Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, September 7, 1956 Page: 1 of 12
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WEATHER
^PARTLY CLOUDY
- (
i a
ha
. a
Is Seen
2
53
9}
That Fight Brews -
+
ert Harrison, publisher
9
On Ruotolo Case
reports that parents of the stu- v
I
II
<
Whitney.
The
Ruotolo, 33. told police the baby
were
ty or at least to harass the orderly
majority.'
The liberal_Democrats distrib-
igation’s focal point.
‘Shivererat - Republican
State
Mrs. Rutolo spent several hours
on
tors. She was led out-at 8:30 p.m
To Comfortable 68
TO BE ONE OF BEST
r
-
inches..
2
+
f
Sept 19-22.
, wishing to enter the spectacle may
Get Crime Blame
I
Dallas characters,” he said.
WASHINGTON (
A union
The sheriff, explained that bur-
he liked to solve them better than
partly cloudy weather today With
9
4
attack on this country.
WEATHER
I
87
rises Saturday a1
BLOND
Pot-O-Gold ............2.12
RANK
I"
ANSWER NO. 21
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t:
1
4-
t :
'j
"he
i
XKINT
Danger
Of Steal
Court Upholds
Court-Martial
A Growing ^eicspaper Tor A Growing Area
DENTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 7,1956
Union Tabs
Strike Vote
AF Pilot Killed
Near Gainesville
JUSTICE MINTON
WILL RETIRE
WEST GERMANY
PETITIONS REDS
HUNTER
CLEARED
3-YEAR CATTLE
PRICES TOPPED
appears to have
iragement to the
for next week’s
I $475 in cash, in
took military action it would lead
to a rift in the Western alliance.
contact Pitner, Joe Evans or Jack
Vanderhoff.
It is P
winner to
■ "I _
Weather Bureau
Will Publicize
Atom Forecasts
WASHINGTON (M-The Weather
Bureau said today it will make
High Thursday .
Low this morning
• By JOE DAVENPORT
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
This sort of
given great
Egyptians.”
' 4
17
store Saturday, a mile from the
lake.
It was shortly after three boys
fishing had found the" body that
Ullman’s office became the invest-
‘56 FAIR PROMISES
The new puzzle is found on Page
2. For explanations to last week’s
puzzle, turn to Page 9.
days.
. Also brought to Ullman’s office
were Mrs. utolo’s neighbors, Mr.
Ing: Good through Saturdi
Denton County rainfall
d
DENTON AND VICINITY: Partly
cloudy through Saturday. A little
• warmer Saturday.
TEMPERATURES
(Experiment Station Report)
■<
Democratic Executive Committee
has demonstrated in the past its
See DEMOS, Page 2
tt.
l:?' A.—>
Church News
Classified ’..
Comics .....
Editorials ..
11
9
9
charges filed against him by Rob-
'TT*? ... of Con-
persons.
Negotiations were broken off at
11:50 p.m.
d.
TV Log ........
Sports ..........
Women’s News .
b • ‘
1 a' •
zr
“si'c
The five-nation Suez Committee
-made-up of Australia, the United
States, Iran, Sweden and Ethopia-
sat tight lipped on the new turn
See SUEZ, Page 2
copy of a lengthy memorandum
delivered at taz Russian Foreign
office.
"e . 7V
Krekeler called on Secretary
State Dulles today Fto give him a
WASHINGTON ( - West Ger-
many sent a formal note to Rus-
sia today calling for prompt ne
gotiations to unite divided Ger-
SAN DIEGO i*l — Janice Cory,
11, who was scalped when her
long hair caught in a whirling
gear.of a dough mixing machine
in a bakery, was in serious con-
many through free elocttns.
West German Ambassador Heinz
made available to local authori-
ties.
Center of the vast probe moved
quickly from Hamden police head-
quarters to the office of State’s
Atty. Abraham S. Ullman in the
Rebucci had said she went shop-
ping at Sears with Mrs. Rutolo the
day the latter reported Cynthia
missing from-the carriage.
C FORT WORTH dh—Prices
two classes of cattle which had
bench. _ .
