 GUbreth. see-
nN/n0
#2* Into the
41
dall is now rigging up rotary on
It* No. 3 J. Whitten, a guarter-
mile north offset to the No. 1.
Culbertson A Irwin, Inc., No. 1
Nora E. Alston, extending Lea’s
Jal sand pool a mile to the south,
flowed 75 barrels of oil to 13 hours
through 3-4-inch choke on tubing
At the rate of completion, four
wells with production to the pool
since the first of the year, It is
expected that the field will be
quickly drilled up hereafter at the
rate of about one completion a
week.
Contract given by Iron Moun-
tain for drilling of 30 wells to the
area by Groover * Rose, and the
moving in of two rotary machines
indicates a development program
unequaled to Jones county since
the first Hawley field play.
Mountain Oil compay today stak-
ed location for a new northwest
outpost to the Avoca field. its No.
1 A. V. Jones and H. R. Stasney.
• nearly a quarter mile west of pro-
duction and north of the main
field.
The test will be drilled with
cable tools of Groover * Rose, to
be moved from the Iron Moun-
tain and Humble No. 3 H. B.
* Haterius as soon as it 1* complet-
ed. and will be 330 feet out of the
southeast corner of section 191-
BBBAC survey.
It is west of the Fain-McGaha
in a recent Sunday tssue on its
oil page The Reporter-News pub-
lished a group of pictures taken
in southeastern Jones county, in
the midst of one of the county’s
fine on pools. The oil editor, be-
ingboth photographer and report-
er. handled the "cut lines’’ under
Ehepretscoe"amna-nanocmentio
that the so-called "shinnery’ belt
north of Abilene is one of the most
prodeetive areas in Texas of fruit
berries, vegetables. peanuts. cot-
ton. feedstuffs and other products.
Moreover, the oil editor picked out
a piece, of land omned hyan OU
company and consequently, cul-
tivated” for oil and nothing more:
a piece of private property where
maintenances of road* 1* not a
duty of the county, or its commis-
79//77
D ■ 4 / 1
’ / Af A
woven oil
active to
luring the
office is
A* to the shinnery roads—well
we don’t have much of a relief
problem because our surplus labor
is used in road work to the shin-
nery:
Regarding. "Across the white
waste of what once was a cultivat-
art tract raw be seen the apudder
hi* home
rears ab-
and Sinclair Prairie No. 1 Olson,
I • mile north extension to the pool.
"I The pool’s first west extension.
: the Iron Mountain and Humble
No. 3 Jones & Staney, rated a
H potential of 3,852 barrels per day
I according to report* today. The
j big producer. which was 31 feet
, 1 * higher structurally than the dis-
covery well. nowed 963 barrels to
six hours from natural Palo Pinto
Ume at 3,184-3,200 feet. The test
is 1,035 feet from the west and
330 feet from the south line of
the northwest quarter of section
‘ 196-BBB&C survey.
Plugs will be drilled the first of
the week on another well'for the
pool, 'the Iron Mountain and Hum-
ble No. 3 Haterius. which is stand-
ing with five-Inch casing cement-
. ed at 3.258 feet. It is in the north-
east quarter of section 196—BBB&C
Crud* Paragraph*—
ANOTHER DEEP CANYON TEST
DUE LUEDERS AREA OF JONES
TAP. at 2,616 feet. X feet higher
than to the No. 1 TXL. discoxer
well of the pool It drilled ahead
to 2,666 feet. This show, together
3,345 feet, to sand. It was shot
drilled to 1,1*0 fret. Coaden No 1
ODansel, outpost m the northeast
quarter at section 34-30-1s, TAP
was past 2440 feet Magnolia No
3 oDanlel, 1,880 feet from the
north and 330 feet from the west
Ines of the seetioh, drilled to 2,330
feet.------------------
Tron Mountain No 4 Snyder, 130
feet from the south and 2310 feet
OUTPOST CORES - —
An outpost on the west side of northwest corner of section 26-255-
half southeast of yon pay zone withim * Ot-
1 set acreage is owned on the west by
Lewis production company and on
See these and many other new and beautiful styles in
I. MHer beautiful shoes fui spring.
tion +-32-2, TAP a problem weU.
was finally completed for 540 bar-
| rels daily at 2,532 feet Continen-
tal No. 3-0 Chalk. section 140-29.
