The Saint Jo Tribune (Saint Jo, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1927 Page: 1 of 8
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I'RIBUNE
ESTABLISHED 1898
SAINT JO, MONTAGUE COUNTY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER, 1927
VOLUME 29, NUMBER 45
"rt-
About Friend Wife.
Old Si Chestnut says: "This country doesn't need a more
elastic currency. Adhesive currency is the real need."
And old Si is more than half right. In other words we need
money that will stick to us, for money is a very elusive com-
modity. There is only one real safe way to hold it. Put itr in
a reliable Bank like ours, a Bank that has the confidence of its
depositors. Keep it there until- there is a chance to invest it
safely.
The First National Bank.
II. D. FIELD, President
JOE BOWERS, Cashier
S. M. KING, Vice President
GEO. A. WRIGHT. Ass't Cashier
LOCAL NEWS ITEMS
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OI 1
Saturday.
fr^;rNoS;t:dHSftBh-Lmovcd
J. H.
Worth Wednesday on bUsfness"
Henrietta, Texas.
Lauderdale went to Fort
THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
SAINT .10. TEXAS
THIS BANK IS BIG ENOUGH T O ACCOMMODATE ITS
LARGEST CUSTOMER,
AND IT APPRECIATES ITS SMALLEST DEPOSITOR.
Glenn Barnes and family, formerly 5
f Muenster. have movmi t,. v„ =
JAMES R. WILEY, Pres.
GEO. D.
S. II. CAMP, V. Pres.
PEDIGO, Cashier.
uniiam
FOUR PEOPLE HURT
Two Cars Collide Just North of Saint
Jo with Serious Results.
Rev. R. 0. Brinkley, recently of
Weatherford, called as pastor of the
Fiaptist church of Saint Jo, will preach
his first sermon to his new charge
Sunday morning at 11. The public
is cordially invited to hear him.
Cotton Report.
Saintt Jo buyers report 71 bales
marketed to date this year, with the
price around 21 cents.
NOTES FROM THE OIL HELD
The Hooser rig on Harirs No. 1 has
shut down on accounti of water.
Bill Baker i drilling on the Hodge
farm north cf town at a depth of 1100
feet.
' R. H. Dearing on the Bybee place,
Dye Mound, is shut down, due, it is
said, to inefficiency in the leases.
The new well on the Harris farm
just east of town was spudded in Wed-
nesday night.
It is reported that R. 11. Dearing
will begin drilling on the Ward place
known as the old Martin farm, within
the next thrity days.
DYE MOUND NEWS
DYE MOUND, Sept. 21—Mose
Hurley came in Friday from Ardmore,
Okla., to visit his parentts, Mr. and
Mrs. W. W. Hurley.
Lonnie Young, who had his foot
mashed in the hay press a couple of
weeks ago, is improving rapidly.
Mr. George Umberson and sons,
Barnie and Earnest, left Sunday for
Oklahoma.
Miss Pauline Cable gave a birthday
party Saturday night, and received
numbers of nice presents.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Stout are moving
to Saint Jo this week.
Mr. and Mi s. T. H. Yarborough and
.children of Montague were here Sun-.
day visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. B. .Tack-
son.
Eld. J. R. Raymond filled his reg-
ular appointmtent at the Christian
church at Forestbturg Sunday and'
Sunday night.
Herman Tompkins left Sunday for
Waco where he will attend Baylor
University t. i
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sadler and chil-
dren of Denton came in Saturday to
visit their mother, Mrs. N. T. Sadler.
Eugene and Ruth Lench of Dallas
returned home Saturday after spend-1
ing some time with their grandmother
Mrs. Zula Young.
Mrs. Alice llowerton and two
daughters of Wilson, Okla., were hei-e
last week visiting her brothel1, Will
Petree, and wife.
Bro. Hurd and family of Saint Jo
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Johnson Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Holland of Mal-
lard spent Saturday n:ght with Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Black.