During his Senate tenure Minton
became known as a New Deal
stalwart.
posted at the Morris County plant
of the Lone Star Steel Co. at mid-
night as the firm’s contract with
the United Steel Workers expired.
It was not learned how many
workers accepted the offer of the
1- '
The passing of every day adds
more emphasis to earlier thinking
that Denton County this year will
stage one of the best fairs in its
irregular show history.
Reports from committee chair-
men and division superintendents
last night pointed up weeks of oil-
ing and repairing machinery for
the show, bringing to the front vis-
ible results of tedious planning and
legwork. Dates for the fair are
-
J
Cartoonist Dies
WESTPORT. Cohn, i- Alex-
ander Raymond, 47, a cartoonist
who originated the "Flash Gor-
don” strip and currently drew the
"Rip Kirby” series, was killed in
an auto accident yeterday.
Richard Weldy, above, a big
game hunter, will not 'have
armed robbery in Denton County
since I took office in 1955 and that
was the Justin Bank robbery,”
Barnes explained.
2 See CRIME, Page 2
All division superintendents re-
ported swelling entry lists, includ-
ing entries froa breeders and pro-
ducers outside Denton County.
Three large tents have been order-
ed to handle the large number of
entrants in the beef cattle, dairy,
swine and quarterhorse depart-
ments.
TICKET SALES GOOD
Denton merchants are showing
their usual enthusiasm on purchase
of tickets to be given customers
for competition in a car give-
away sc' duled for the final night.
Fair officials said merchants who
needed more tickets or who have
not been contacted, may call Nat
Noles, Optimist Club president.
NO WINNERS
Gov. Shivers, longtime head
the conservatives, charged in Aus-
tin that the liberal-loyalists also
might try to block the nomination
of Sen. Price Daniel who won the
party’s nomination for governor
in a elose race with Ralph Yar-
borough.
Shivers' charge brought a quick
denial from Mrs. Kathleen Voigt
of San Antonio, state organizer for
the liberal group.
She said she knew of no such
plan and is not a part of it if
there is one.
“The certification of the nomi-
nee for governor, so far as I’m
concerned, has already been made
and is not an issue in this con-
vention,” she said. .
“I understand the defeated can-
didate has already conceded.” .
Mrs. Voigt also hit back at
Shivers’ charges that liberate are
planning a “big steal” of the con-
vention. '
Shivers warned of a “great dan-
ger” of plans for a “big steal"
he said were being made by the
liberals, but said it would be a
conservative convention.
“Every time the solcalled Ray-
burn group has been in> charge
of a convention. May or Septem-
ber. the ethics are to boot out
by brute strength all who oppose
them," Shivers told a news con-
ference.
Daniel said he understood a mi-
nority faction “is presently at-
tempting to organize another ef-
heavy economic pressure.”
“Parents of some of the youths
A Streamlined Report
Of Important News
. • 4 - -e .
over West and South Texas, the
Associated Press reported.
Temperatures at dawn ranged
from the upper 70s along the Gulf
Coast down to Amarillo’s 50 de-
grees..
General rains ranging up to 5
Inches feU in the Rio Grande Val-
ley Thursday.
Farm and ranchlands in the
San Angelo area were soaked by
slow rains measuring up to 1.08
’ 7
ENTERTAINMENT T
Entertainment for the 1956 fair,
first in three years, also promises
to be outstanding. .
On the list of —Hal attractions*
as well as for competition, is a
Shetland pony show, staged under
rules and regulations of the Amer-
ican Shetland Pony Club.
The show, to be held in the rodeo
arena, has attracted many of the
leading entries in the recent Na-
tional Shetland Pony Congress
held in Des Moines, Iowa. The
entry list includes Joe’s Topper,
champion of the €ongrer- show,
entered by C. C. Teague of Sher-
man,
Portia Simms of Gainesville also
will be featured during the pony
show with his' dog and pony act,
one of the most popular ad pre-
cision animal acts of the South-
k \,e‛
888883383 s 3 6
.88"
REMEMBER WHEN
- - All students brought their
lunches to school?
F W
e-
High year ago .......... M
Leer year ago .........----61
Sue sets today at 6:44 p.m.;
From H. M. Pitner, parade mar-
shal. came a report that 21 floats
already had been entered in a
giant parade scheduled for 5 p.m.