WANW, deepened from 1841 feet
1 to 3,239 feet, earned a potential of
Sts barrels a day. Other compie-
tion was the Pure Oil No. 16 Chalk
which topped pay at 2M1 trot and
was bottomed at 3,031 feet. On a
two hour test it made 22 »1 barrels
the second hour for a dally poten-
tial of MI barrels.
in the Bnyder pool. Bun Na 3
Snyder on an Bo-acre lease to the
with 160 quarts of nitro from
3,279 to bottom. Location is the
Hale-State, late to the week was
coring 11m* at 4,310 feet, with
first pay not yet picked up It is
located in the center of the north-
east of section 35-17s-34e.
Farther north, Magnolia No. 3
State-Bridges, center of the south-
west of the southeast of secticn
23-17s-34e, is drilling with cable
tools at 4,381 feet, to lime.
In the southeast part of the
pool, George F. Getty, Inc., No
1-F State is standing, bottomed
at 357 feet in red rock, after ce-
menting 13-Inch surface pipe at
343 feet. Magnolia No. 1-H State
b drilling at 1,150 feet, to red
rock.
The Cooper pool’s northwest ex-
tension continued to attract in-
trest as Barnsdall Oil Company
No. 1 J. Whitten, to the southeast
corner of section 33-23s-36e, gaug-
ed natural flow of 50 barrels an
hour through tubing for a 12-
hour period. It topped the pay
a water shutoff on the No. 1 Hat-’
erlug. which flowed 878 barrels of
oil to 15 hours, the last hour show-
ing 49 barrels of oil and 30 bar-
rels of water. The test had been
acidized after balling indicated the
water intrusion had been halted
by a squeeze job at 3,192-3,211
feet. Pay b at 3.311-18 feet. Loca-
tion is in the northeast corner of
163--BBB&C survey. Tw. oftsets,
on the north and east, have al-
ready begun operations.
Operators were drilling near
*4,900 feet on the Haterius and Un-
gren A Frazier No. 1 Olson. deep-
est exploratory wildcat drilled in
the area, which had a slight show-
ing of dead oil to a 1 1-2-foot sec-
tion of Caddo lime saturation from
4,830 feet this week.
If condition of the hole permit*,
operators Intend to carry the test
to the Ellenburger, Ordovician
series, which b expected to be
logged around 5,300 feet.
It is located about two miles
northwest of Avoca field produc-
tion and 330 feet out of the north-
east corner of the southwest quar-
ter of section 182-BBB&C survey.
_ Interest was also held by the
Bells Wells No. 1 R. L. Pond, out-
poet test between proven Avoca
territory and the Shackelford
county deep discovery five miles
to the northeast.
The test was last' reported un-
| derrecming stzz-inei castnz to X-
1 765 feet. and is expected to make
the remaining 600 feet to the Can-
Elliott’s Funeral home was to sion
charge of arrangements.
r paid its
nd. Divi-
ast year
shae on
rering at
Ling fund
, for the
as to pur-
Stamford. the R B. Farris No. 1
Sza Srvey."hnaplugetpbacklthequtngandsquthvestby Fain-
with cement from 3.561 feet where McGaha Oil Corporation.
It found sulphur water to 2.170
Still undefined to extent, the pres-
ent productive limits of the area
show it to be four miles north and
south, and two miles east and
west. Latest completions in the
extension three miles south of the
three Magnolia Petroleum Com-
pany producers in the original dis-
eovery area have been for large
natural output, total depths rang-
ing around 4,500 to 4,550 feet.
I i
f
oral blocks have been assembled
to th* W6bU---------------- --------
Humble on A Refining com-
pany No. 1-A Reynolds Cattle
company, southwestern Throck-
morton county wildcat located
northeast of the Forest De- '
velopment’s big gasser, was re-
ported to be drilling Saddle
Creek lime this week at 1,300
feet.
Possibility of a dry hole to the
King sand for the southeastern
part of the Hawley field was cre-
ating worries for Ungren & Frazer
this weekend as operators recheck-
ed measurements to determine if
the deep zone had been drilled.
