Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 6, 1950 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 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:
;ets Promise to
When the
Frwjfcy.ij^fit te
to be on the
final mfa
win tuft di/kjmifOm Mustang Ifoaj4 the
gridi*on"_irr..sV» evt water at 8 p.fe, ’ 'The Jacket#, who have nlucd in*, tea vine here sJMft 11
Fri^hy.-aiffet te ant one el t^a J_e# worlwuta because of rain, be- “W* won’t work oat all
tam.tArifeem* is the state. Thetf el school pnd Sunday, ary get there,*' Murphy *a«t
W» he oatweiahed Store than 30, good physical condition. The want #ven limber ay.
*• <to tf8n> I?1 pUaiveache#, Mike Murphy and Arnold likely well lie area*
will taka
hy hM Friday
vine here
t work on| after we
“We
More than
areo*d and rein*
•*•.*.*
Yanks and Red Sox Think
Tfcjy’it Win; Envy Tigers
New York, Sept. 6 V—Manager*
Casey Stengel of the Yankee* and
Steve O’Nein of the Red Sox had
one thing In common today aa
they prepared te battle each other
—they agree Detroit ha* the best
break in the aehedule hi the Amer-
ican League *tretch run.
Both Stengel and O’Neill think
their clnbe are going to come roar-
ing la and win the flag, but that
schedule advantage the Tigers defi-
nitely enjoy began to assert itself
again last night. Detroit, which
has more game* (26) left to play
than either Boston or New York,
and therefore enjoy* a gcrater
winning potential, also has more
games at home and more games
against second division teem*.
The Tigers gained half a game
oa the leading Yankee* by beating
the St. Louis Browns, 7 to 4, and
now are only lit games behind
again.
The Tigers, who still have 13 of
their remaining 23 games with
second division teams, bade a fond
goodbye to the Brownies for awhile
last night, combing their pitchers
for 16 hit# #s Hoot Evers set the
U. S. Curtis Cup
Team Defeats
British Women
pace with four singles and two
runs driven in.
The fourth-place Indian#, who
still have less ground to make up
in the AaMriean than the second
place Dodgers In the National
League, moved to within 414 gamee
of the top-dog Yankees by winning
a 10-inning S to t decision from
the White Box. . -
In the National, the muscle-flex-
ing New York Giante whissed te
within 21k gamee of the second
place Dodgers as they topped them,
6 to 6, in 10 innings, enabling idle
Philadelphia to go 71* games in
front for their widest margin of
lid year.
The Giants, who aro out to take
second place from the Brooks, put
over their winning run on a
double by Wes Weptrum, then
socred two more for insurance oa
another two-bagger by Den Muel-
ler.
The Cardinal# laded a aeven-
game losing straak and knocked
the slumping Cubs into ssvsnth
place by winning * 4 to t decision.
Gerry Staiey pitched six-hit ball
xn dStan (who elsef) Muxial drove
m three rum with a bomer and
double. BUI Howerton produced the
fourth Cardinal run with another
homer.
* All other
were idle.
major longue teams
Yesterday’s Star—Boat Evers,
the darsMo left fielder af the
Detroit Tig cm. who despite a
lame wrist gat foar bit* aad
drove tat twa runs is * T te 4 vic-
tory ever the Brow as.
than’*
for the starting line-up, with dif-
ferent men
pattern# are needed fi
to be. used if different
far foe
Mr
mm
•rzsx
......^
wr>
.j * t * t; <.» I m \, \
mmm iiMmyrnnaHW
is
Artie Brown, 166-pounder out for
bis first year of football, edgld
into the starting line-up with
scrappiness and determinm-
Other <tarter* are Jo* Boase.
135. HB; Harry Braeuer, 146,
QB; Arlie Brown, 160, G; Cart
Fallen, 180, T; Jim Howell. 170,
E; Joe Jackson, 166, C; Ben
Jackson, 166, HB; Herman
Kenghxsjn. 160, FB; Bob Lang-
lay, 166, 0; BUI Little. 160, fe;
Harvey McCujUougb, 170, QB; J.
Bay McCullough, 170, Q; Tubba
Taylor, 189, T.