Wednesday. Sept. 19, to open the
fair. Two bands, from Denton and
Muenster, already have agreed to
participate, as have riding groups
'from cities throughout the area.
Entries for the parade should be
made before the kickoff date ar-
rives, Pitner said. Organizations
Pago
. 8
...........W
............9
...........4
Saturday. - ............. ;
Skies cleared over Texas Fri-
day following heavy rains that a
southbound cool front triggered
----------------------------------
IN THE WANT ADS .c
.. - - ___.
>4THYEAROFDA1LY SERVICE— NO 11
-v y etgungan
Dentonites early this morning
flipped off the air conditioners and
reached for the covers as the mer-
cury dipped to a chilly M. ■
Thursday’s high of 87 was the
lowest maximum temperature
since Juno 4.
The cool weather started Sept.
1, when the summer's high mer-
P(puro)2
MELM)--(w
Mo
—-
- n ■
; “4,; ' ? <
“Deaton County's geographical glary was his “pet offense" since
' location is good for, buotnias and ' " '
for those who work in our neigh-
boring cities but for law officers
it is very bad,” Denton County
Sheriff Wylie Barnes told the Den-
ton Lions Club Thursday night.
To prove his point, Barnes told
the group that 68 burglaries were
committed in Denton County in
1955. "Fifty-four of these were by
• thieves from outside the county
and a good many of them were
special public forecasts next week
of the atomic fall-out that could be
expected in event of an enemy at- .
tack on the United States.
The forecasts are made twice
daily throughout the year. They
will be made public at weather
stations across the country as a
part of the Sept. 9-15 Civil Defense
Week observance. I
The bureau and the Federal * —
Civil Defense Administration to-
day urged newspapers, radio and
television stations to use the fore-
casts to impress upon the public
that radioactive fall-out is one of
the prime dangers of a nuclear
any of the other crimes and liked
to think he was better at working
this type of case than any other.
In pointing this out, harnes told
the Lions that in most cases there
I was more da nage done to the
• business or home by a burglar
i than the expense of the items
sic en. making the offense more
expensive than any other form of
। crime.
" roes said that the second
largest ffense in Denton County
was theft, which he broke down
into the three classes as stated by
dition today.
Surgeons fitted the scalp, which
- was removed intact from the ma-
2 chinery, back into place in a three-
hour operation last night.
The scalp was torn off from
above the eyes, including the eye- -
brows: over the ears and down
1s
to live at his home in New Albany, dents had been “subjected to
Ind,, where he has spent his sum- '
mers since going on the high
held since 1952 and on one class
that had held since 1953 were top-
ped here Thursday or Friday.
‘Good and choice Aberdeen-An-
gus stocker and feeder cattle drew
818 to 826 Friday, highest since
November 1952..
Good and choice slaughter
steers and heifers brought >17 to
828.50, the latter pride for two
loads of fed heifers, top figure
since February, 1953.
• • • •
DEMOS CANCEL
HARLEM MEET
NEW YORK o — Democratic
leaders in Harlem, predominantly
'Negro area here, reportedly have
said that Negro dissatisfaction
with the Democratic party's plat-
form on civil rights made it in-
advisable that Adlai E. Stevenson
speak in Harlem "for the time
being,-’*
‘Dallas Characters’
all divisions of the fair, superin-
tendents reported. Early entrants,
however, will have priority on
shelters in event total numbers
exceed available space, they add-
ed.
respondent of the London Daily
Mail explained: . . - ., —
"Responsible Americans have uted • pamphlet declaring the
I understand, made it clear in "Shiverea * - Renklinen
Cairo that if Britain and France
•LL
■
* _ •
work in nearby coal mines,” Wil-
liams said, “and it is reported
some were told they would lose
their jobs if the Negro children
remained in Sturgis High School.”
“These rumors and reports have
been turned over to the Federal
Bureau of Investigation to chetk
any possible violation of civil
rights." the commander said.
