Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 115, Ed. 1 Monday, January 11, 1954 Page: 2 of 8
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it that the oil in- i
Another is the com]
267
Truman. un-
more money, and has larger sav
summer. der whose administration, when
268
mutual savings banks alone.
d
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day
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THESE DAYS
n
iN ci kt
TOIS YEAR
M i, 4p, 41:
cehtly
inted out, “The public must be so
indeed,
pose.
first ।
The very
Plastic-Cocted
agency
!
“such as
of a salesman will have to stop
them-
For Better Health ..
-
1953 total plastics fabrics ship-
ran about 13
ALAN PATON
the nasal
structures to the ethmoid sinus.
Water Gets Back
Mrs. J. K.
G.
By
I
BOYCE HOUSE
-
Jane Eads
-
Corp.)
dustries.
as Senator Bricker now proposes, recognized.
school, is especially an’ six bits.”
of Congress and
They 11 Do It EveryTime
mbpugp
By Jimmy Hatlo
Well.
The Rowanis Coi
f club has electci officers
social day to her
home and house-
OF
Ham
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founded
T
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O C »
Reed and
d
Mi
RAISINS
Sweet "n tender! look!
335
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popularity in
automotive in-
Richard
and Wil
4? In the
no unani-
is that the
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Ariz.. this year. ___________ ________ ________ ______________ „
Joan, though still fond of basketball, in which dne been beat dUt of a dollah erally hold that such legislation
the nation’s capital.
"I told them that we were new here,” their ing
! R !
e
. ?
2 e
Hartley.
Last year congressional com-
s earning
ngs, than
there is a
river, looks for a way to escape not one
----- but a thousand flakes ... To him
. Robins said the outlook is very
promising for conveyor belting
and foam rubber. He said the
soft spots <
ly in such fields as a]
The best thing that could be done to so
unsound a tax is total repeal. Failing that,
.x0j2
2
.A
d
m2A5BrV
maeeez
I try to go to as many as
reserve some time for the f;
“EMERGBENGY“
ARISE5-WHO9DOIN5
THE DELNERNG?.
thousands of cit-
izens, and came l
from the "Com-
mittee for De 1
omi2- -
fa r
geCE5SlO
SUPPOSIN’
SOMEBODY
SEES ME-:
publisher.
Our pledge to yeo: Consistently
low priew ALWAYS! THY US!
parking meters which were not
legally in use.
gmrem-"em"“
-,33 -+en9 ---- --
years before, and wants a place
out of the wind’s way.
mother explained. “and that ev-
erybody was making a fuss over
us but that it couldn’t lat, so
they should enjoy it while they
could.”
The excitement has died down
though Papa’s very much in the
limelight, and Mama too. as any
such attractive, well-dressed and
personable cabinet wife would
be.
Joan, 17, Tom. 13. and Jin, 10,
son and William C Simpson, reelected
Wooldridge, B. C. Andrews, Ancil Ross
-ad verti sing amandea tn nrotect thie eointr
calling Geo. Sokolsky from alien powers whose activ-
latter is gaining
the furniture and
TNL LITTLL STORE
o0 nt st watt 1
h tw u onenowAr saddd
Ea
43
k-ge
n
L ! * |
■ gu
be an increase in shipments of
vinyl-coated fabrics - during the
first six months of 1954 com-
pared with the same period of
1953 according to the.Plastics
Coatings & Film association.
The association said that fore-
Give ’Em Back
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (U.P.1—
Honest motorists gave a bonus
er:boy news printed in this newspaper, as well as all
So IM ABOUT A m
WEEK--WHEN AN 4
___ running
levels. Even so, there was
nothing resembling a real slump. Certain
farm prices also dropped—but agriculture’s
income is very high as compared with almost
any previous period.
,ges. There was, of course,
during the latter months—
stAAEARUrer
NERE’S A LIST OP ALL
fense of the Con-
stitution” — a
l a u d a ble pur-
MV CUTO
FORTY- SE
THEM-
- . people mad.
Sight unseen, '
udesrdg8ss8*yem)
to the Battery . . . And Brooklyn for 1952.
