Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 27, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 11, 1950 Page: 3 of 6
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LOCAL MRS
TO MEET LION
11 WEDNESDAY
Stephenville’* high school jun-
iors win open the lid to Stephen
ville's “triple decker*1 football week
at 7:80 p.m. Wednesday on Memo-
rial field.
Coach Allah Uttorboch’s juniors
-cnfcde up of freshmen and sopho-
mores—will meet fresh and sophs
from Brownwood.
The Wednesday night game will
inaugurate the “triple decker’’
that continues Thursday night
when the T8C Plowboys meet the
Cameron Aggies, and end Friday
night when the Yellow Jackets
meet the scrappy Lions from
Brownwood. _, • ',, '1
The Brownwood Junior record is
not known, but last ysar the team
was said to be better than Brown-
wood’s B. team and capable of
giving the regulars a hard game.
Coach Utterback believes that acme
of the Brownwood Juniors have re-
turned to the team and that it
will be star-studded.
I
ir
Lions
The nation’s top doublo-hSader grid game will be In
Saturday, bj^Stpphenvill# edn boast a triple-header—in one
week. The Mgh se}ua>l juniors take on the Brownwood juniors at
1:90 pm. Wednesday. TtrletOn's Plowboys play hosts to the
Cameron Aggies Thursday night, and the Stephenville Yellow
Jackets engage thd T^ons of Brownwood Friday night.
The Upn4»Ckrt game will be played on Memorial Field,
beginning at jg fuf|. Friday, and a capacity crowd is expected
to see an $ff«nsfte*battle that will leave all arid sundry breath-
less and limp. -1 :
Brownwood has 49 men on Its
BAUER SISTERS
IN TOP ROLES
WOMEN’S MEET
Fort Worth, Oct. 11 ItF!—The
glamorous Bauer sisters, theii
games in top form, drew the gal-
leries' attention today as the Teks*
. Women’s Open Golf Tournament
entered its second round.
The Bauers, who raoently turned
pro at Midland, were favored to
win their matches today over the
rolling River Crest Country Club
course, and their performances yes-
terday gave ample reason.
Alice Beats Louise Suggs
Free-Swinging Alice Bauer wal-
loped pro Louise Suggs, Carroll-
ton, Ca., 5 and 4, while her young-
er sister, Marlene, eliminated Nata-
lia Bering, DeCatur, III., 6 and 4.
Alice was pitted today against
Dot Kielty, Long Beach, Calif.,
who drew a bye yesterday as play
began over the 6,200-yard course.
Marlene faced Mrs. Gordon Perrin,
Cl Dorado, Ark.
flansea ▼»- Riley »
Defending ‘ champion Beverly
Hanson met Polly Riley, Fort
Worth, in another featured match.
Miss Hanson, of Indio, Calif., olim-
inated Mary Lena Faulk, Thomao-
, villa, Gs., in the opening round
while Miss Riley, the 1»48 titlist,
ousted Mrs. W. K. Stripling Jr.,
Fort Worth, 6 and 4.
Other Up pairings in today V18-
hoie ptay included fatty Berg,
Minneapolis, va. Betty Dodd, Fort
Sam Houston, and Betty MacKin-
non, Dallas, vs. Bea Me Wane, Bir-
mingham, AM.
squad. ''K'H jf
Stephenville has 22 men.
Brownwood** Lions have 1 sen-
ior lettermen, 1 junior letterman,
18 Senior players with experience,
7 juniors with experience, and a
holt of sophomores who played
junior high and B team football.
Stephenville hpa 4 returning
lettermen, 2 ef Whom were reg-
ulars in 1940.
The Stephenville Yellow Jackets
are not supposed to have a look-in
with the boys who hold the mighty
Breckenridge Buekaroos, the num-
ber 2 team in the staU, to a 14-
point margin. The Lions, it is said,
out-fought Breckenridge and lost
on had breaks.
Stephenville’* linemen have been
taking a riding because they have
not been able to gat fired up since
the season’s ’opening, encounter
with Sweetwater. TO jhat Sweet-
water game—against ft line that
outweighed them 86 pounds to the
man—the Jacket linemen proved
they could play great defensive
football. In three later games, how-
ever, the Jacket linsnuftn’t been as
Have they played great ball at the
me time. ,
“Maybe R’a a question of build-
ing a bon fire under them,” one
Sn said.