Williams estimated only 300 per-
sons gathered In front of the.
school this morning. The crowd *
was mostly quiet ana orderly. One
man was arrested on a breach
of peace charge when he refused
to move on. m ______. nf
Williams said the Negro youths*
parents reported they would be
back in school Monday but they
were “too afraid to have them in
school today.”
MEETS GOVERNOR
Williams returned from a con-
ference at Frankfort . with Gov,
A. B. Chandler this morning,..................
He said the governor prepared
a martial law proclamation “and
instructed me to use it if it be-.)
See STURGIS, Page 2
Pot-O-Gold Now
Worth $2,114.25
Sturgis is Ready
For Martial Law
g
* A
A
Doctors Refit
Girl’s Scalp
Police Bear Down
1 . . • . r /
—__—J_JL_
momennne
, ■
J I.
the 100-mark for the rest of the
week. Friday's‘102 matched the
1954 record of 53 days with high
temperatures of‘2 or abo
Since June 1, the lowest tem-
perature was a 56 on June 2, but
that day's temperature didn’t feel
as cold as Aug. 22 s temperature
of 57, which follox * 25 days of
straight 100-degree or above mer-
cury readings.
This summer's high fell on July
8 when thermometers ' " no.
The weather forecast calls for
-
NEW RAVEN, Conn. W—Police
are bearing down today with re-
newed intensity — and as though
a ’ solution were near — in their
investigation of the Ruotolo baby
case.
With an absence of interstate
angles indicated, the FBI has
officially stepped out of the probe
although its facilities have been
GAINESVILLE - Capt.
Charles Walker, 20, a student pilot
was killed when his T33 jet trainer
miles west of Gainesville.
Ir. ' 2
, 1
K
-- «
' Y
■ . i
."rj
' -
A source close to the Egyptian
government said the viewpoints of
Nasser and the committee “run
in parallel channels with no possi-
bility of being reconciled."
This source declared that only
intervention by the United States
can prevent use of force now by
Britaimhd France. ■ *
The U.S.' State Department had
no comment on that assertion.
There was, however, unofficial
speculation in Washington that
Egyptian talk of “U.S. interven-
""2: Union Posts
plastic bag in Hamden’s take
E
. ." ' "T
1. ' .. . n- . '
__r J •' . , . „.....
Record-Chronicle
child’s mother, Eleanor Steel Pickets
fidential Magazine. . Harrison
said yesterday that the shoot-
ing which put him in a Domini-
can hospital was accidental. (AP
Wirephoto)
(wu6) (MAG
come to Cairo to find a solution
to the Suez crisis, but to find a
starting point for negotiations.
Nasser left Cairo for Alex-
andria. the Mediterranean sum-
mer resort and Egypt’s main port.
Nasser’s family has been vaca-
tioning there this summer, and
he usually goes there on the week-
end to visit them:
. AWAIT WORD
Pessimism pervaded both the
Egyptian and the foreign quarters
of Cairo following the reports the
Menzies mission had failed. It
was generally agreed the mission
was awaiting word from London
and Washington before making its
next move—even to setting a time
for the next meeting with Nasser.
Both Egyptian sources close to
the government and Western dip-
lomats in London reported last
night a deadlock in the talks be-
tween the five-nation committee
headeby Australian Prime Min-
ister Robert G. Menzies and
Egyptian President Nasser.
Menzies was said to be waiting
for some word from Washington
and London that might yet sal-
vage his mission.
The informants said Nasser has
refused to accept the 18rnation
plan for international operation of
the 103-mile waterway.
This gives him sufficient years
in federal courts for him to retire
at lull pay of 835,000 a year.
Federal judges may now retire
at 65 years of age on full pay if
they have served 15 years,'
Minton served as a Democratic
senator from Indiana from 1935 to
1911. Later he became an admin-
istrative assistant to President
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
His retirement will give Eisen-
hower his third opportunity to fill
a Supreme Court vacancy,
• Eisenhower previously ap-
pointed Chief Justie. Warren Md
Associate Justice Harlan.
Minton’s health has been good
while he served on the Supreme
Court, except for the crippling
condition in his knees and lower
part of the legs. —
In 1949, he suffered a broken
leg in a fall and for 8 long time
had to use a cane. Four years
previously, while on the Circuit
Court, he suffered a heart attack
which kept him from that bench
for some time.