• Mr. and Mrs. George Umberson and
daughter Ona went to Slydell Sunday
to visit Mr. and Mrs. .Toe Holland. i
Tuesday afternoon just after 12
o'clock one man was dangerously in-
jured and one other man and a boy
and a woman were painfully if not
seriously hurt when a trurk belong-
ing to the Roxana Petroleum Compa-
ny collided with a touring car driven
by Monroe Dickey of Red River coun-
ty. With him in the car were his
wife, Mrs. Gladys Dickey, and his two
brothers, J. B.,.aboutt 211 or 21 years
old, and Nathaniel, about 14.
Those hurt were a part of a party
of ten people on their way from Red
River county to Wichita Falls. Mi1,
and Mrs. F. Dickey, the parents, with
four smaller children, were in a light
truck some distance behind and did
not see the accident.
.J. B. Dickey was seriously injured
about the head and body, and was ren-
dered unconscious from the shock.
The attending physician had to take
fifteen stitches on scalp and face.
He was taken to the Gainesville San-
itarium, and had not regained con-
sciousness Wednesday morning. His
j skull was fractured. The younger boy
I was painfully hurt about the head and
shoulders, but it was not believed any
I of his injujries would prove serious,
j Mrs. Dickey suffered sevcrt'.y nom
' shock, and it was feared that she hnd
1 suffered internal injuries also,
j Monroe Dickey, who was driving
| the touring car received several very
painful cuts about his head and body,
I and was rendered unconscious for
1 several minuets by the shock.
i The car was completely wrecked.
The large oil truck was not badly
damaged, nor were the occupants, the
driver and another man, hurt be-
yond a considerable jolt and a few
minor bruises.
Filth the driver of the large truck
and his companion went to the assist-
ance of the injured parties and ren-
dered every aid possible, coming into
town with them and securing medical
attenttion. A11 he injured parties
we to later si .it to the Sanitarium a.
Gainesville.
The collision seemed to be the re-
sult c) a misunderstanding of direc-
tion. Dickey, driver of the touring
car, said he was drivii • <? west on the
highway near where t c road forks,
one prong going to No ona and the
ether to Illinois Bend. The oil truck
was coining in on the Illinois Bend
road, and they met near the fork. He
said he thought the truck was going
tr> pass to his right, but that, as lie
was turning to give it 1001. io pass
on that side, it suddenly turn, d to the
left. Both drivers then became ex-
cited and the crash followed.
The family seemed to be in . ather
destitute circumstances, and entirely
unprepared to meet the necessary ex-
penses of such an accident. A p;irse
was made up in town and given to
them, for which they appeared to be
very thankful.
KIMES SENTENCED TO DEATH
Oklahoma Bandit Found Guilty of
First Degree Murder by Jury,'
MONTAGUE NEWS
Items of Interest from Our County
Capital.
. h..r P' .Maa«ie of Van Alstyne was
MONTAGUE, Texas, Septt. 21.— re 'ast
Judge C. F. Spencer and wife of Fort
Worth were visitors here last week.
Mrs. L. P. Cook of Fort Worth call-
ed on friends here Sunday.
Mrs. B. R. Giles and daughter, Mrs.
Cecil Allen of Bowie, were in Mon-
tague Monday.
Miss Ruth Kemper, who has been
visiting her brother here for some of Muenster, have moved to Vernon.
time, has returned to her home in
Oklahoma City. | Mrs. S. H. Camp was shopping in ^nmiiiiDiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiimiuiioiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiniiiiiiiiDiiiininiiiaiiiimiimoiiiiuiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiniiwiiiKiiuiiiiiniiiiinMiiiinieiniiMiiui
Mr. Kemper and wife attended a Bowie the first part of the week
family reunion in the home of Mrs. | 0
Kemper's mother in Greenville Sun-j Q. J. Huntsman and Miss Mamie
day. There were about thirty persons Waters were visiting in Nocona Sat-
in attendance. nrdiv !
Mrs. W. R. Williams underwent a „
surgical operation at the Gainesville! TT , . . ,, I
sanitatrium last Saturday morning Herman lompkinsi left Monday^f
for tumor, and rallied nicely, but was Baylor University at Waco, wheie he
reported Monday as not resting well.,W1^ attend school.
