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One hundred years ago, the first production-model Temple farm tractor was fired up, put in gear and driven through a nearby field.
The Prairie Queen was born, and its owners hoped the powerful gas-powered tractor would plow under the competition.
That didnât happen.
While John Deere, Ford, Farmall, Cat and others made thousands of tractors, Prairie Queen Manufacturing Co. made considerably fewer. Like five. Six if you count the prototype.
According to an article in the Temple Daily Telegram, the Prairie Queen company was formed in January 1920 by three
Temple residents â John Zoop, J. Walter Pane and W.A. Harrell. Harrell was advertising manager of the Telegram at the time.
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United States 1870-S $3 Gold Coin
A great numismatic rarity was interred in the northeast cornerstone of the second
San Francisco Mint on May 25, 1870, during a Masonic ceremony covered by the press. Struck especially for the event using modified dies, the
1870-S $3 gold coin joined a number of other extraordinary numismatic rarities in a copper casket in the new facility’s cornerstone, ostensibly out of collectors’ reach. The facility was completed in 1874 and would go on to serve the western region of the nation’s coinage needs until 1937.
In 1907, almost four decades after the cornerstone was laid, a
second 1870-S $3 gold coin was offered in an ad published in
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