Minton said his future plahs are
not definite but that he will return
A firm’s president, E. B. Germany
of Dallas, to stay on the job.
He said cots had been set qp
By TOM MASTERSON
CAIRO (The Menzies mission
conferred privately for nearly
three hours today and adjourned
without announcing whether it
would meet again with President
Nasser on the Suez Canal situa-
tion.
A spokesman refused to com-
ment on reports the mission has
en off. Mrs. Rutolo returned to
her home several hours, later--------
While no one at Ullman’s office
would say what Mrs. Ruotolo was
at the courthouse for. Deputy Po-
lice Chief Frank Cattaneo of Ham-
den she was called to go over her
story of last Saturday's events.
Cattaneo said investigators were
awaiting a report of an" autopsy.
Corrigan said only a preliminary
report had been made.
“We have no motive,” said Cat-
taneo, “until we ascertain the
cause of the baby’s death.”
Corrigan said vital organs from
the baby’s body were being sent
to the FBI laboratory in Washing-
, h,
h
A rodeo is set for the final two
nights of the.fair, and will feature
competition among cutting horse*
and roping horse*. Finals will be
Saturday night, Sept. 22. An esti-
mated 89 to too horses will com-
pete in the rquarterhors competi-
tion of Wednesday.. .
Sixteen rides will be brought to
the fair by Jack Ruback..operator
of Tekas' largest motorized carni-
r val Two of the attraction* are
new and have never appeared with
the carnival, he reported Mil*
• week.
was snatched from her carriage LONGVIEW .Pickets
in the foyer of a Sears Roebuck
there with Ullman, Coroner James —, .0--. _
J. Corrigan and police investiga- inside the plant and arrangements
failed to get Nasser to agree to
international control of the canal
,u and that the next moves are up
of Lo Washington and London.
He said the mission did not
TWAS THE BITTER END,
QUEEN ONLY LAUGHED
BRAEMAR, Scotland (AP>—Wrestler John Bland
.qualified as the most embarrassed man in Britain
yesterday when he lost his kilt—in front of Queen
Elizabeth II and four other members of the royal
family. f
The incident'occurred just as 25-year-old Bland, a
middleweight, tossed his opponent in the annual open
air Highland Games.
The Queen burst out laughing.
• Princess Margaret smiled.
Princess Anne rocked with glee.
__Prince Charles giggled. * z
The Duke of Edinburg grinned broadly.
Bland crept quickly across the greensward, retriev- .
ing his green skirtlike garment, and whipped it back
on.
In a Scottish military regiment, men wear nothing
under their kilts. ’
Bland, being civilian, wore trews—close-fitting plaid
underpants. a...... - — . .....
the sheriff wax armed robbery.
"We nave had only one case of
He wax from Bentonville, Ark.'. puzuy ciuuy wemui wuay wuu
and stationel at Perrin Air Force temperatures warming up a. little
Texas statutes — theft under 85. ,
theft over 85 and Under 850 and
theft over 850.
"This offense also includes . car ■
theft and Lll types of personal
thefts," he said. "If a man takes
as much as one penny from your
pocket he can eo to the pep.”
The last offense mentioned by
cury readings dropped from 102
and Mrs. Paul I. Rebucci. Mrs. Friday to 92. then remained below
iors. Siu was ie Oui-ai 5.30 p.m., made to provide food for those
got into a police car and was driv- who wished to continue working.
- -- -.....The company employs about 4,000
lion" was aimed at driving a fort to capture control of the par-
wedge between the United States . .
msud • dmmenm--l“ .21584 874P
REHEARSALS FOR BIG NIGHT
Six of the 17 contestantfl for the Miss America title go over one another’s routine
at an Atlantic City rehearsal. Left to right are Misses Mississippi, Texas (Barbara
T. Murry), North Dakota, Montana, New Hampshire, and,..seated, Arkansas. In
last night’s preliminaries, Miss Arkansas, Barbara Banks of Conway, and Miss
Hawaii, Jere Wright, won the swimsuit division. Finals are Saturday night. (AP
Wirephoto)
Entries are fill being taken in Ion for examination. He said he
expected it would take several
wo
g‛
if '
i I
WASHINGTON i — Justice
Sherman Minton of the Supreme
Court said today he will retire
Oct. 15.