Over-aU team average is 160^
pounds. Average weight of the
13 probable „ starters is iWMt
pounds. The backf ield weight av-
enge is 1(7 pounds, with the line
averaging 167 pounds.
The Ypilow Jacket line will give
away 26 pounds per man to the
Sweetwater line, and the Jaekag
backf ield will give away 0 pounds
per man. Team per team, the
Mustang eleven wiU outweigh the
Jacket eleven by 38‘pounds per
—
Ruffs Stretch Texas Loop Lead
With Win as Cats Lose Again
By t'NITED rUSI
Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 6 <W—Brit-
ain's Curtis Cup golfers were
vanquished once again by their
American tormentors today, and
the captain of the Empire lassies
blamed it all on austerity.
The Americans won five out of
six individual matches yesterday,
and those victories—along with
two out of three wins in the team
competition—gave the U. S. a 7 Vs
to lii triumph. The U. S. has won
five of the six Curtis Cup matches
since the series started, and the
other ended la a Me,
Mrs. Diane Critchley, the non-
playing captain of the British
team, frankly admitted today she
had little hope for the future.
“Golf in England is a very expen-
sive game,” she said. "Most young-
er girls mutt devote most of their
time to jobs—not games like golf."
Polly Riley of Fort Worth beat
Mrs. George Valentine, 7 and 6;
Beverly Hanson of Fargo, N. D.,
beat Jean Donald, 6 and 6; Dor-
othy Kielty of Los Angeles beat
Philomena Garvey, 3 and 1, and
Grace Lenctyk of Newingon, Conn,,
downed Elisabeth Price, 5 and 4,
in the matches which clinched the
victory.
Peggy Kirk of Findlay, O., had
a little more trouble when she was
extended te the last hole of the
36-hole round before downing Jean
Bisgood, 1 up. The British half-
point was earned when Frances
Stephens played Mrs. Mark Porter
of Philadelphia to a tie in 36 holes.
Ted Williams to
Be in Uniform
For Vital Game
Boston, Sept. 6 ®—Ted Wil-
liams, Boston's trump card, will
be ready for action along with
Jataw Hopp, the Yankees’ new
nee in the hole, as both teams
square off in a vital pennant push
tonight before a full house.
Manager Steve O'Neill, whose
Red Sox are three and a half games
behind the pace-setting New York-
ers, says “Williams will be in uni-
form and ready to pinch hit if
The Boat on outfielder has been
sidelined with a broken elbow since
he suffered the injury in the all-
i on July 11.
The Fort Worth Cats, who
pranced at the head of the Texas
League caravan through the lion’s
share of the stormy 1860 season,
will have to “get hat" in the re-
maining five days of the season
if they hope to regain the hallowed
perch from the Beaumont Rough-
necks.
The Roughnecks stretched then*
lead over the Felines to one and
one-half games last night by down-
ing the Houston Buffaloes, 7 to 1,
behind the nine-hit hurling of
Clarence Beers.
Wayne McLeland, the loop’s top
twirier, chalked up his 21st win of
the season as the Dallas Eagles
whitewashed Fort Worth, 6 to 0.
The masterful righthander allow-
ed the Kitten* only two hits.
iMfeslator Bare of 4th Place
The 'Shreveport Sports climbed
into a seventh-place tie with the
Houstorf Buffs by downing fourth-
place San Antonio, 6 to 4. How-
ever, the Missions had little fear
bf losing their spot in the playoffs,
as they still led struggling Dallas
by two and one-half games.
The Tulsa Oilers, meanwhile,
virtually nailed down the No. 8
spot with a 5 to 3 win over Okla-
homa City. The loss was a heart-
breaker for Indian hurler Leroy
Wheat, who allowed the winners
W*
only four hits,
committed four misruse.
Tonight's schedule: Fort Worth
at Dflfes, Oklahoma City at Tulsa,
San Antonie at Shreveport and
Beaumont at Houston.
Scores by innings:
Dolta. ..............soo sss ns—s 7 *
Fort Worth______1 SSS os* *S* * t 1
M'Msed #M Ariw.r0; Hoorn, Bor
iaaor (7) *»4 Bnsan. Stash* (7).