... And here in the mist ... A a 15 per cent increase for
ride to Staten Island . . . Now vinyl fabrics in 1953 over 1952 is
• look at your Statue of Liberty, attributable to a sizeable upsurge
lifting her imperial torch against '
Well, maybe I do make too of $279 to the police depart-
much of jt But this is the first ment. They dropped nickels in
real snowfall we have had this _
”,
I
Cloth Expanding
NEW YORK 7UP_There will
in im-
Union
QH,TOP CRABBNNG:S
JUNIOR CAN'T MBP FT F
1
----------------------- —---allAPnews i
THte epubll»hm are mt responsbi for eopy
PRouDOFYOUWY
-V BOY-- o-
gyOH,TLONA
„ignBI, reoruarv. 19d
. ---in The
all attend Sidwell Friends School.
All of the children “are athletic
and fond of riding and moving _______
about in the open spaces, but Ann, 15. is the only ,___
one who wanted to spend the winter as well as with a _______,
summer in Arizona, where the entire family vaca- natrly as big
tions yearly. She is an 11th grade student* at the headiight. “Is
AIN TAX
_______ THERE WIL be some relief
for the taxpayers. And during its delibera-
tions on tax revisions, congress should take
a hard look at the capital gains tax.
they are nothing but life’s wet
drum beats. He’s seen other
snows in other towns in other
4
“282:
are here visiting his sister. Mrs. S. J.
mer and Miss Viola Brown; Vasker
Miss Lillie Reed
represented the end of TH taken off the books, which
much stumbling around inside was what union labor leaders
the administration and the pres- wanted. But in the following
ident’s own official family on years, when his Democrats ran
the question of amending Taft- congress he couldn’t do any-
Hartley. thing, either.
Last year congressional com- During his administration —
mittees held weeks of hearings when it was clear that enough
on the law, letting all inter- Democrats and Republicans in
ested parties — labor. business congress were joined together
ME MAD TO PLAY BASKET-/,
BALL—MERE IT IS— 29 A. i £
PIMENTO AVENU--—4.
„ „casts for shipments of vinyl
a close-knit neighborhood and sheeting set the level for the first •
many a wondering loyalty. It is a half of 1954 at that prevailing
| city swept by storm and turbu- during the last six months of
I lence of living and the wind of 1953- down from the first half of
1 - the year.
In the first nine months of
spends a lot of time there. She’s allowed dates
on weekends—if she keeps her room tidy. This
prompted Joanie to remark one night when her 1
voice. :
But today the snow is falling
. .. And New York City is beauti-
ful’. . . And. oh. I wish you could ments
see it now . . . From the Bronx ahead of the nine montl
per cent
ns figure
THE WORLD TODAY
Taft-Harfley Law Changes
Certain to Make Some Mad
By JAMES MARLOW istration would have fallen to
WASHINGTON, Jan. 1 (A) — the secretary of labor, Martin
All President Eisenhower could P. Durkin. Durkin stayed away,
be sure about today, when he The result: Congress didn’t
scurityste’attbgted t5bydhenkswledgd artentiorssnsanrdonodaragaanena:
that, if he realizes a profit, the tax will bite der attack ” Jonn. day nor dans Madson
A" ’ P ’ i „ .1 could have foreseen. In fact, none
deeP- Naturally I assumed that here of the delegates to the Consti-
Moreover, this is not a tax that applies might be another committee to tutional Convention could have
only to a few wealthy people. In a recent year foant thter aomumeynistsiheerhah imoazanedethaeconee“nitacpsyate
74. per cent, of all people reporting capital Amendment. but I was in error, volved in the affairs of Europe,
gams had incomes of less than $10,000 and This committee was organized Asia and Africa, they, the dele-
42 per cent were in the under-$5,000 brackets to fight .Republicans and Demo- gates. just having „—
— - - - --- erats who favor the Bricker selves from Great Britain and
Amendment.- European tutelage."
„ From the general tenor of the The difference of opinion here
the rate of capital gains taxation should be statement signed by these gentle- is a hidden one—not at all the
sharply reduced. men, one would imagine that the one that is generally discussed.