Minton said he is leaving be-
cause of impaired health. He will
-be 66 oneet. 20.
In a letter sent to the White
House this morning, Minton no-
tified President Eisenhower of his
plan.
- The justice has a circulatory
condition in his legs. He told the
President he does not feel he
could carry out "the exacting du-
ties of my office" in his present
condition.
Appointed by President Harry
Truman, Minton went on the Su-
preme Court bench Oct. 12, 1949.
Previously be served more than
eight years on the U. S. Circuit
Court in Chicago.
andon tleshine, me Cairo C«. conduct of the conventiop by the
The Pot-O-Gold i pot for the
new context starting today leaps
to the f tastic total of 82,114.25
in cash and merchandise — after
nearly 1600 Record - Chronicle
readers missed lest week’s puzzle.
WASHINGON • - The U.S.
Court of Military Appeals upheld
today the army court-martial con ,
viction of Claude Batchelor of
Kermit, Tex., on charges of help-
ing the Communists while a pris-
oner of war in Korea.
The court, acting unanimously,
said “the evidence supporting the
findings of.guilt" is overwhelm-
ing.
Batchelor was sentenced to life
imprisonment but this later was
reduced to 20 years.
IN TODAY'S PAPER
. • r 4
WORLD Pessimism In
EVENTS Air At Cairo
leader said today a strike vote
among 800,000 nonoperating rail-
road employes has been com-
pleted but results will not be dis-
closed for another “week or 10
days.*1;:--:--------.--
George E. Leighty, chairman of
the national committee for H non-
operating railroad unions, said re-
sults of the 30-day poll • of
members will be made public at
Chicago.
y 42 1
T ~ . -•AT- ...
p"T
k k k k k
Mercury Drops
State Demos Agree
#
this month: .04 of an inch. So fa
this yea 11.07 inches. This tim
last year: 10.42 inchea.
IL ' J e-
- - . . • 1 - 'N
V ■
--- . .
Fqr Texas (Conclave
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rival factions of the Democratic
party were agreed today on one
point—both said there was danger
of “a big steal" at Tuesday's state
convention in Fort Worth.
The conservative and liberab
loyalists factions both said the
other side would try to “steal"
the convention
12 Pages PRICE; FIVE CENTS
--------H-—MA —
d0=_____
12_____________________
.4^. ’■*........"
CARS FOR SALE
. the neck.
-2 Doctors sold there was “a small
but definite ’ chance that the
i grafted scalp would hold. They
Said there have not been enough
cases locally of complete scalping
to give them a hasis upon which
' to judge this case. ,
* . {
Base----—.. --------—.........—
Walker was on a night training
mission. His widow and five chil-
dren survive in Sherman.
addition to 81,999 "-worth of mer* ‘
rehandise from Denton stores. The,
basic prize of 8250 will be awarded
to anyone having the correct an-
swer. In addition the winner will
get a bonus of $‘03 if he is a reg-
ular s ' -.criber. If the inning
contestant has sent in a new sub-
i Mion. he will w‛- an additional
6 $100: e-
Nine Negro
-Pupils Stay——
Home Today 1
STURGIS, Ky. (AP_Nine
Negro students stayed home ‛n
today as officials stood ready
to declare martial law if
necessary to control angry____
crowds threatening the Ne-
gro students who enrolled in
previously all-white Sturgis
High School.
National Guard and State Police
officials said they had the papers
necessary for declaring martial
law but at the moment thought
it was not* needed. " ■
Adj. Gen. J. J. B. Williams said-
the governor instructed him to use
martial law if it becomes neces-
sary but "That is one of the last
things I want to do." —~
Williams, in charge of National .
'Guardsmen in this western Ken-
tucky mining and farming com-
munity. announced the Negro stu-
dents would not attend school to-
day.
ECONOMIC PRESSURES ) 1
Williams and Don Sturgill. Ken-
tucky's deputy public safety com-
missioner, said they had received
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, September 7, 1956, newspaper, September 7, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453229/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.