Houotoo -------— St* «*1 SSS—1 • t
Boo—e_____*1* IS* **«—T 12 1
Joy or. Patrick <7> and Kuoorlman : Brora
aad Coartaay.
San Antonio —----12* Ml SSS—4 t 1
Shreveport -------IS* It* Sla-S It *
Slrotrr. Pavlick (8) and Da irk; Auman,
Booh It) and BooUek.
I
'm 0m}
so—
• ^'‘4
THINK
M
I’LL
PASS
bv jmc
Texas sports scribe* have voted
to us* a new system In selecting
foe mythical state all-star team.
Under foe new system, each of the
three conferences which play
through to s state title will have
a chairman to co-ordinate reports
and recommendations from com-
mittee members responsible for
•nfofo #*triefe ip his owq class-
ification ^
Chairman wiU use committee re
poets, of farad throughout foe sea
son. Members of foe Texas Higl
School CoAchps
#r.
High
will
City___
D00 2*1 ###— S S t
r«ha -------te# NO as-t 4 2
Whrat aad Bargbar; Croat and Williams
teams ia their own division, and
these lists will go to the com-
mittee for checking and revision.
The teams will be selected when
the committee meet* January 1 at
the Cotton Bowl game.
Jerry Ribnick of the Houston
Chronicle is foe chairma* of the
City Conference; Jin* Tucker of
Waco is AA chairman, and Frank
Codso* of AmariUo is the Class
A chairman.
Pelf Arthur Strong
The Port Arthur Yellow Jackets
are picked to dominate Region 3
in AA ball. Marshall is strong in
District 8-AA.
Port Arthur has a large foam
in U-AA, srifo 12 lettermen back
The Jackets will use the doqbie-
wing instead of the single-wing,
hut will use power plays as in the
past. .
The Yellow Jackets i.
Rains have slowed down drills
ia foe Jacket camp, but haven’t
Southwest Conference Grid
Practice Shitts into High
Pr umtpo rase , {foi
Southwest Conference football
coaches ordered “hill speed ahead”
today as they prepped their teams
for opening games little more than
two weeks away in moat cases.
Six of the seven squads grind
into action Sept. 23, and their
coaches have them on vigorous two-
a-day practice schedules.
Southern Methodist will play
host at Dallas to Georgia Tech in
an important intersectional battle.
But the Mustangs' opener doesn’t
overshadow other clashes.
RHODES SYSTEM OF PICKING BEST
GRID PLAYERS NEW BUT ACCURATE
JACK GATES
I f|» Porto Wipe*
Houston, Sept. 6 (IP—A young
associate professor at the Unl-
Ckildrea Cans# First
Fart Wayne, lad., HP—The board
pf safety ordered adult* to atop
in Delta Lake. U is re- j
for children to fish in.
versity of Houston believes he has
created a scientific system that
will measure accurately the abil-
ities of a football player.
He admits it sounds a bit far-
fetched. But Jack Rhodes, asso-
ciate professor of health and phy-
sical education at the Houston
institution, says poatively the sys-
tem has been provan.
"It won’t tell the coach how good
a boy will eventually turn out, or
how many touchdowns he’ll score,*
Rhodes said. “But it certainly wj|j
show how good the bog i* capable
of being if he desires.”
Measures Physical Ability
The system, called the Rhodes
football classification index, meas-
ures only the physical aspects of
a potential player. This, says foe
professor who is a former Texas
University star, is Mi per eeat
of foe qualifications.
The other 10A per cent is made
up of such factors as personality,
emotional stability, philosophy af
coaches, injuries and sickness.
Than are two distinct phase* to
foe Rhode* toot. Oa* is a personal
1NP
m
SCHOOL DAYS
ABE NEAR
Will the task *f getting your young-
sters ready for school or college pose
S financial problem for y*o T W# have
money rspdy to help you. Only a
few minutes required. Call on us tq-
dayl
FM.A.
if '■
Lfi INSURANCE AGENCY
history index, foe other a physical
test.
The personal history index meas-
ure* weight, height, age, grade,
and experience in football.
The physical tests are a 60-yard
dash to measure speed, a standing
broad jump to measure dynamic
leg strength, a pullout around a
goal post to measure balance and
speed, a 10-yard sprint to measure
starting time, and a sig-sag run-
ning test to determine ability to
follow instructions.