And th<s linemen, says the grape-
vine, are. setting fuse to that fire
for the Brownwood game.
Browns t)eny
Rickey Rumor
St. Louis. Oct. 11 sn—President
Bill DeWitt of. the St Louis
Browns says Branch Rickey is net
buying his cltrt».
It's not for sale, ha adda, and
there have been no talks with
Rickey. j
Reports that Rickey might bay
the Browns popped up when Rickey
sold Ms stock in the Brooklyn
Dodgers to William Zeckendorf, ■
New York real estate dealer. But
DeWitt said he doubted that Ric-
key would leave the Brooklyn dub,
and he added:
"As things stand now, the club
isn’t for sale. We don’t plan any
changes in operations of our club
—and Rickey hm’t buying it.”
New York, Oet. It (W—In his
borne town he caused the - drug
stores to rub short on cold euro
medicine and in the nation’s foot-
ball capital he brought oh the big-
gest boom in aspirin Hi five years.
He’s the Unttftd Frees coach of
the weak, 8tuart K. Holcombe of
Pnrdue’a bumptious Boilermakers.
Who produced that eolosaal upset
of Notre Dame’s mighty Irish.
And the funny thing about that
28 to 14 eftrtb-shaker is that ho
thought it might happtn all the
Upon the establishment of the
Marines by Congressional resolu-
tion iri 1116, Capt. Samuel Nichols
wfts ordered to recruit two battal-
ions nf Maxi™*-
OLD-TIMERS MAY HAVE FINISHED
LAST SEASON IN MAJOR LEAGUES
MURPHY BEATS TEXAN
Lot Angelos, Oet 11 (W-Wild-
■wingtnf Bob Murphy of Bah
Diego, the nation's fourth ranking
light-heavyweight, stemmed out a
blaring first-round knockout teat
night ever ‘Dolph Quijano of El
Paso. Murphy, staU light-heavy
champion, docked Quijano in 2:81
of the first round in the scheduled
10-round non-title.bout at Olympic
Auditorium.
aggressive on defdpsC.
But now the linemen are expect-
ed to come info thoir ov/n. Un-
heralded—the lost boys of football
— the linemen have been down
there in the pile-ups getting their
lumps, and the grapevine says the
Jacket forward wall la fired up and
ready to rand the Brownwood line
limb from limb./ v
Observers hope this (is true. The
JackeU have reminded some fans
of the Masonic Home Mighty Mites
of old—in spurts and flashes—for
they tackle low and hard. Their
defensive play hasn’t been con-
sistent, however, and line-backers
are forced to come up for too many
tackles. •' \
Aa one experienced fan said:
“The Jacket fine la rugged when
it wants to be. Those kids can
tackle as hard as any lads I’ve
ever seen. Their only trouble is
that they play in starts and stops.
On one series of downs they’ll rush
like heck, and then they'll give a
passer all the time he wants to
get rid of the ball. Usually, on the
offense, they block VW1—but they
seem to think tbtir own passer
should take care aof himself. If
they leurn to block for their passer
you'll see their pairing gftme .im-
prove 60 per cent, because their
receivers get open dnd their passer
is good—when he teh’t too faMtfp £
dodging the entire opposing team.”
For some time, dferpRe losses,
fans have felt the Jackets ware
much better than the record book
shows. ,
“The line and baekfield will da-
ride to play ball the same night—
New York, Oct. 11 «W*—Chances
are that several former star ball
players—like Tommy Henrich, Joe
Gordon and Bill Nicholson—played
their last major-league game dur-
ing 1960.
Only one thing apparently stands
today between these and other
tottering oldsters -and the minor
leagues qr retirement—and that is
Selective>^tervice. If the military
draft is expanded to take many of
the young players, clubs will keep
the 'old-timers around for one more
turn on stage.
But, barring that, the end of the
trail is in sight for many men who
used to make the headlines..