According to sand line measure-
ments, the company’s No. 2-C Dor:
zey, deepened from the Cook sand
and cemented atop the King zone,
had drilled to 2,357 feet where it
found water. The test is south-
west of the Humphrey No. 5 Dor-
sey, deepened to the King to flow
246 barrels In three hours, and
between the Humphrey wel! and
another King sand producer drilled
by N. H. Martin A Son. The King
sand is the deepest and the sixth
pay of the field, was discovered
by Ungren A Frazier last summer.
Hugh King Jr. et al No. 2
Davi* - Walker, deep Strawn
sand wildcat 13 miles north-
apARISAND"
A nt. so00s 6
PATENT
In black and color*
sioner.
So the Reporter-Newa agrees
with G D. Triplett, the successful__
and valuable secretary of the An-
son chamber of commerce. that be
has grounds for protest in the
name of his county. and therefore
presents below a letter from Mr
Triplett:
To the editor
Abilene Reporter News
Abilene, Texas .
Having noticed your pictures ef
the -shinnery" in your recent is- .
sue and the comments thereon by
your oil editor. Charlie “Chinnery"
Ells I am moved to protest.
While it is sometime true that
the camera never lies, sometimes
it and accompanying "O’*1 lnes |
distort things. ____| 5 •
Referring to the "scrub oak* As
pictured in your excellent publication
the picture is evidently one. of the .
Mmaflest that could be found— "e
there are counties* ones that at-
tain a stately growth But even
reauulg hvE----* ----P - — ---• -
shutorfbeforecontinuing.Itis___ports stated it-w**-drilling past
------- 4,015 feet.
I
I
- I •
>; 28
In the artiele, "the shinnery was
— years ago thought to be excellent
- orchard land, today there are
fields of dead trees ‘ While it b
k true that there are dead trees.
A dead from old age and furnishinz
■ many a crop at fruit for Abtlene
0 residents to "smack" their lips over
T t can show you orchards in th*
8 shinnery that produce a Delirious
■ apple that bold* the worid’s record
E for sine, pecan trees that produce
2 bountirun. berrtes of all kinds
2 pears, apricota, plums, peaches, and
N grapea—all shinnery products
—Dnitod 06*6** liors Mong pgr*h—*if |
a new car.
States OU corporation No.
rig— what more do you want? I’ve
seen pieces to a certain nearby
bounty Wiftft lh<fe Bot eV«r
a spudder rig to bring the “ahin-
nery’s" underground resources to
the light at day to ba rattoed inu*^ an anuuRt 1
gasoline to run -modern day mach-
men’, yes. even reporter’s cars.
BY FRANK GABDNEB
MIDLAND, Jan. 22—New work
in the Southeast New Mexico area
of the Permian Basin showed a
decided upturn this week as first
report*, were filed for 11 -testa to
Lea and Eddy counties. Of chief
importance were two new loca-
tions made by Phillip* Petroleum
company to the Increasingly active
Vacuum pool of Lea.
An outpost test nearly one-half
mile northeast of Skelly Oil Com-
pany No. 1-J State, farthest east
producer in the area, was staked
by Phillips on its No. 1 commis
sioner-State, to the center of th*
southwest of the southeast of sec-
tion 30-17s-35e. The other new
Phiips location is for its Na l
Santa Fe State, to' the center of
the southwest of the northwest of
section 21-17s-35e.
The two Phillips locations bring
the number of Vacuum pool’s ac-
tive well* to a total of seven. There
Parrack, seven miles north of East-
land, another Ellenburger try to
Eastland county was running five-
inch pipe and was to resume at
3,676 feet.
In Stephens county, four miles
north of Ranger. Graham et al No.
1 Yocum was preparing to run five-
Inch pipe at 3,400 feet where a
show of oil was made when lime
was topped.
In Comanche county, W. J. Dobbs
No 1 Hodges was preparing to
drill plug on cement set on pipe
at 2,527 feet where gray Ume was
topped. The welt has been plug-
ged back from 2,713 feet where *
small strata of salt water was
stryck.
Phillips Petroleum company No.
1 Cozaft, deep Cellahan test- wast
drilling near Scranton at 3,400 feet.
...... . . . e-—.