Mr. and Mrs. Wat Self and Hugh . 9. . .. - ,
Sterling havereturned from Post, Tex., W. Denn's and family, forme ly
and report that crops are good out of OW™ *" 1 Spedal to the Tlibune from the lis no exception. With the bulk of
th™° aw e r c0.untry Prosperous. t0 sulphur, UKia. -United Service Bureau. I western range cattle going to middle
Mrs. W. S. Jamieson has leturned am/httpo western feeders and the Pacific Coast
from an extended visit with relatives Mrs. Lee Davis returned Wednes- LOS ANGELES, Sept. 19.-In the'demand increasing steadily for grain
at Olney. .. /lom .Y?? , T3'!8' where s e past the feeling has prevailed among' finished cattle, there is no douM but
John 1. Dunsford, Jr., and wife of had been visiting friends. i range cattlemen that the promotion of that the same condition will prevail
W'chita Falls, visited their mother, —o— feed lot operations was opposed to upon the coast as does in the middle
Mrs. John T. Dunsford, of Montague Alonzo Wigley and Chubby Owens their best interests; the theory being! west
left Thursday morning for Wichita that feed lot cattle would bo placed I Then, too, with the better apprecia-
Mi s. ( has. Petei son and 1' alls to attend the Dixie sencs. tin competition with the grass cattle, ;t'on cf the importance of maintaining
iw /-.l i tT0-T i fu e detriment of the range inter-1 soil fertility through the medium of
Mrs. Charles Page] and children of ests. (livestock, feed lot operations will in-
Muenster were vis-ting her mother,, A program of livestock feeding in j crease. The viewpoint in .this con-
J.A.M<NAUGHIt>N
^Livestock.
Situation,
Sunday.
Mr. and
daughters of Nocona were visitors in
the home of F. J, Clark Sunday.
Mrs. Dr. Wilson has been visiting
in Dallas and Sherman the past week. Mrs. F. E. Crump, Sunday
is visiting lier mother, Mrs
Phillips, and other relatives.
—o—
J. L. Morgan has returned
no way injures the range cattle busi-, nection has changed around to the
t ~ , 'ness- 14 really ,le,P8' because it af- tendency to handle livestock because
Mrs. J. ,0. Cooper of Flaxon, Okla., fords an assured outlet for stocker the land needs the fertilizer, rather
visiting her mother, Mrs. Annie and feeder cattle, and as the practice than viewing the matter from the
| of feeding becomes more general, no, viewpoint of a direct financial gain,
doubt the bulk of the range beef cattle ! The lack of recognizing the import-
from will be sold to feeders, to be finished ance ot animal fertilizer in the United
Tioga, where he has been for several out, at prices as satisfactory as those States has resulted in the course of
weeks for his health. He is some- now realized from turning this class fifty years in certain sections of land
what improved. 10f cattle to the packers. This too, becoming barren, whereas in Europe-
"T°T , . has the added advantage of absorbing an countries with less fetriie soils to
Glen Barnes, who has been working seasonal movements in a more regu-j commence with, after hundreds of
for Hedrick and Camp in Muenster jar way without the danger of gluts years of production the land remains
for some time, returned to his home in through excessive supplies at certain in good condition. This situation will
Haralson, who lives near Henrietta, ^ eri.cn Friday. seasons going beyond the point where of course eventually be remedied
was here last week hunting cotton —<►— tj,e demand can make proper absorp-1 through the handling of a few head
pickers, and reports a fine crop in The revival at the Methodist church tion. I of livestock on each farm and ranch,
that section. has been increasing in interest- with There is a constantly increasing • and the carrying out of the feed lot
Misses Dorothy Spain, Lois Drake, each service. Rev. R. L. Patton is demand for better beef, and the west I operations.
and Doris Clark, teachers in the local doing some fine preaching, and the
school, spent the week end with home congregations are growing. j
tolks. | 0 | —o— '
Mrs. Lucy Nixon of San Antonio,1 Mrs. Ashcraft has returned from
A. W. Cunningham, former sheriif
of Montague county, but now em-
ployed on the Texas lunger force,
was a business visitor in our town
Monday.