Henrich, the New York Yan
kees’ “old reliable’’ first-baseman-
outfielder, had to be left out of
the World Series altogether be-
cause 6f bis bad right knee. Thirty
four-year-old Tommy is consider-
ing an operation but doctors said
the surgery wouWL have only “a
60-50 chance” of returning him to
action.
Gordon, 86-year-old Clevelanu
Indians second baseman, has slow
ed down and was benched during
late season in favor of young Beta
Avila.
Nicholson, 34-year-old Philadel-
phia outfielder with the “svtish”
swing, is hospitalized with diabetes
and the word is that he has played
his last game.
Walker Cooper Injured
PURDUE MENTOR—WHO ELSE?
NAMED AS COACH OF THE WEEK
We don’t have a great team now,
anyway. We just have 12 or 16
players and if we don’t get hurt we I
might go along all right. I
“But remwMmr *e play in the-
Big Ten where they play pretty I
rough. In there we could lose any
or all of our gamea.”
■ Hdkombe emphasized that it was
Forty-Niners Face-
Head-Rolling for
Losing to Yanks
New York, Oct. 11 OTI-The San
Francisco Forty-Niners, biggest
fiapa of. the young pro football
season, face firings and finings
unless they end their four-game
losing streak against the New
York Yanks.
Even if they do win, wrathful
ass,ail
Apparel
m <
“a them victory and whether wvj c^ch Buck Shaw vowed today,
can do It again I don’t know—we
probably will have plenty of
trouble Saturday against Miami
ught
turn
His Student body back
in La-
from Florida.”
Hi.
Fayette, lad., hadn’t ebarad that
confidence. So stunned and ex-
hlli rated were they that they
paraded all night long, risking
pneumonia in the rain, to cele-
brate last Saturday with the re-
sult that there was a grant epi-
demic of Colds and absenteeism on
the campus Monday morning. At
South Bend) tnd., where the un-
believable occurred and where some
of the faithful still think they wih
awake and find it was all a bad
dream, there were a thousand en-
during headaches.
Hew Ceach Said It Happened
Here’s how Holcembe thinks it
happened—that snapping of the 39
A Marine battalion accompanied
Washington on his crooning of
the Delaware near Trenton# New
Jersey and fought in the battle Of
Trffc*?-*.?*.......-
sometime—1 hope,” one observer
Mid. “When they do, you’re going
to see a hots of a team in action.”
Billy Little, Harvey McCullough,
JOe Jacksoh, Arils Brown, Jim
Howell, Curt Fallen, Jim Taylor,
Kirby Keahey, Harris Morris, Wal-
ker, Owens, Lane, Willard, Gar-
rett, Chapman, J. Ray McCullough
—all have shown up well indiv id-
daily and in different games. Nev-
er, since the Sweetwater game,
In Berlin on United Nations Day,
October 24, the Freedom Bell will
be dedicated aa a living symbol at
freedom and hope to the enslaved
peoples /af the world.
j.-- V- ..............
Ankle Injuries have put Boston
Brave stars Walker Cooper and
Pete Reiser on the list of doubt-
ful returnee*. Cooper, 35-year-old
catcher, had a fine season with a
.313 batting average but then frac-
tured an ankle. Reiser, 1941 Na-
tional League batting champ, had
an average *f .206 in 62 games and
twisted an ankle in the last week
of the s*aw>n. Mickey Heafner, 38-
year-old hurier picked up by the
raves late in the campaign, alto
doubtful.
Johnny Vandar Meer, Chicago
Cubs’ hurier of double no-Yiit fame,
won three and lost four this year
and may be washed up at 36. Dutch
Leonard, 40, won five and lost oae
but may be through. And 34-year-
old Cnb catcher Mick
In addition to Nicholaon, the
Phillies also couM be plotting to
part company with veteran re-
serves Ken Silvestri, 34, and Jirnm
Blood worth, 33. The Pittsbjtfg
Pirates have Ray Mueller, 88, and
Murry Dickson, 33.
The Brooklyn Dodgers, Cincin-
nati Reds and New York Giants
are loaded with young players yritk
virtually no oldsters.