The typical U. S. motorist, who
earns less than 830 a week, pays
Umm so-called scrub oak* serve *
very useful purpose for they are
hauled to Abtlene where your
residents are glad to get them for
fuel in fact. I might add. a num- .
ber of your fetlow townamen maxet
___ their living by hauling these tfMa
east half of section MXH11 TAP to Abilene and selling them for
fuel So you see, Mr Editor, even
"Chinnery" Ellis did not recount .
$1275 THt paI
D Humphrey Na 1 A. H. Alston, - -
“mystery wildcat." on th* Jones-IFlud. R-k„ Dinr rtf
shackelford county line, was re- -lyde DO by Des •r
ported! preparing to drill out Pneumonia Here
• cement plugs at 3,180 feet in five-
are now six producing wells in - -
the pool, which Myei.lre.no. -nz“ks2s00mndadriled oraa
been given a pipeline connection
J. R Chesnut and associates of
Fort Worth have assembled a block
of approximately 3,500 acres in
northwestern Callahan county, ly-
ing north and west of Eula, on old
geology aurked by a major oil
company.
Chesnut, who has been operating
in the Young and South Bend area,
plans a 3,000-foot wildcat, but has
not yet announced location. Sev-
kir
li 25
9
• F
That'* just some of the many Jovely colors we offer
you in this big shipment of 1938 styled evening
dresses for the Presdent's Birthday Ball. Whites,
pastel* in floating chiffons—taffetas and crepes—
$1695 to $2250
________k ,
"a
north lines of section 33-30-1s,
Chalk And Snyder
Link Area Test is
Ready For Gauge
BY JOE PICKLE
BIG SPRING, Jan. 22—Six com-
pletions this week added 3,636 bar-
rels to the daily potential of the
Howard-Glasscock area. Two of the
completions were in the Chalk ex-
tension area.
Other developments being watch-
ed closely in this territory were
the Johnson and Bruce No. 2-A
Hyman, in section 88-29, WNW,
Howard county; the Robinson Bros.
No. 1 Martin, section 147-97, HTC,
Scurry county; and the Moore
Bro*. No. 3 TXL, in the Snyder pool
of eastern Howard county.
Johnson and Bruce No. 2-A Hy-
man, a mile and a half northeast
of production in the Chalk exten-
sion and six miles south of com-
mercial wells in the Snyder pool,
was ready to take potential test
as the week ended. It topped pay
at 2,890 feet, and had shows to
2,940 feet where it is now bottomed
having been deepened from 2,906
feet and shot with 660 quart*. It
previously was rated at little less
than 500 barrels. A mile and a
quarter to the northwest, the H. L
Lockhart No. 1 A. R. Huesinger. 330
feet out of the sou 1 east quarter |
of section 67-29. V'E:?W, drilled
ahead to 1,350 feet ia shale and
anhydrite.
Another Howard county wildcat
abandoned was the W. F. McDer-
mott No. 1 Capp* Lucas, located in
the northeastern portion of the
county in section 18-30-1n, T&P.
It drilled to 3,101 feet without
shows
SCURRY WELL TESTS
In southwest Scurry county the
Robinson Bros. No. 1 Martin, six
mile* removed from production, was
being tested following treatment
with 1,600 gallon* of acid. The acid
was used after a 300 quart shot
a week ago. Prior to treatment, it
cleaned out about 23 to 30 barrel*
per day.
Most noteworthy development to
the new Snyder pool was the en-
countering of a show in the Moore
Bro«. No. 3 TXL, 900 feet from
the east and 330 feet from the
/V
Eastern Jones county will gain
another Palo Pinto wildcat project
next week when the Joe A. Wor-
sham et al No. 1 J. H. Commons
is spudded about three miles south-
west of the town of Lueders.
The teat is slated for drilling to
3,300 feet with cable tools on acre-
age adjoining that of the States
Oil Corporation of Eastland.
Location waa announced Satur-
day, 330 feet from the south and
east line* of lot T, A. W. HUI sur-
vey No. 4, Stettens subdtviston. It
1* directly south of the Avoca field,
about eight miles. East and south-
east offset acreage is owned by
States OU. south by Home OU A
Gas company.
Fisher county’* Rotan field
added another' producer yes-
terday with completion of rail-
road commission gauge on the
Sunray OU company No. 7 Joe
Robinson, northwest edge well
and ‘dry hole’ which was drill-
ed to 3,872 feet and plugged
back.