--------------------------—--------- ------ American Constitution had been What is really at stake is this:
. .l ■ prepared by the Persians and The internationalists have learned
The Were AF (-ee Medes and is unchangeable in ev- nothing since 1945. They have
• • • ery comma and semi-coron. Ac- not truly appraised the events
„ „ . . t .. 1 ... . tually, the Constitution makes that have happened since our
Our eternal standing will be established by ample provision for amendments government finally discovered
God s judgment, not by our neighbors’, and has been amended 22 times, that Soviet Russia is not an ally
The Hord seeth not as man seeth; for man including once to eliminate alco- but an enemy They have learned
looketh on the outward appearance, but the holic beverages from our lives nothing from the failure of the
Lord looketli on the heart.—I Sam. 16:7._____and another time to restore such Marshall Plan and the develop-
This levy has been accurately described
as an irpn curtain which divorces two of the
moot dynamic factors in American capital-
ism—venture capital and industrial growth. •
If this country is to keep On going ahead,
people must be encouraged to put money in
untried enterprise—which means enterprise
where there is a considerable risk that the
What’s going to happen in 195
crystal ball business there can be
wanted it made tougher or not So between last September
changed at all. and now the Eisenhower people
The most he could hope was have whipped up a list of
that a majority of businessmen changes, probably fewer than
and organized workers would Durkin wanted. which the
consider his proposals reasona- dent could say represente
ble and good and that congress considered opinion
would feel the same way and Nevertheless, the difficulties
translate them into law. encountered by Eisenhower on
But he couldn’t be sure be- this subject were fairly mild
forehand. And particularly he when compared With those of
couldn’t be sure that congress, former President
before quitting next
year, and snow does excite us
esi-
his ।
ering legislation on a law as nothing Any changes this con-
and John Foster Dulles support- controversial and basic as Taft- gress might i make Won’t end
ed before he became Secretary Hartley, it would be usual for the dispute. Organized laborwill
of State but now rejects, is un- an administration spokesman to certainly be in pitching next
she starred at her New York
happy to be near the Library
mother returned from a busy
own rather hectically dishve
mother—no dates for her this ___________
That would certainly be no punishment for
Mrs. Brownell who loves her
3 i
rIl
nt
.i l
2lnsa
LLwreM8h---6
sensation travels to the brain throu zh special
nerve fibers which traverse through
of a salesman will have to stop thinking
about his product only and concentrate in-
stead on the customer’s needs.” Fro m a lead-
ever before. To take one example,
record $24,000,000,000 now on deposit in
because it’s ai
needs.” An outstanding example
the automobile—65 per cent of —
families own a car now, as against 54 per
5 years.”
An executive of a big company ma king elec-
trical products observed, “The 1914 edition
coming year will depend on aggressive sell-
ing to a greater extent than we have known
since world war H. Just after the war, of
course, there was a huge backlog of hungry
demand for almost every conceivable .kind
of manufactured article, and eve 1 inferior
V Mr. and Mrs. George Bird, Jr., of Ho is, Okla..
. “Z___.. Kennerly,
, Mrs. Georg Y. Bird
been issued to J. D. Pal-
Even so, hard-headed businessmi n in large
numbers believe that financial suc< ess in the
YU DO SO MUCH-- SCOUTS.
PIANO LESSONS--W-L J
- you HAVE TMEPK9
keeping and is a college graduate in home eco- t 1
nomics. Besides all her offiia} activities she
keeps up the busy social schedule expected of a
cabinet wife. ' _ I
“If I told you I had five invitations to luncheons ■ 1
in one single day, it would be the truth,” she told . I
me. “Besides. there are the White House functions I
and inumerable afternoon parties and receptions. M
man for a farm equipment company, who
said, “A lot of younger men in sales have
never experienced a highly competitive sit-
uation such as now. It’ll take some time
xeg 0e"3V ~
"" <LoQK
9Uk,
)
tion costs in line, who survives.” A spokes-
man for a major motor manufact urer said
that there will be a hot competitive battle for
the consumer’s favor and money
this country has not seen in over :
legations that are frequently made concern-
ing the oil industry.