Mrs. Gregg Howard antertained the
young people of Montague Friday
night. Sandwiches and lemonade
were served, and the guests engaged
in var'ous games on the lawn.
About thirty-five boys and girls were
present.
J. T. Wright, brother of Mrs. J. J.
MAN OF MANY FACES
—o—
Marriage Licenses.
a visit with friends at Nocona.
who has been visiting her two broth-
ers, Dick and Till Williams in Saint
Jo, and her sister, Mrss. D. 0.
Atha, at Gladys, returned home last
SSunday.
—o—
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Cunningham of
Harlingen, Texas, came in Tuesday .
by auto, and are visiting friends and for a short visit with her mother arnl
telatives here this week. Mr. Cun- sisters in Burkburnett.
ningham stopped over at Bowie to . . —9—
On Monday and Tuesday nights we see his father, who is in rather feeble Misses Alice Collier and Jessie Mae
Morris S. McClanalmn and Miss Ev-
elyn E. Jordan.
D. A. McDonald and Miss Addabel
Crtes.
T. J. Pace and/Miss Georgia Spen-
cer.
( cunt> Baptist Assoeiational News.
Mrs. T. O. Maguire and daughter,
Mrs. Elmer Hemphill, were visiting i
friends in Gainesville Tuesday and:
Wednesday.
—o—
Mrs. R. J. Hundley left Tuesday
"
attended the revival at Ppwie. The health
meeting there was a great success.
Bro. Pierce baptised forty-five Sunday
afternoon, with several others ap
Guy Donnell returned Tuesday from1
Gibbstown, N. J., where he has been
Redman are visiting
Montague this week.
friends neav,
proved for baptism, and a large num- spending a few weeks.
ber were received by lettter.
Wednesday afternoon we drove to
Cooke county and spent the night with
our half brother, J. A. Knight, who
lives near Leo. Thursday morning we
went to Valley V:cv>, where we at-
J. D. Collier returned this week
from Fort Worth, where he had been
visiting relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Graves and
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Jones and fam-
ily spent last week end in Wichita
Falls.
—o—
John Austin, of Newark, Ark., who;
visited relatives here last week, re-
turned home Friday.
tended the Cooke County Baptist As- daughter of Fort Worth were guests
sociatiton for two days and returned in the city last Friday and Saturday. '
home Friday afternoon. We enjoyed —«>-
ILLINOIS BEND NEWS.
ILLINOIS BEND. Septt. £l.—Mrs. I
Valton Coker of Wellington, Texas,
has been visiting relatives near the
Bend.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Snapp left last
week for Cement, Okla., where they
will make their home.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Harris of Thack-
erville, Okla., spent the week end
with his mother, Mrs. W. C. Masten.!
Miss Joyce Ritchie of Montague j
spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs.!
Gene Ritchie last week.
Miss Mattie Barnes is spending a
,few weeks in Saint tJo.
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Frazier, Mrs.
Jake Scitern, and Miss Min Howard
spent Sunday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. W. C. Masten.
«i i ' Okla., Sept. 19.—
Matthew Rimes, youthful Oklahoma
outlaw, today was sentenced to death
by an Okmulgee district court jury,
that convicted him of murder for his
alleged part in a double bank robbery
at Beggs, in which Police Chief W.
J. McAnally was killed.
The jury found Kimes guilty late
yesterday, but disagreed on the pun-
ishment that should be meted to him.
After ten hours deliberation the jury
reported this morning that they were
hopelessly disagreed, 11 to 1, on the
degree of punishment.
I) strict Judge Hayes, however, in-
structed them to continue their de-
liberations and the verdict was re-
turned a few minutes later.
Kimes took the verdict smiling,
though his hands twitched and he
grew pale. After the verdict was
read Kimes was taken back to his cell
His attorneys had nothing to say.
Judge Ifliyes has not yet decided when
Kimes will bo sentenced.