In all the tests, Rhodes said, the
boy’s attitude is measured.
“If he won’t try on the test, he
won't try somewhere on the field,
probably on a tough play that
might mean the difference in de-
feat or victory."
The he*t score on each individual
test, according to Rhodes, is qge-
The best possible score on each
of the two series is 10. In testing
approximately 1,000 high school
boys, the best total score the pro-
fessor found was 14.
- Flayers Are Classified
Players are rated by the score*
a* outstanding, first string, letter-
man and equadman. Since he be-
gan his experiments, coaches who
Have helped Mm have discovered
potential players they never be-
fore recognised, he said.
|MTh* system definitely works to
good advantage,” said Rhodes, who
plans ts 'get a patent oa it.
“Just for an example," he said,
“take a young potential out of
high school in whom n collage
coach Is interested. The tests will
skew the ooach if foe pwagast
possesses per cent af foe Um
twa necessary for * goad football
player. Ordinarily, it might take a
atari) two yean to Aad out the
player doesn’t have them. By than,
ha’s probably been out * lot of
trouble, expea
Arkansas meets Oklahoma AAM
at Little Bock, Baylor travels to
Laramie to meet Wyoming, Texas
plays Texas Tech at Lubbock, Tex-
as ARM clashes with Nevada at
Sacramento, Calif., and Texas
Christian plays Kansas at Law-
rence. 1
Only Rice won’t see action two
weeks from Saturday. The defend-
ing champion Owls open Sept. 30
against Santa Clara at Houston.
Here’s the way things shaped up
at the training camps:
Ray Graves Still Pitching
At Texas AAM—A battle for the
quarterback job continued between
Ray Graves, Dick Gardamal, Dari
row Hooper and Delmer Sikes.
Coach Harry Stitalar expressed
satisfaction with the line perform-
ances of Jim Fowler, Walter Hill
and Russ Hudeck.
At SMU—Fullbacks Henry Stoi-
lenwereck and Pat Knight sparkled
Coach Rusty Russel experi-
alfbacks John-
tyle Rofo and
kussel Jr., the
expense and warty.”
V»«*» T«"«r
merited with hpckfield combina-
tions.
Knight ran with
py Champion and
quarterback Rusty
coach’s son.
Another combination included
Stollenwerck, quarterback Benton
Mussel white and half* Val Jo*
Walker and Chicken Roberts ns foe
Mustangs held their first scrim-
nA|e.
At Rice—Coach Jeas Neely said
passing prospects were improved
for the Owls. Sophomore Don
Drake and veteran Vernon Glass
drew smijes from Neely and the
coach said "Drake
plenty."
At TCU—Coach Dutch Meyer
miaed plenty of “rough stuff”
remainder of the week as he
tested green sophomore linemen.
Competition was keen as Meyer
has improved
ST
End for Nevada
Against A&M
San Francisco, Sept. 6
Things an tough aU over, of
course, what with foe war; a run
on the purchase of golf b*Us and
the drafting #f football players,
fot nowhere
can they be as
reached dawn into the battens of
the talent banal and comes up
W -Oa* «r •arrogata* end* this
year probably wHi be Jerry
And who is Wyness?
Jam last year’s Wolf
*NT ***r, tkf*
ran two top squad* through T-wing
pass patterns and ground play. *~
Towaaead Sparkfes
At Texas—Coach Blew Cherry
•aid foe Longhorns bad
......... .■
made logs
since opening prac-
of progress’
tie* Friday.
In a 40-minute scrimmage yes-
terday, Gib Dawson, Byron Town-
send and Bubba Shands sparkled
en runs. Dan Page passed well and
end Ben Procter made fine catches.
At Arkansas—The husky squad
was “shaping up wall,” according
to Coach Otis Douglas. He said the
team was free of injuries after
heavy contact work.
At Baylor — Rain-soaked turf
forced Coach George Sauer to em-
phasise defensive formation yes-
terday.
Sauer had goad wards far end*
Terry Downs sad George Cook,
tackle* Walt*); Still and Ken Caa-
ner, center Gale Calloway and
guards Dick Calhoun and John
Hancock.