One is the gloomy claim that we are swift-
ly using up our oil resources and are in im
minent danger of running out The t
said, “Our known crude oil reserves in this
country are greater now than ever before.
Historically the oil industry has not only
sentence hit me •
with all the ve-::
hemence of an
I can, but I have to ’
________ _ ______ lamily, and we try to 1
keep a few nights for ourselves.”
Though acclaimed one of the best-dressed worn- 1
en in the new administration, sleek, dark-haired
the nose and sinuses must be
moist and normal. • The odor
must, of course, come into con-
tact with the nasal membrane.
Lastly, the nerves of smell must
be normal.
Sinus trouble, which may lead
to dryness of the nasal mem-
brane with irritation, foreign ob-
jects in the nose. and nerve dis-
eases involving the nerves of
smell may all interfere with this
important sensation
25*,?,,, :98;sa
605
323 93 49,15
288
: hyg3ag5
■ e.
, ,5
$s.;
42
I "saca
“WE KNOW MUCH THAT AIN’T TRUE”
TOE SACRAMENTO, California, Union,
- which has the distinction of being the
oldest daily west of the Rockies, recently
devoted an editorial to refuting certain al- 11
act on TH in 1953. Later, when
’ Durkin quit the cabinet in Sep-
5 i ember. It became pretty clear
I why he hadn’t gone before the
I committee.
I The administration through
" last winter, spring and summer
had been unable to make up its
ly bought so my of its
' o'this is
American
Full Flower
• ■ ■ ma A m 2. Om
mity of opinion. But the consensus
economic machine will continue to roll along
in high gear—even though it may not race
its motor to quite the extent as in the recent
past. This belief is based in large part on
the fact that the public at large
and hard work to get the best out of them."
All of this should add up to good news
for the consumer. The buyer’s market is here p
in full flower.
and others — have their say on in opposing outright repeal—or-
i ■ what should or shouldn’t be ganized labor might have been
Constitution Designed to Permit Amendments 1 When a committee is consid- But it wouldn’t. And 24""Kg
i By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY hard-headed Americans who rec-
LI received a letter signed by ognize a fact when they see one.
three,important names Lucius The fact they see is that while ci—-4 n : .—---2--------------------- -- ------~~ " .E-—
Bhh’w: Savs rd 5 aSorrwinettnr the Constitution provides that the iseprusfdenishtw cEn slatnitsldhews and very unusual year.for more changes.
probablysent tommm legislative function of this na- anyone consistently support in Last year
1 tion is designated to congress, he Tin 1 " mimitt *i
I it can be and is being performed
4 Al Dropsy results from impaired o diseased
kidneys. The term dropsy is usually u sed to de-
scribe what is also called Bright’s dii case. Ac-
tually. there is a group of kidney disort ers which
will cause dropsy.
Dropsy usually describes a swellin g of the
feet, ankles. or even abdomen due to th > accumu-
cent in 1948. P
The Journal .polled 75 repr esentative
American corporations on the question of
souped-up selling. Sixty-six expect id compe-
tition to be tougher this year than last. A
leader in the appliance field said, “It’s going
to be the manufacturer with a stiong sales
organization, and who can keep hi s produc-
, THRE THINGS ESSENTIA L
TO SENSATION OF SMELL
By C. A. DEAN, M.D.
MEDITORIAL: Smell is a sense we de pend upon
IVA much more than iz commonly rea ized. This
Add Ran college, now Texas Christian i niversity,
is in the city visiting his son, Lee Clark, superin-
tendent of city schools. Mr. Clark resides at
Cisco, Texas.
goods found ready buyers, for lac < of any-
thing better. This situation gradually cor-
rected itself as the factories hit ne N produc-
tion record after new productio n record.