• Joe Page Yankee Problem
Besides Henrich, the world
champion Yankees have a problem
in S2-ye«r-old reliefer Joe Page,
who was poor this' season; two
over-age first basemen: Johnny
Mize, 37, and John Hopp, 34; and
relief .pitched Tom Ferrtck, 36.
The Detroit Tigers have hinted
that catcher Aaron Robinson, 34,
victim of the famous “boner”
against the Indians, will not re-
main, and they also have question
marks in Bob Swift, 34, Eddie
Lake,’ 33; Paul Calvert, 32, and
Charley Keller, 34.
The Boston Red Sox, disgruntled
at missing out again, night trim
off Buddy Rosar, 35, and Walt
Masterson, 30.
Oh the Cleveland Indians, along
with Gordon, Manager Lou Boud-
reau is an uncertain player next
year. The 33-year-old skipper
benched himself this season dn
favor of Ray Boone, a rising star.
Also 33 is outfielder Thurman
Tucker, who hit only .178.
Can this finally be the time for
41-year-old Luke Appling of the
Chicago White Sox to hang up
hla glove? Could be. Might also be
time for 83-year-old Hank Majeski
and 36-year-old Randy Gumpert.
The Philadelphia As have pitch-
ing problems with Joe Coleman,
only 28 but with a sore arm; Dick
Fowler, sore-armed at 29; Hank
Wyse, 32. Along with catcher Mike
Guerra, 34, infielder Barney Mc-
Coskey, who has indicated his re-
tirement; Eddie Jost, 34, and Wally
Moses, 39.
The St. Louis Browns and Wash-
ington Senators are loaded with
youngsters, and the few oldsters
they h'ave turned in good seasons.
U biggest Might thus far thir
year haa been in the discovery of
19-ycat-oid sophomore quarterback
Mika Samuels, who throw two of
the touchdown passes against
Notre Dame and set up the other
two. He cbmjrleted nine of 21 for
161 yards and kicked all four extra
points.
Stresses Fundamentals
Otherwise the friendly 40-year-
old hobby-leas ex-end eoach from
Amy believes that he can point
to the team’s strict attention to
fundamentals, blocking, tackling,
punting and passing, for its suc-
heads are likely to roll anyway.
“If the pictures of last Sunday’s
game against the Detroit Lions
show some of my men letting down,
I’ll either release them or assess
them with stiff fines,” said the
silver-haired skipper of the West
Coast entry.
Veterans — fellows who have
been with the team for years—
were singled out by Shaw as the,
players at fault.
“If the pictures show what I
suspect they are going to show—
nr- jmwh
iekey Owen, .343
batting average, may be sidelined
for a youngster. -
The St. Louis Cards have prom-
iaed to “clean house” and. that
means danger for old-timors Erv
Dusak, 80; Harry Brecbeen, 36,
A1 Brazlc, 36; Fred Martin, 36,
George Munger, 36; Ted WHk«, 34;
Eddie Miller, 84; Eddie Kazak, 30,
and Marty Marion, 32.
game Notre Daffie streak without
at defeat and Its first loss since
Grant Lakes Naval trainees turned
the trick on Dec. 1. 1946:
“I sort of sensed the morning
of the game that the boys were
getting fired up,” he said. “They
were feeling ready and they want-
ed us to win. Before then we made
no effort to key them up—we did
not dare do that.”
Holcombe felt there were two
past incidents which helped Puri
due to win. The first was the Pur-
due defeat the previous week to
Texas, 34 to 26. The other was a
never-to-be-forgotten game two
years ago when the Boilermakers
CSme closer than anybody since
then to accomplishing what they
did Saturday. That was when they
went to Notre Dame for their open-
er and lost a 28 to 27 heartbreaker.
"We wanted to win that Texas
game pretty badly but the ’boys
weren’t ready yet,” he said. “We
made too many mistakes then, but
we didn’t make many Saturday.
That Texas game helped us plenty
and I’d like to play those boys
again, now.”
As for the loss two years ago
to Notre Dame, Holcombe thought
it wrecked the team for the rest
of the season.
"To come so close and miss just
took the heart out of the boys,”
he said. “We fell apart after that
one. But we never forgot it and
we certainly reminded the boys
about it on Saturday.”
Surprisingly, Holcombe thinks
this year’s victory may have the
same devastating effect on his
team.