Elk City and
Fort Wayne to
Meet in Finals
Wichita, ^Kan., Sept. 6 «B—Far
e ia the four years they
a third time
have attended the National Base-
ball Congress Tournament, the de-
fending champion Fort Wayne,
Ind., Cape harts will engage in a
play-off game far the U. S. title
tonight.
The Capehartx mad* foe extra
game necessary Inst night by
nosing oat foe previously unbeat-
en Elk City, Okla., Elks, 1 te 0,
in a 12-inning final round gam*.
Fort Wayne (7-1) and Elk City
(6-1) will square off again to-
night.
Negro southpaw pitcher Pat
Ccantlebury was the hero, both for
his four-hit pitching aad his hitting
as Fort Wayne spilled th* Okla-
homa champions last night. Scan-
tlebury poked his first hit in 12
tourney plate appearances, s double
to left field in foe ltth Inning,
to send courtesy runner Jack Horn-
berg across with the winning folly.
Catcher Serge Schuster had started
off foe rally srifo a double to right
field with up** away but Wps
struck by foe throw-la qp he pall-
ed info second base and was
haached for Coqrteey runner ifom-
Rightbander Howard Basa
th* distance for Elk City
hit performance to suffer
tourney hM*. He has |wo
Scpntlebujry, in foe
gained a token of rev#i
fej W>
stopped the boys’ workouts. Body
contact is being made as the lads
buckle down for the Friday night
game with the SVeetwater Mus-
tangs.
»ngs. ,
The Jackets are going to he on
he short end as far as weight
the abort end as far aa weight
goes, with the Mustang line aver-
aging 193 pounds.
A large Stepbenville delegation
ia expected at the Sweetwater
game, weather permitting, and
moat fans think they can make the
trip in any kind of weather that
will permit the
ball.
Jackets to play
TEXAS LEAGUE LEADERS
*r Vhrrwp pass*
I4TTWC
(Ckatasionoklp olieMta only)
Saucier, SA ~___
AB
486
H
151
MeDougald, Bt
647
184
x-Dyck SA _
340
108
Dunlap, Ds _
309
124
Kress, Hn
483
147
x-Not yet in 100 games.
Runs: Marquis (Bt> 120, Malm-
berg (OC) 106.
Hits: MeDougald (Bt) 184,
Klaus (Da) and Locklin (OC) 172
each.
2- Base Hits: Thomas (Bt) 42,
Locklin (OC) 41.
3- Base Hite: Knoblauch (Tl) 14,
MeDougald (Bt) 18.-
Home Runs: Lemon (OC) 30,
Witte (Hn) 28. <~
Stolen Bases: Fondy (FW) 39,
Tatum (FW) 27.
Runs Batted In: Lemon (OC)
119, MeDougald (Bt) 114.
Innings Pitched: McLelsnd (Ds)
269, Presko (Hn) 248.
Complete Games: Presko (Hn)
30, McLeland (Ds) 19.
Strikeouts: Presko (Hn) 162,
Prtm (Tl) MSh
Games Won: McLeland (Ds) and
Nevel (ft) 21 each, Blackburn
(Tl) 80.
STEE1.ERS RELEASE TEXANS
Cambridge Springs, Pa., Sept. •
fo—Coach John Michelosen today
leased two rookie hacks, with
five raor) cuts to be 'made before
Monday’s ‘'S^player deadline. The
Steelers sept back Jftn Conley,
Texas Tech, and center Buddy At-
taway, Baylor, to Richmond of the
Minor American League. They
picked up Sam Tamburo, who play-
ed last year for the New York
Bulldogs. Tamburo was a standout
end at Penn State in 1948.
no full
in evidence a-plenty 1* tha
Owls’ workout Tuesday. Coach Jess
Neely said he suspected * scrim-
mage would he held “pretty soon.”
Don Drake, the six-foot, one-inch
sophomore from Fort Worth who
looked good as a freshman, is do-
ing a top job of passing along with
veteran Vernon Glass.
“He’s improved plenty,” Neely
said. ■ * -,
Lee Stonestreet, the number one
center who foiled to suit up in the
first two days because of a minor
infection, was in action Tuesday.
