The Bowie News (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1945 Page: 9 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Montague County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bowie Public Library.
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The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
IIP AY, OCTOBER 12, 1945
I
THE BOWIE NEWS
12, 1945
1
r
COATS
Of Merchandise That Means Ad-
$15.98
$19.98
ditional Warmth For The Entire
$29.98
I
Family.
SUITS
GET READY FOR WINTER WHILE
$14.98
THESE VAUES ARE AVAILABLE.
$24.98
$29.98
I
THIS COLD WEATHER WILL CALL
FOR CHILDREN'S HOUSE SHOES-
7.98
9.98
69c to *1.98
1
See These
12.98
VALUES!
LADIES' SKIRTS
Ladies' Sweaters
LADIES' HATS
i
CHILDREN’S WEAR
MEN'S WEAR
*
LEATHER COATS
I
1.
2.39
2.39
I
2.95
3.15
I
*
$1.39
2.98
J
BLANKETS
5.49
1
AT
I
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5
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e
G. E. MEDLE'L Owner
Phone 235
Bowie
Texet
(
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♦
1
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5
W.-J
*4!
■■i
1
It
J
- ■i" •
1 'as
Chev. 38-39
Pont. 37-39
s^itiAOS jo|iuiis sjaqio
Air Cooled, for
16.98
14.98'
Services Held For
Mrs. J. P. Wilson
1000-Hour Radio
Battery
4.98
4.98
’.trying to i ebuild their lands
their lives.” — —
Air Coo ed
,Pord 8’ 37-38
39 Standard
For Ford 28-31
with pipes T1207
1
I.
I
TAILORED. CQ4.TS
Most Popular Models
FITTED COATS
Newest Fashion Detail
FINE FABRIC
I Unusual Fine Quality
WOOL AND RAYON
. In Attractive Colors .
JOO'. ALL WOOL
Finest Quality
GARBARDINES
Beautiful Pastels
For Chev. Master
35-36 T1138
io
a.
:n.
SCARFS
PASTEL LACE TRIMMED — Several
Colors—
BOWjE
TEXAS
id
id
ry
<* * I
1
HOUSEHOLD LINENS
LUNCHEON CLOTHS
PRINTED'CLOTHS — Floral design-
52 x 52
4
ALL WOOL
SINGLE
Rich Solid Colors—Blue,
Hose and Maroon, Satin
Bound— ;
$9.98
10.98
12.98
Western Aut
Associate Store]
7
ALL COTTON
’ double
Rose and Blue Plaid—
double bed size—
$2.98
■ f
■
79<
- GUEST TOWELS
LOVELY GIFTS — White and Solids.
Embroidery—
98*
8.95
Exchange
‘■’J
/IF
..
‘________•
7.40
Exchange
Others similar savings
r
-T*'
Men's Sweat Shirts
Natural color — crew
neck with V-ribbed cuffs
and bottom
$1.19
- | Checked Plaid. lOpsi wool.
Side closing, button at
waistband. Size 24 to 30.
$6.98
- ' • ’ *
■
schedules throughout Texas, anC
time-table revisions will be an-
nounced by Bowen soon.
WIZARD
MUFFLERS
For Chev. 37-39
T1148 . ...
rtf
I - • -
MEN'S UNIONS
*
Full 'cut — warm and
comfortable. Sizes 36 to
46
' Il
i
I
I
*'x
GENUJNE PONY HIDE /I QO
Cott Style. 5-button
GENUINE CAPE LEATHER
Zipper Front, Belted Back
LEATHER COSSACK JACKET
Lined Zipper Front
MEN'S PAJAMAS
Outing Flannel of excel-
lent quality, desirable
patterns at
$2.98
MEN'S HATS
Genuine Fur. FeltsT in
Brown, Blue, Gray and
Black—
$4.98
Native of Germany
Buried Here Monday
Final rites were held Monday
Hfiwnoon for -Mrs. Barbara Rus- .
feld, who died Saturday at her
home. east «»f Bowie, Service* were
h -lil from the Lutheran Churri.
with Rev. Ralph Danielson, pastor,
officiating.