Team Now Target for All
“The darned thing might ruin
ear club,” he aaid. “Everybody that
plays us now will be trying to beat
the team that beat Notre Dame.
And ft won’t help any if our boys
get to think they’re pretty good.
The curly, dark-haired native of
the football hot-spot of Lincoln,
Neb., played halfback at Ohio
State and began a long coaching
eareer at Findlay College in Ohio
in 1932, moving successfully up-
ward to Washington and Jefferson,
Miami of Ohio, and to West Point
under Coach Red Blaik in 1944
where he helped work on the in-
comparable Army teams sparked
by Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis.
He’s been at Purdue since 1947
and because “football for me is a
year-arotmd job I don’t have any
hobbies.”
“1 don’t even play golf,” he said.
“The other coaches would laugh at
me.’’
But they weren’t laughing today
about what he did to those Irish.
that some of our veterma# let
down and didn't do their best
then some changes will be made
when we get back home,” said
Shaw. The Forty-Niners lost that
game, 24 to 7. Counting exhibition
games, it was their eighth loet in
nine games this season.
That Line Is Tough As Hack, Coach
SO— -
I
THINK
I’LL
PASS
BY JING
Perfect Weather
For Football and
Fishing Promised
Hr UNITED PRESS
, “Beautiful autumn weather” that
is perfect for football and fishing
may be expected during the next 36
hours in Texas.
The U. S. Weather Bureau at
Dallas said today there were no
signs in the air that the situation
would change by Saturday, when
the State Fair of Texas will pre-
sent its football doubleheader star-
ring Oklahoma and Texas and
Southern Methodist and Oklahoma
A&M.
“Texans can count on warm af-
ternoons and cool evenings for at
least the next 36 hours,” observers
said.
The highest point the mercury
reached yesterday was 93 at Wink,
while Amarillo recorde da low max-
imum of 75. Highest minimum
early today was 69 at Corpus
Christi while Lubbock was low with
a 46.
There was no report of rain any-
where in Texas during the past 24
hours, weathermen said.
Statistically speaking, foes of
the Stephenville Yellow Jackets
have cashed in on the Jacket pass
defense. Opponents have completed
20 of 37 passes against the Jackets
for 341 yards, an average of 64
per cent.
The Jackets have completed
33 1/3 per cent of their passes,
with 11 completions of 33 at-
tempted passes. The Jackets have
gained only 144 yards via the air
route.
A i un-down on play-by-play ac-
counts of Jacket games indicate
that failure to rush the passer has
harmed the Jackets, and also that
Jackets are content to make sure
of tackling receivers instead of at-
tempting to bat down the pigskin.
On rushing, the Jackets have
picked up 884 yards while allowing
opponents to pick up 925 yards.
Only Sweetwater has out-rushed
the Jackets badly. The Stephen-
ville lads out-rushed Waxahachie
and Coleman, but were out-rushed
19 yards by Arlington Heights and
118 yards by Sweetwater.
All opponents have out-gained
the Jackets in the air. Sweetwater
completed only two of nine passes
for-50 yards, but passes set up
both Sweetwater scoies. Arlington
Heights completed 6 of 7 passes,
while Waxahachie completed 4 of 9
and Coleman cotftplhted 8 of 12.
In the punting-' department, the
Jackets have an average of 34
yards per try. They have booted
13 times for 44f yards—excellent
kicking in high school circles, with
Braeuer the cool man who puts
the toe into the trail.
The Jackets have picked up 48
first downs to 63, with only Sweet-
water doing the damage on th«
long end of the first down pick-ujfS.
Individual rushing averages fol-
low: (TC means times carried, TG
means total gain, and
AG
meant
average ghin.)
Season
Statistics
TC
TG
AG
Braeuer
60
442
7.36
Langley
56
261
4.48
Boase
_. 33
134
4.06
Kaughinan
6
34
5.66
Jackson
3
18
6
Coleman Statistics
TC
TG
AG
1 Braeuer
16
152
9.5
1 Boase
11
56
5
Langley
.. 16
76
4.75
1 Kaughman
.. 1
11
11
| Jackson
2
6
3
Robert Wilson, writing in the
Daily Democrat-Voice of Coleman,
said Harry Braeuer was the best
back on the field Friday night . . .
and went on to piaise the tremend-^
ous power of lines of both teams.