Skip Alexander
Cops First in >
N. Y. Tourney
Loudenville, N. Y., Sept 6 tel—
Stewart (Skip) Alexander, a
Johnny-come-lately to professional
golfing circles, flashed a prise-
winning check of $2,600 today for
showing old-master Ky Laffoon
how it was done in the $16,000 Em-
pire State Tournament •
Alexander, a bespectacled North
GsruUaa putting precisionirt who
turned pr« fat 1946, strung together
•r-par 70 in tl
a sixzling one-under-par 79 in the
yesterday
Andrews
special 18-hole playoff
while Laffoon, foe St
I1L, veteran who wowed ’em in
the late ’30s, soared to a 74.
All but overlooked in the early
going, the curly-hairad Alexander
sky-rocketed from 14th place to
tie Laffoon on the final groan dur-
ing the final regulation round.
Alexander came through with a
record-breaking 66 in foe third
round and then followed with, two
successive 70s. As compensation,
however, Laffoon pocketed $1,900
for his second place finish.
Garden to Open
Cage Seasorf
December 2nd
ork, fkpt 6 Ov—Mpdison
Garden’s ihtereollegiate
New Yi
Sqilare
1 with p slight r
already soaked 1
consolation flights.
In foe first flight Wayne Bar-
ham took top honors by besting
D. H. Adair on the 17th hole 2 and
LJfo the second flight Garland
Lsudei milk lost out to Hardy Lock-
hart ia the finals, and Jim Hart
defeated E- L. Miley in the third
{UmppaJp. ... ~
In the consolation flights Law-
rence Latham-bested Jimmy Voss-
mer 2-up for the championship
group, and Alvin Young ploughed
nHafogfeAMMit' 4 and $ for the
Jack Hickey under 4 and
third flight* consolation.
Prises were awarded te
awarded to the win-
ner and runner-up of each of the
three flights and to the winners
of the three consolation flights.*
Mike Murphy, who qualified for
the meet with a 74, was awarded
six golf balls as medalisf.
Jones received a corduroy sport
jacket as city champion, Bill Biggs
won a putter as runner-up. In foe
first flight Barham received a
caddy cart end Adair got a set of
el,ub covers for his woods. Second
flight prises were a nylon golf bag
for Lockhart and a set of club
covers for Laudermilk.
Jim Hart, winner of the third
flight, won a set of three Wilson
Strata Bloc woods, and E. L. Miley
received a set of club covers. Other
prises swarded to the consolation
flight winners included golf balls,
sport shiAs and hats.
Jones, the new city champion,
is the second person to hold that
position since the annual tourna-
ment was started in 1948. C. M.
Flory won the title the past two
years, but did not defend his crown
this year.
RICE GOLFER WINS
Houston, Sept. 6, Of) — Buddy
Weaver, a young Rice Institute
senior, combined long drives and
sharp putting to defeat Witford
Wehrle of Louisville, Ky., two-up
In the 86-hole final of foe Brae
Burn Golf Tournament Monday.
basketball season opens Dec. ^2
when St. John’s plays William
Mary and Long Island University
meets Kansas State, it was an-
nounced today.
The Garden said San Jose State,
South Carolina and Boston College,
in addition to William and Mary,
will be making their Garden debuts
this season on foe 28-night season.
The 1960-51 Garden aehedule in-
cludes: Dae. 7—LIU vs. Denver;
St. John’s vs. Southern'Methodist.
Dee. 16—Bt. John’s vs. Holy Cross;
Manhattan vs. Texas.
Sons AU Priests
Weymouth, Mass., —When Mr.
and Mrs. Richard A. Loeffler ob-
served their 60th wedding anniver-
sary, their three priest-so ns parti-
cipated in a high mass.
FRIGIDAIRE
SALES-SERVICE
Aia-MS
*-J.T. MAYS § fc Ctt
APPLIANCE CENTER
baa* 1«8
enginp1 with£^ ’
a) nm-tvt gaeatfoe mdanga ..
» you OIL-
Motor Oil:
Fair and
itt
I *****
I478-10SO
amazing economy of operation. Average gasoline
as fm the^^^OOO _ W*
iili
Jm
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.
Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 6, 1950, newspaper, September 6, 1950; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1133101/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.