—o
Mr. and Mrs. B. E^, Davis and son,
L. II., returned last Friday from a
two woks visit with Mrs. Davis' sister
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Varney, Portales, New Mex!co. On
their trip they visited Roswell, Carls-
bad and Fort Sumner. The greatest
event cf the trip was going through
the^ wonderful Carlsbad cavern cave,
which is said to be two and one-half
miles deep and seven miles long.
the trip very much, as Cooke county
is our old home and we met many of
our old friends whom we had not oeen
for many days. The association was
well attended and harmony prevailed
throughout the session.
We were in Belcherville Sunday and
attended Sunday school, and in as
much as it was Methodist day We all
attended the Methodist church and
heard Bro. Jordan preach a wonderful
sermon on Bible holiness. Sunday af-
ternoon we went to Stoneburg, but on
account of the baptizing at Bowie
and the B. Y. P. U. program at Mon-
tague the laymen's meeting was called
off. While there we visited in the
home of Rev. T. P. Miller, who is one
of our pioneer preachers, who helped
to lay the foundation for all the work
in this county. He and his good wife
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Clark and fam- j
ily and Mrs. Jewell Brannon of Wich- j
ita Falls spent last week with Mrs. ■
Lee Davis, who returned with them
thi week for a visit there.
I —l
Miss Thelina Morgan, who under-!
Miss Eula Nell Scott left Tuesday .vvei^ an opei-attion for appendicitis t
morning for Sherman where she will ln Sherman Hospitatl last W*ek is re-
attend Austin College. ported to be improving and is ex-'
0_ peeted home in a tew days.
W. E. Scott. Jr., made a 'busines-'
mtmm■—
psiiS
V -*■
^ >•••" V
?;■
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hoover, Misses
Mary and Eva Hoover, and Mrs. W.
E. Scott spent Thursday in Gaines-
vile.
trip to Sherman,
points last week.
Dallas and other
Miss Janice Davis left Sunday for
Denton where she will attend C. I.
A., this winter, taking her degree in
the spring.
—o—
Misses Sara Meador and
Garner went this week to
are getting feeble now, but"we pray
thev nmv bnve n, v mmv. Collc e of Industrial Artst.
Mrs. .J. 1'. Belleuh of Frederick,
Okla., and Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Howell
of Snyder, Texas, are visiting Mrs. J.
T. Puryear.
—o —
E. T. Stoneman left Sunday for Chi-
ago to attend the Tunney-Dempsey (
fight.
Gazelle '
Denton, Misses Edna Boydston and Mable
in the Ilarwood spent Tuesday shopping in
| Gainesville.
Robert I la! wood Manlove, tha
versatile character portrayalist, Is
to app.iar on our entertainment
course this winter. In his charac-
ter delineations, he becomes Jn
turn an Irishman, Swede, Jew,
Dutchman, Frenchinau, Italian, a
rube, an old man, a grouch, a silly
kid, a tramp, a dude and many
other < araclers. He laughs and
cries ai.d his audience joins him
in both. Manlove has a full even-
in": pro ..•am of the snappiest, clev-
erest n ! most entertaiuing com-
edy you ever saw.
that they may have many more
dXvTcyMiller preached at Stone-1 W .H. Casey and Darrell Bailey re- Fan""to attend the"Jpenfng
burg Sunday and Sunday night. turned Friday from a month's visit in fif' opening
Sunday night we had the pleasure Arkansas and Mississippi. Same of the Dixie ^series,
of preaching for Pastor McClung at „ , —0— „
Ringgold. He is now in Oklahoma Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Neely, formerly Smith C. Pedigo and son George
University as a student and assistant ot Nocona, have moved to Saint Jo left Wednesday for Wichita Falls to
instructor. and will make their home here. Mr. attend the first game of the Dixie
We attended he chapel exerc'se of Neely is with the Texas Oil Co. series.
the Ringold school and spoke to a fine —"— ,. —°"7~
group of boys and girls about the im- Mr. and Mrs. Don Wigley left Mon- Miss Lannio White, formerly of
portanee of'preparing for their life ''"V f°r Wichitat Falls, where Mrs. Saint Jo, spent last week end with
work. W:gley will undergo an operation for relatives here.