The weU made 437 barrels to
34 hours following a second acid
treatment of 5,000 gallons in
Noodle Creek lime saturation
from 3,550-57 feet. It had been
shot with 130 quarts from 3 526-
57 feet, plugged back depth. Lo-
cation 1* to section 172-2-
HATC.
A
inch easing Sunday, morning: Funeral was held Saturday at the
The test has ‘T i gravesid in Clyde for Clara Fay
and depth has not been confirm- Kiehol2, 16- month- old daughter
ed it was reported that the wild- ■ _ _ NiChOlas
eat found anshowing of,ol atop rou i, AbUene The child died at
kmowatmat-tnecastmg standsneafiy Saturday morning from pneu-
cemhnttest is north of the Owens- monia.hehapsben in the hos-me pool
Snebold et al Na L H R Haterius,. Pl . Mnu. wrnte ” “
. Bh.ckelford Palo Pinto lime dlz- , thanatheererent
andis an section 16-3- and“hrmaj.rg. sandpjotthyde,
• .... eXv, Mr and Mrs, Lon Nicholas of near
SEEK-sTorT. conortea ore. ; AbUene. paternal grandparents.
.Operators.wereoreportedm at Four brothers Leon. Lonnie Jack.
paring to make another attempt at Doyle B olden Ray. and a sister,
Francia Nell, also survive
matism, neuritis cr sclatica i> caused vasr ANn Jan 33—<Snt>—
« agravated by excesa uric add ’ Jana( .
• . 5i-an2 mlnne That Cecll Darnell, geological scout I or
onsoher.creulatingPoisonsanmhat the Sinclair Prairie Oil company,
beineathe.cae..he car. Alsostenzon has been transferred from Wichita
that one and sale prescripton UT. 4, biiif r*z-iiarfrr« at Fetlana
b Allenru-often the terrible pain -Falls to headquarter* at Estand
and agony are gone to 4* houts-
ask any Ure druggist in America
BY STEWART DOSS
EASTLAND Jan. 32. —(Spl—
Acidization is planned for Monday
on the Lone Star Gas company No.
1 B. T cozart, showing for a pos-
sible Ellenburger producer about
nine miles northwest of Cisco, it
was announced today. ,
Much Interest is attached to Ute
No. 1 Cozart for it is one-half
mile north of the Hickok Produc-
ing & Development company No. 1
Van Parmer 1,000-barrel Ellen-
burger discovery.
Th* Cozart, recently deepened
from a former pay, topped Ellen-
burger at 3,946 feet but saturated
lime was not touched until 3.956
feet. The saturated lime done was
two feet thick. Total depth, still
to the Ellenburger, was 3.971 feet.
When shutin at night the Cozart
made a small flow with oU testing
40.4 gravity. - 5
Lone Stars No: 1 M Thom**, ap-
prozzimately 1,300 feet west of the
Van Parmer, was running 10-inch
at 1,695 feet. The Hickok No. 1
Donovan, mile and a half southeast
of the Van Parmer, was drilling
below 3,910 feet, G. D. Chastain
No. 1 Weddington, three and a half
miles southeast of the Van Par-
mer, topped unsaturated Ellen-
burger at 3,995 feet and late re:
from the east Une* at sektion 28,
was at 1905 fret and «* No. 3 Sny:
der set seven ln«h casing at 2150 :
feet Moore Bro. No. 1-A Snyder,
west offset to Tron Mountains Na
3 Snyder pools heaviest producer,
was below 940 feet
Continental No-6-A Gay 139-29, ।
WANW Howard -Glasscock area
deepened from 1,836, was under-
roaming before resuming drilling on
a 3,000 foot contract Continental
No 17-A Settles 8-32-28, TAP.
drilled at 2,938 feet to Ume and
its No »-■ setties, 1eo-29, WANW |
Sai at 1225 feet to anhydrite rour I
miles east of Big Bprine. the West- ;
brook nnd Graham No 1 Great I
West. Andeat air weir in section
48-22-fn, TAP. was below 1*0* feel
with no show*.
Each Sunday—3 NIP. M
South Bide church it Christ
Tenth and chestnut Streets
1111
titt
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 249, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 23, 1938, newspaper, January 23, 1938; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1590183/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.