Now, as the Wall Street Journal recently
(Q) “Please give me some C. A. I lean, M.D.
information on dropsy. Is it curable' ”
% B
Measured by production and sales, 1953
was a boom year in anybody’s book. Practi-
cally every business sold its output and came
up with a reasonable profit. Practically ev-
eryone who wanted to work hads-
dustry is dominated and run by a few big,
companies. Of this, the Union said, “Actually
no group of oil companies could control the
industry as a whole, as is shown by the ag-
gressive activities of numerous and highly
successful ‘independents.’ ”
The Union ended its editorial by recalling
Josh Billings’ famous old saying: “The trou-
ble today is not that we are ignorant, but
’ that we know so much that aint’ true.” A
good many of us would profit if we remem-
bered that—and acted accordingly.
Dt Bi
9 • -.;*5
30 Years Ago . . .
(From the files of The Daily Register,
- Jan. 10. 1924 •
handed con-
gress his sug- |
gestions for |
changing the!
Taft - Hartley I
labor law, was 2
that he'd make 5
quite a few
Mrs. Brownell says she hasn’t splurged on many .
new costumes and has few Of the low-cut, flor-
sweeping ball gowns that most women are wear- ’
ing to the season’s big doings.
Mbn., Jan. 11, 1954
Mias Dovie Matthews was able to return to her
home Jtoday after being a patient at ( ainesville
2—Msinesville (Texas) Daily Register
would make any changes, or. if the Republicans controlled con-
it did. that they would be the gress in 1947, T-H was passed,
ones he suggested. Truman went a lot further
[ What Eisenhower offered to than Eisenhower. He wanted
For the proper sensation of smell, th ee things
are essential. The membrane of penimehmesdmemm
n
k mind on what T-H changes it
I thought should be made.
but because his . SA Durkin complained, on the
ideas on changes adra day he resigned, that- he had
were de- ueaed been working with Eisenhower's
scribed as mod- E White House aides on suggested
erate, Eisen- ".I. changes, thought they had White
hower was a HESMRLO House approval, and then found
cinch to displease union leaders out they didn’t. Eisenhower said
who wanted the law wiped out he had never broken his word
and those businessmen who to an associate
lation of liquid material from the blood channels.
Have a pressing health problem? Dr. [Dean will
try to help you in his daily column.
।Copyright 1954. General Features
eled room: “Poor
weekend!"
been able to find each year as much oil as ,
it produced in that year, but more. There
is every reason to believe that our reserves ’■
of crude oil will continue to increase . .
?, new directors.
_____ Randolph Clark, education plophet of
Texas, who with his brother Addison "
Buyer's Market Is Here in Full Flower
To the Benefit of the Consumer in '54
J)URiNG THE LAST FEW _________
been the usyal new-year flood of reports
and forecasts. The reports deal factually
with business’ experience during 1953 and
look ahead to what is expected in 1954.
7* 5
Ehe"a
e5*9
iteers. learned nothing from France’s schoolsas.well-as official.in.the l’d sure hate to live here," many vinvi sheeting, the association
be reported sabotage of the European De penal SYst em. Fis,latest „ook iS a tourist says But really you said.
rs and lay- fense Community. They have ________________________ have to ive with New York City +-----------------------
e set out to Itemed nothing 4om the Korean • ----- . ihmen’gmgigsenhereen Non-Tire Rubber
To Hs Start ' Forms See Volume
tannsnment oi one oven ana two p—pA,A ,, o Iy snow, and the highest civilized STAMFORD, Conn. <UP)— The
covert Communist governments E HRATA . Wash- UP-Wa- icicles in the whole wide word, non-tire segment of the rubber
in Latin America. They do not ter used in the Columbia Basin • Come now, come now . . . See industry wii operate in a highly
seem to realize-that the Panama irrigation project has completed hoW the snowtaKes, one alter an- competitive market in 1954 but
Canal is in peril its full trip from the Columbia othern one tKnthenrthrmirs should be able to mateh AS’8
shersproceenSsafiouFh.thpu-m through the vast irrigation canal anothernon like Vacnegther EBut" itwi . ak "minereqged
a polk,-devised in the first live system^nd is notv being returned and all are stirrd andainar ins. Jr. president O/hematRob
years of the 1940’s and which totheriyer. . , meiting r . . Ana none Knows •
brought to our country disaster In 1948, the water was pumped why- . rhe goo cbmoanies making
and humiliation 289 feet at Coulee dam, then it it is a storm that nature is ,
These matters these interna- flowed into a 27-mile-long equal- hurling at the city, and all rrbbexpprtduct °therumha natiret
tionalisks do not wish to have izing reservoir from which it en- storms harvest havoc . . . For ArerhPeced .E°,,5L4°9
dsrnassd oSen"? on floor of tered the canal system. After every laugh in this world there 470,000 ofrubbert.about35
tKeTrehL to treaties flowing through hundreds of must be a cry, and often two . . per cent of the.industr>
iRastus was wearing a I-n, written between this ntr5 and miles of canals and laterals, it On Park avenue a girl in a mink the same as in 1953.
East“shashing"eminha wns Wome’others.srheyheanavoisich recently reached the downstream coat sticks. her tongue and
_______________that aognuine reements Which bind tS‘Amer for the first time to complete the On the Bowery a walking bum
Quarter Circle V-Bar Ranch School at Mayer, diamond?” a friend asked. Scan people to conditions of which fuH an<t r^urn to the
Rast us replied ,Ef it ain’t, I they are not cognizant. They gen
‘ "..... - "***— —. .—"h About 200 breeds of dogs are
Washinaton Letter 6SB2S SS S
VVCSIIIIIGTOI LVTTVI • • • bootleggers and racketeers. learned nothing from France’s school as well as official in the I’d sure hate to live here. ’ many vinvi sheeting, the association
......I., u m .1., ’Therefore, it must I ______
By JANE EADS ’ that when the lawyers and lay- fense 'community.
WX ASHINGTON — When the four children of men of this committee set out to learned nothing M.... ... 0.
VV Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell first moved to frighten us by announcing an- war and the Indochina war. They
Washington from New York last year they were other attack oh the Constitution, have learned nothing from the
thrilled wide-eyed at the excitement of living in they were misstating the case, inability of NATO to form a
exaggerating thes premise, engag- European army of from the es-
_____ J in fantasy, which may be tablishment of one overt and two
characteristic of pleading law- covert Communist gov
Kb. yers, but is not likely to influence in Latin America. The’
g8,3*i I—
EEgecsesi I
4
Ea8 1
I til
for the new year as follows. Arthur Teag ue. presi-
dent; H. L. Simpson, vice president; Mr? Blanche
Mason, secretary; Frank Morris, Jr.. H E. Wil-
whole investment will be lost. Investors take
so big a risk for but one reason—the hope of
a good profit if the enterprise succeeds. The
capital gains tax is a very real barrier to
that kind of investment] And the conserva-
ing pint and building material coneern came
this view: “Competition is certainly back
with us in no uncertain terms.” And a very
significant observation came from a spokes-
' ] This is a quarrel which will
.. _____no one from the probably go on for years since
the Eisenhower administration administration appeared. The TH is at the very heart of man
what he opposed in the Roose- job of testifying for the admin-agement-labor relations.
by foreigners in the United Na- Truman administra- i----F"—“T--4--------
me igSSgSE Boyle's Column ... hal soyle
"2 iSSKis i"heazzepew
tothe consttron needs to be Truman was president, why does wourhke“lTT1TK _ .
1 he oppose them now? live. in
(Copyright, 1954 King Features The soft f lakes
iTSyndicate, Inc.)_________ fell like the
I , wandering
Today's Birthday... 28
.ALAN PATON, bom Jan. 11, khowing - how; e
1903, in Pietermaritzburg, South preatest cit/ in
Africa, son of a civil servant. Kte “ora a ritv
Famed poet and - a ^-
author of “Cry. T
the Beloved .
Country,” h e ,
been called one ,
of the best nov-
elists in recent a
years. “Cry, the S
Beloved C o u n- l
try," the story ■
of a Zulu par- ■
son. was made ■
into a hit musi- ■
cal play and ■
motion picture "
entitled “Lost
pegzg,.a 32
"28883...
9=1
of many small
circles and many NAL B0LE
Have A 4
LAUGH MS
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 115, Ed. 1 Monday, January 11, 1954, newspaper, January 11, 1954; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579694/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.