* * *
Army could beat Slippery Rock
or Podunk Junior College and still
be called the number one team in
the nation. There just aren't
enough sports writeis this side of
the big river to out-vote the know-
it-all boys in the East.
* * *
Billy Tidwell of Texas AdiM has
an average gain of 9.4 yards. The
lad is from Hearne, and is a
modest, quiet youngster.
A&M FROSH va. CUBS
College Station, Oct. 11—Texas
A&M’s freshman football team will
shoot for its second victory of the |
new campaign against Baylor's
Cubs Thursday night in Waco.
Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m. Orig-
inally, this game Was scheduled for
Oct. 11 at 2 p.m.
Coe Daily Empire Want Ada)
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Spotlight
Loop on
in Class AA
West Texas
This Winter
temperatures alow your starts ... sap your
printer grade of new Conoco §UR£I
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ar UNITED PRESS
Four West Texas teams take the
apotHght in the Class AA school-
boy football race this week, while
full rounds of title play occupies
three of the four City Conference
districts.^ . ' .
There are four Clasa A A district
games on this week’s combined 50-
game schedule, but moot of the
interest will be In Wedt Tyxas
when undefeated, untied Pampa
plays host to onb-tted Lubbock and
whir* once-tied Sweetwater en-
tertalns undefeated, untied Mid-
land. Both are inter-district games.
In East Texas, unbeaten, untied
Texxarkana goes to Longview
against a Lobo eleven which has
been tied once in a District 9-AA
opener for both clubs. Yaleta vs.
El PM High in 4-AA,-Greenville
at Gainesville in 7-AA and Glade-
water at Marshall In 9-AA ara the
other conference games.
Big D Still Warming Up
In City Cohfereaee play, the
Dallas district continues its warm-
up schedule, but Fort Worth, Hous-
ton and San Antonio teams tangle
in titla gardes.
Ih Fort Worth, Arlington Heights
meets Carter and North Side plays
Poly. It’s Davis vs. MUby, Umar
va. San Jacinto and Reagan v».
Houston hr the fiftyou City
Mtt la Sin Antonio, defending
state champion Jefferson play*
le and
1 flttto
Th* schedule by district, in C
The schedule by districts in Class
AA (all games Friday unless other-
wise noted):
1— Brownfield at Plminview, Lub-
bock at Pampa, Vernon at Ama-
rillo.
2— Dallas Wilson at Quanah.
3— Abilene at Odessa, San An-
gelo at Big Spring.
4— Thursday: Marfa at El Paso
Jefferson. Friday: Ysleta at El
Paso High <x). Saturday: Berger
at El Paso Austin.
5— Midland at Sweetwater^
6— Breckenridge at Dallas Tech,
Lameaa at Mineral Wells, Brown-
wood at Stepheavillo, Waxahachie
at Weotherferd.
7— McKinney at Denison, Green-
ville at Oainosville (x’), Palestine
at Paris.
8— Thursdayt Dallas Sunset at
Highland Park, Grand Prairie at
Dallas Forest. Friday: Dallas
Adamson at Denton.
9— Gladewater at Marshall (x),
Texarkana at Longview (x).
10— Orange at Lufiiin, Kilgore
at Nacogdoches
11— Baytown at Beaumont.
12— Harlingen at Freeport, Port
Neches at Galena Park, Conroe at
Pasadena, Galveston Ball va Gal-
veston Kirwfn.
18—Sherman at Waco, Cleburne
at Hillsboro, Bryan at Temple.
14— Beaumont Sooth Park at
Korrvillo, El Paao Bowi* at Aus-
tin, Port Arthur at Corpus Christi
Milter.
15— Me Alien at Kiagavilte, Tex-
as City at Vtetorte. •
16— San Antonio Edison at Edin-
burg, Corpus Christi Ray at San
Benito, Corpus Christ! Academy at
Brownsville. ' m *
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Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 27, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 11, 1950, newspaper, October 11, 1950; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1133093/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.