Mrs. Husfeld was horn in Ger-
npiny eighty years ago and later
inViveiFt'o Montague county, when
she had resided for the past fifty-
seven yuara. F--- '
She is'survived by three daugK
t< is, Marguerite'and Annie Hua-
feld and Mis. John Ruth of Bowie,
and three sons, Fred, and Henry
Husfeld of Bowie and Rudolph Hus-
feld of Lake Charles, La.
interment was , in the Germa*
cemetery under the direction <a!t
Burgess Funeral Home. Pallbearers
were Will Peninger, Alfred Klein-
----.----, . ... -. Ij>ans, Herman Husfeld. Hear?
winter, but HwreHiusield, Fred Roth and John
hans.
-» •.--— o—--------.
s i New Bowen Bus
provide.^ by Schedule-Makes
Faster Travel
Bits travelers in the Southwest
will gel to their destinations
October 1,
Rev. A. C. Harper, pastor ”f the,
.Fruitland Baptist'Church’, conduct- .
"d final rites for Mrs. J. P. Wil««n I
42, from the First Bap*is* B-ptist
Church of Bowie Sunday afternoon.
He was assisted by Rev. G. B.
Bradshaw, pastor of the Bowh I
Church.
' The former MnTy'Jane Gordon ’■
Mrs. Wilson came to Bellevue ii
1883 from Mis-i-^ippi and married
.1. P. Wibon.in »87. The following 1
year the couple mdved-to Montague |
County, where they have, been I
prominently identified with Civic I
and church activities. She -was a
member of the Fruitland Baptist
. 'hurch. Mrs. Wilson died Saturday
.turning at her home four miles
■"st of Bowie following an extend-
d illness.
Beside her husband, she is sur-
vived by three brothers, Jim Gor-
don of Blanchard, -Okla., W. P.
Gordon of Lawton and Henry Gor-
don of Cache, Okla., anil four sis-
ters, Mmes. Minnie Wallace of
Waurika,’W. J. Watley of Bridge
port, Sallie Morris of Blanchard
Okla., and Dorie Burch of Mulberry.
Ark.
tntertnent was in the Elmwood
• Cemetery under the di. ,i.’ n <
Owens St Brumley. Palllr arers .vttT
C. A. Baxter, K W. Brown, H. F.
Swann and W. D. Parsons.
I ---------_,o--------— - ■
RECEIPT BOOKS—Bowie News.
DRESSES
CORDUROY JUMPER
J. Solid Color — 7 to 14
PDA ID JERKINS -~
F^art Wool; prdtty. warm .
—---P A NT I E S
COATS
CORDUROY REVERSIBLE -
Water Repellent
WOOL AND RAYONS
Lined and Tailored ,. -.
II
r
All-Wool. Solid pastels,
button or slip-over. Size
‘ 32 to 38— .
$3.98
DRESSES
NEW CREPES
Many Colors-and Styles
LICHT .WOOLENS
Dark and Bright Shades
’" TOP DRESS FABRICS
. With Smartest Details .,
Bw
Kg M
-
i
MW1.
ml
Continued Help
For Starving In
Europe Is Urged
! ■ At STJN—With return to normal
i living in. Europe based upon the ex-
’ p-iiinee of (he crrtii -il fall and win-
ter head. Winthrop W. Alrich. £res-
ideut' of the National Wai Fun.I,
advised Judge Ben 11. PowelL pres-
ident of the 1’nitf d War Chest of
Texas; of the-desperate need of eon-
[ tinned American help through' the
I final victory campai'/n of the Na-
( tional Wat* Fitnd. e
I • M.r: Aldrich has just returned
| from a trip to Europe where-he
visited England, France, Holland,
Czechoslavakia and Ckermany. .
"In my opinion,” Mr. Aldrich re-
ported, ‘‘Muss starvation aijd death
by freezing are not likely to occur
| | ifi Purope'this.
| will be great suffering unless the
I people receive more than the—ne-
cessities of life in addition to es-
sential food and clothing, unless
these necessities are |
the agencies .of the National War I
Fund.
. ‘‘SumtTjieopTe ask‘why private Fy-
lief is necessary, and if govern-
ments are. not meeting the needs of ( faster since October 1, who
their peofde.'1 he answer is the fact | Bowen Trailways returned sr
that governments and government pre-war speed schedules.
sehedtilcg are- rnade
. as’CTTrouIt of the gov-
ernment lifting the regulation
Which held motor travel to U
miles an hour.
The Bowen line also a»-
nounced that.'fouf.through sched-
ules have been added to Cali-
fornia' on the Fort Worth-Dallas
to ' Albuquerque division, and
that a hew service -with' three
schedules daily from Amanlic
to Denver will be put on via
Lamar-Pueblo and Coloradr
Springs. Limited cars' e being
• • • - i n ,y’".nd Fort' ■
Worth and between/ lias and
Amarillo _with stop// t Bowit
Wichita Falls, Verm- and Chil-
, dress.
The stepup in speed will cause
O'
their people. The answer is the fact ; Bowen
- agencies - are str.iving-despcrately I 'pfac faster
“ to resfoveThe basic econoihy—tu I possible as"
Provide transportation, coal and
i mass fopj supplies, to reopen ports
and to set up means of distribution. I
It must also lie borne in mind that |
I Europe existed under military gov-
ernment for weeks iffter their lib-.
| eration. Also,, the assets and re-
sources of govr nt are not al-
ways readily fr<< 1 after war.
, "The result jif war is abnormal-
ity. Nothing is : .al in a country
that has been, in the path of a
^great war. The eeonoin.v is not nor-
‘ ma). The health of the peopled-"iddCd between Dal
from normal.* The psychology, of
the piojilv is not normal.
“In all the suffering areas of
Europe,one notices the lack of the
ordinary essentials-of life, such as. .
shoes, clothing, soap, kitchen uten- '^changes in arrival and departure
sils, small tools, needles, nails—all
the things which one requires for.a
bare normal existence.
“Privately-supported relief agen-
cies of the National War Fund are
managing to get sdbstantial quan-
tities of these materials in, afid are
meeting needs that are not i
any other agencies. The work
Highly styled black fejt,
veiled trimmed. They a e
SO* flattering—
$3.98
69^
39<
BOYS' SWEATERS
Two-Tone Tan and-Brown
Fancy check. Size 30 to 36
BOYS' SWEAT SHIRTS
Fleece Lnnd. crew knit tuck
Serviceable and warm wO
Ladies' Handbags .! I LADIES' DICKIES
Ever popular Jp zipper Soft Ninon in white and -
style; trim undci’-arm bag . pastels. New-fashion black
Assorted color and leather, j ribbon beading trim—
S4.98 S1.98
BOWIE
,A TEXAS
Phone 235
$1.69
KITCHEN TOWELS
PRINTED MEXICAN MOTIF—Blue
[• and Red—
49*
-
RAYON TEAROSE ,
All Elastic Band — 4 to 12
WHITE COTTON
Flat Knit All Elastic ... ..
BOYS' COATS
* Fine Quality, Melton Cloth ftQ
Plaid Lined, belted, 3 to 10 >
BOYS' SHIRTS
Fancy Colored Dr«hs Shirts f . /| Q
size 8 to 14 ’ *
Make good school shirts
COLD WEATHER NEEDS
For The Entire Family
Ladies New Fall Wear federated store h..
IT with
<4
Mr, and Mrs. Carol Young were
guests of Mrs. J. A. Young Satur-
: - . day. Mr. Young recently was dis-
h*et by charged from the Army Air Corp*
of | ■ ___ ___
these agencies Is enormously im- PENCILS — All kinds — Soil,
portant, and m my opinion, the ex- Ha.d and colo„ Bowia New>,
tent of their work in the next few ] Box FILES BowU Newlu
months may fix the pattern of liv-1 ~ '
ing in Euiope next Spring. Thepeo-'----------------------------
.pie qf Europe who have been aided
by.. voluntary American philan-
thropy are well aware of the help
they have received. They are most
greateful to the American people.
“I am convinced that the work
iteing done by National War Fund
agencies in no* way duplicates that
of L'NRRA. These agencies are
providing relief materials and serv-
ices not within the UNRRA pro-
gram.
“The member agencies of the.
National War Fund have contl ib-.
Jted not only to alleviation of hu-'
man. suffering but to good will i
among nations. It is most import-
ant that We continue this work to
help thoese who are desperately!
trying to rebuild their lands and
For Plymouth
36-41. 21340
SJ0}BJ9Ud!)
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Trout, H. I. The Bowie News (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1945, newspaper, October 12, 1945; Bowie, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1363877/m1/9/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bowie Public Library.