The regular workers conference will appendicitis. | —(►—
0 Mrs. Clarence Moore and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Rogers have Katherino Lain spent Monday in
moved to Henrietta. Gainesville shopping.
be at Montague Monday. Come and
spend the day with us. Especially do
we want all board members to be here
for there will be business of much _ ,
importance. GREGG HOWARD, | Mr. and Mrs. Doc Payne of Denison Mrs. Ruby Harper and son left this
Missionary, visited with his father, S. T. Payne, w-eek for Richland, Texas, where she
M ... ___ _ ,ast weck- will join her husband.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Scott returned —o— | 0
last week from an extended visit with Messrs. Bill Dumas and Loyce Wal- R0v. R. C. Brinklcy and family, for-
friends at Dallas, Hutchins, Lancas- k< r of Gainesville were visitors here nierly of Weatherford, have moved to
vlii (i? J'01??'in, th«t vicinity. Tuesday. Saint j0( where he hng acceptcd a can
White there his friends blind-folded f~Tr ... as pastor of the Baptist church.
and hog-tied him and took him into Jack Newton of Valley View was q_
a theater, he says, and he admitted visiting a friend here Saturday and
that he liked it pretty well after he Sunday. i noy Scouts.
got "sorter used to it.*' —o— j
—0— I an<i Mrs. F. L. Hill, who have | xho Rnu <5nm,fa s_i„„
Dr. J. M. Wright, pastor of the lived in Saint Jo for some time, will C8tjn,, meetw last Fridav ntehV
Presbyterian church, and S. C. Ped- niove to Vernon soon, where they will eitrht trooners heino- nrooonf fnl
'as MEf,spcn"the win,er_o- iastrast-sa:
.ttendoJ the ,Pre M?\y"Vl ^1 «"• 9"" «!• HiRh S'jSrrf H0E4.nl
Mr. and Mrs. Dodd Wilev of Wieh-1 }X°.rt.h la??Lweek> While there Dr. community, and Mrs. B. D. Franklin
ita Falls vjsitod with home folks in
Saint Jo this week.
Mr. and Mrs. T. N. Field and Mr.
D. W. Donnell returned Saturday from
a trip in West Texas.
Wright affiliated with the FV>rtWorth ofMa^ille0 were "guests T^e ^^nl
•V' o_ MmAe HeXSlfTaTt^SaSda^ IH fS test ^
« _ M. A. Hemphill, last Saturday. tu fjrat. nni-rni ,„no
Rev. Werren T. Whitetside of Deca-,
tur, presiding elder of the Decatur1
XLIa£'ucr °Vne uecatur Mrs. Henry Phillips spent Sunday er. It will be know'n as' the'Eaffle
tnT^fuLST'e,^.'.^9 Mrs. Otto Al* Patrol. _ . . ^
The first patrol was organized
with Marvin Calloway as patrol lead-
Saint Jo Tuesday on business.
driedge, at Gandview, Texas
\
Rev. Earl J. Patton is scoutmaster.
The greatest Fair tn all history.... 13
days of horse racing....horse shows,
foot ball, polo game«...a stupendous
program of entertainment....replete
with thrills and fun. Livestock, agri-
cultural and poultry exhibits surpass
all records.
See "Countess Maritza"
Music, singing, dancing, comedy, love
and romance....in the Auditorium.
Prico, Evtolnp $1.00 to $150
Matinee# 75c to $2-00
MjiI Orderi NOW I AddreM R. Rupird,
State Ftir of Texai, Dalla
^ DALLAS
OCT. 1927
Master Edwin Fulton, who has been
visiting in the family of Mr. and Mrs,
Earl Giles, returned to Denton Mon-
day, where he will attend school thW
winter.
i
i!
W*
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Reynolds, L. J. The Saint Jo Tribune (Saint Jo, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1927, newspaper, September 23, 1927; Saint Jo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth335470/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .