The Bowie News (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, June 16, 1939 Page: 1 of 8
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mamder of the summer witn
their aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
E. Scott Avery.
J. N. Langston of Ft. Worth
was the guest of his parents dur-
ing the week-end.
r in "Ei
hidden Money.'
X.... MAJESTIC
Now Shwoing—J<
now on* of th* Thi
toon in "Overland I
era."
At the Theaters
-—:—
RITZ
Now Showing thru Saturday
—"All Quiet on the Weetem
Front" with Lew Ayrea and
Slim Summerville.
Pre Vue. Sunday and Mon-
day-Dorothy Lamour and
Lloyd Nolan in "St. Louis
Blues.**
Tuesday only—Bette Davis in t
"Dark Victory." . I
Wednesday and Thursday—j
Double Program^—The Jones |
Family in "Everybody's Baby" I
and "Sr" •
couple of lamp chimneys, a new
hall-acre bread pan, a pudding
pan or two, and some new cups
and saucers and goodness knows
what else. We hurry, hurry. The
sun will set long before we reach
(Continued on lest Dare)
“The thrill that comes once in a
life time” begins for us:’ Mother
takes out a list that she has been
compiling for weeks Worsted,
gingham, calico, enough for sev-
eral dresses aro'und for all of us
girls. Enough outing and canton
flannel to keep the whole family
warm during the winter. Black,
sleeved, fleece lined undershirts,
heavy ribbed stockings, long
Bleachin’, unbleached domestic
by the bolt. Elastic, buttons, pins
both safety and straight. Needles
in every size and everything else
that a family might be in need of
after a six months absence from
town.
And wonder of wonders! A trip
to the Millinery Department
where Miss Frankie Cummins
created a charming hat for each
of us. Then to the shoe depart-
ment where a big good natured
fellow they call “Leslie” fits us
all out with two pairs of shoes
around. (Leslie and Miss Cum-
mins may not have worked at
Daube's at the same time.)
Father rushes over to Lyon &
Matthews Co., for the purchased
some staples and a half keg of
nails. He has some' building to
dp and the orchard fence must
be set over to accommodate that
last row of young trees. Mother
trips across the street to the
K.
Bowie Lake
Tragedy struck Bowie about 9:45 Thursday night when
a ya* want ,
or results.
*
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a
Texas.
LADIES, LOOK TO YOUR LAURELS
-0-
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B&
L‘!.
Revival To Begin
Sunday At Montague
BOWIE PROJECT REMAINS
on p: W. A. ACTIVE LIST
the
at
New Members
Inducted Into
Rotary Club
FORMER VASHTI RESIDENT
TELLS OF 2ND MONDAYTRIPS
Empty Gasoline Tank
Explodes Saturday
District Superintendent
Holds Conference
IEWS CO.
>aints.
irts
Zell
lue
'ert
ted to
cornet
Bradley Jewelry
Store Has Watch
Cleaning Machine
Highway 370 To
Be Improved
. — p ■■■,• ;
Miss Lovice Burnett of Arling-
ton and Miss Betty Burnett of Ft.
Worth arc here to spend the re-
Brown. Stripling and .finally _s,e_lls
to Daube, the highest bidder.
Tfhen the hired man takes the
teams to Stephen’s Wagon Yard
H E
0
1
0
0
0
0
es 2. | . L
t out, was the guest Sunday
nd 3. mother, Mrs. M. A. Your
T
.000 <
000 I
those attending,
— Mr. and -Mrs. . .. . .
be host and hpstess on Thursday
night. June 22. Lancaster night
will be observed Friday, June 23.-
There will be no Saturday serv-
ices.
Rev. Peek, who recently moved
to Bowie, will use as his subject,
"Lovers of Jesus” on Sunday
AB
.. 5
4
4
3. 0
4 O
3
“ 3 0
3 0
1 0
2 0
fice has been kept open daily for
to register.
will be
present time 682 old peopli
ceiving Old Age Assists
Montague county.
Mays to Bowie and
guests of Rev. and
Westbrook.
In keeping with his policy of
giving the best to his customers,
Gayle Bradley has installed a new
ana modern watch cleaning ma-
chine which cleans watches to a
better advantage and cleans bet-
ter than it is possible to do by
hand.
The machine was installed the
latter part of last week. For
cleaning, watches are taken apart
and placed in fine wire screen
baskets with the more delicate
parts placed in separate baskets.
Thestv baskets are clamped on
shafts on the machine then placed
into jars filled with fluids espe-
cially prepared for watch clean-
ing. . A rheostat controls the
speed. Every five seconds the
motion is reversed. Four fluids
are used in cleaning each watch.
After removal from the fluid an
automatic dryer completes the
cleansing process. Three watches
may be cleaned at the same time.
Mr. Bradley invites his custom-
ers to call at the Jewelry Store
and inspect the new machine.
The first broke out in the pro- i - - ----—
jefction room of the Nocona pic-| T._ _L Z. 3.~
- hire theatre but-no pen ie resulted I —7-n/----=— -----3 . t7. ■ "
as patrons marched out in an ord-1 firgt dfownmg occurred at Bowie Lake,
erly fashion. The interior of the ‘
theatre building was" entirely
gutted, inflicting damage esti-
mated at $30,000. ■ -
The Bennett Jewelry store .and. with- Miss Lula Bell Jackson and Wendell McCloud.
Frank vleggs_Barber shop were
completely destroyed while* two
dry goods stores, the Flint-store
and the Foshee store, the White
Spot Cafe, owned by, Paul Coch-
ran, and the Nocona Drug Co.,
were damaged by smoke and
water. . "
The Business institutions dam-
aged by fire, water and smoke
were hous'ed in the Whaley build-
ing.
Assistant Fire Chief, Jess
Barnes. Warren Brewer and Karl
Wachtel1 were the fire fighters
.making the trip to Nocona. Mr.
.Hachtel drove the truck. Patrpl-
the drive. A number of Bowie
. citizens also followed the truck
Bowie's Firo Department re-
sponded to a neighbor's tall for
ajd Saturday night-and greatly
rous fik-winch swept one ;,f the ALMOST ENTIRE TOWN JOIN§ IN SEARCH
1 FOR BODIES DURING NIGHT
Bowie's Fire
Dept. Answers
Call For Aid
. —-—
Holiness Revival
Begins Monday
At Rock Hill
2 Drown in
t a school of ■
held. Each even-
----!. fire cere-.
given. Sunday ■
morning, before breaking camp,
devotional was led by Bennett
Cooksey, scouter of Thrift. Texas. 1
He will be remembered as one of
the judges at the Bowie Camporee
held recently at Pelham Park. • 1
On Saturday and Sunday tests
were given with several of the
Swimming merit badges were
presented to Hubert vassor, John
Yarbough, and Leon Randell, ■
First aid merit badges went toJ
David Gregory, John Yarbrough,
and Leon Randell. Huber Vassar
and Bert Cassies, Jr., qualified
for first class swimming.
David Gregory was elected to
the Order of the Arrow, because
of his outstanding camping ab-
ility.
Hubert Vassar, patrol leader of
Troop 116. passed the rigid re-
quirement test' for a Red . Gross.
Junior Life Guard.
The following scouts of Troop
91 of Bowie attended: David
Gregory, 'Leon Randell, John
Yarbrough, Tip Jimerson, Oral J.
Roberts, Joseph Wiese, " Irvin
From Troop 116; Hete.
Hubert Vassar, Bert Cassies, Jr.
Paul Donald, Jr., from Troop 98
Montague, Watt Self, Jr., and Paul
Martin.
_. Glfen- Jr-- Investigator for
• | the Old-Age Assistance Commis-
sion, states that the Bowie office,
located ^t the City Auditorium,1
will be open only on Wednesday,
Jiine 21. arid Wednesday, June 28,
to register applicants for Old Age
Assistance under the new law.
On Friday. June 21 Governor W.
Lee O'Daniel signed the Liberal-
ized Old' Age Assistance law.
Since then 129 have registered.
For the past two weeks the of-
pf those wtshihg
ie July schedule
AnnouncedJlater^ALjthe
-ssistance in
Totals
BLUEGROVE—
Player
M. Chiles, 2b. . 5 A 4
S. Chiles. p. ss. 4 0 1
Calloway, cf. p. 4 0 1
G. Chiles, c. ___.3. 0 0
K. Chiles. 3b. 4 O 0
Quattlebaum, lb. 3 0 1
Russell. If. 9 0 1 0
Holland, ss. p. 3 0 10
Hill, cf ' 10 0 0
Van rlouten, rf. 2 0 10
Akins, rf. 1 0 0 0
Totals .2.33 0 7 1
Summary " Ruris “batted in,
Endsley 1, Williams 2; Doubles,
Endsley 1. Quattlebaum, 1; Left
on bases, Bowie 9, Bluegrove, 10;
Innings by Fincher 6, no runs, 7
hiWi Kuans 3, no ninti.-no hits, S.
Chiles 1-3, 3 runs, 2 hits, Holland,
5 2-3, no runs. 5 hits, Holland 2.
no funs, no hits; Walked, by
Fincher 2, Evans 0, S. Chiles 2,
Holland 2, Calloway I; Struck out,
by Fincher 21 Ev'ans 1, Holland "
and Calloway 2.
. 000 000
' .300 000 —
tut- Lv-vivdi. ouu-
ject «(ill- be “My Hearts Desire.”
On Monday he will speak on,
“The Idea of God.” '!The Remis-
sion of Sms" will be his subject
for Tuesday. On Wednesday he
will use as his subject. "The
Lamb of God.” On Thursday
"Christ and His Creed" will be
discussed. Friday's subject will
be "The Way of Peace," One of
-the most outstanding sermons -to-
be delivered during the two weeks
will be the closing sermon on
Sunday. July 2, when Rev. Peek
will talk on "Why the Christian
Church." -r *
The public is cordially invited
to attend all services.
--------o--------
Dr. Jack Younger of Amarillo,
was the guest Sunday of his
mother, Mrs. M. A.' Younger and
sister, Dr. Gladys Cox. He was
en route to Dallas to attend
“dental boardTheeting ’ * ~
*
w*
I An. overwhelming majority pf
K applicants for Texas projects now
K - on the Public Works Administra-
K “ tiop’s pending list have- certified
their desire to have their projects
tion, it wa.-, reported to Admim-
■Jf strator Harold L. Ickes by George
H M. -Bull, Regional TWADirector.
recently.——----------•’——-——... .. . .
I Although most of the applica- tracks was ignited when a car,
K • tions for -pending- Texas projectstused to_J J" '---- **—
M were filed last summer when the right of
■ 1938 PWA program was getting
underway, some of them have
I | been on PWA’s books since 1935.
In his report to Administrator
I&: Ickes,. Bull, said that eighty-three
H per cent of the Texas applicants
BE wanted their projects continued
on the active list'for considera-
tion under such future programs;
as might be authorized.
' The total number of Texas pro-
jects certified as “active” in the
extensive survey is 260. The
— estimated .cost of these projects
totals $134,162,683, BuITdeclared.
"Whether, any ,or all of these
projects would receive allotments
In the event of a new appropria-
tion,”. Bull said, 'is -primarily
—- dependent upon the terms of the
legislation providing the appro-
. , ...
Included On the list of active
. applications are... tk- ...
projects of interest to Montague
--county residents and residents, of |. needed:
--surrounding counties: Bowie dis-
posal plant, $115,900; Nocona
Municipal improvements, $67,272;
Henrietta court house, $146,454,;
Gainesville Electric plant, $424,-
405; Muenster Sanitary sewer,
$33,947.
Assistant Coach
Elected By Board
At a meeting of the sphool
board Monday evening Charles’
Ricks of Ennis, Texas, was elected
assistant coach and history teach-
er in the High School for the term
of 1939-40.
Mr. Ricks comes highly recom-
mended. He is a graduate of
North ’Texas State Teachers Col-
lege at Denton, receiving his
Bachelor" of Science ' degrpe this
spring majoring both irr history
and physical education. He has
had nine years experience as a
football player, four at the Ennis
High School, two years at the
Texas Military College and three
years at N. T. S. T. C. Eightyears
of his ball playing was in the back , ,
field arid the other year in the duet will be given by John Price,
line. He had been elected as co- The Bowie quartet, composed
captain for the coming term at
N T. S. TZ c- had he returned, as
he was eligible to play one year
more. -
Two Weeks Revival Begins
Sunday Ai Christian Church
.------— »-------:----------------~
A two Weeks' reyival will begin
Sunday, June 18 at the - First
Christian church; The-Rev. M. S.
Peek, pastorjiof the-church, will
conduct the services. . The Rev.
rivgun, ■ associate pastor of
the First Christian .church of
Houston, wtH have charge of the
-musk- and also the training of ‘First
the children. Mr. Hughes will “
train a choir—composed * of all enee,
children who care to attend and
sing. They will be given an. op-
portunity to sing a special each
night after rehearsing enough to
be able to do so” .Mr. Hughes
comes to Bowib highly recom-
mended. He is a graduate of T.
C. U. and has served at the Hous-
ton church for the past two years.
A novel attendance’contest will ,v
be conducted the first week of
the revival. The services will be
built around "Family Night.” On
Monday night Mr. and Mrs. Lum
Lovette will be host and hostess
for the evening. Persons whom
they’invite to come, and they a A
tend, 'will be counted on their
recorar Tuesday rtlght. Junc 20.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Suddath will
Jje host and hostess. Wednesday
Tright, June 21.. will be Benson
night with Mr. and Mrs. D: B.
Benson and their daughter. Miss .
Dana Sue mvitmg a^dl.greeting a_juwks
N, B—Gary will
AB R H E
0 1 0
1 0 0
0 "0 j
1 ' "
1 11
4--L
1 1
in"
i o
i o
o o
The Bowie Dodgers played
I the Bluegrove team in the best
* ’ i season
. ” Sunday ,
o The score was 3 to 0 in the Dodg-
’ For years the men have com- :
plained that the gentler sex was
usurping their place iri -the busi-
ness world, but no complaint has
• "been voiced * by the women
against men stepping into their
- "Sphere, yet it’s time for them to
^fckiok to their laurels for a Bowie
^Haan has set out to beat them
^it their qwn game
Five years ago S." R. Huffstut- C McDonald, cf.
—tyr was closely confined to his ==
' home eating fdf his wife, who
______uryn ill In nrrirr to have sonu*-
thing to obcupy him, whence took
up quilt making.
art of piecing quilts so fascanaijng
he continued to make lovely
quilts, At the present time he
has pieced thirteen quilts and has
quilted four of them. One of his
lovely works "of art took a five
. dollar prize at the Texas Centen-
nial.'
Mr. Huff&uttet designs most of
... his quilts. One of the most at-
tractive of these is one ne has
named “The Twelve Chosen.” It
is a full double bed size, seventy-
two by eighty inches.
He plans to exhibit this lovely-
quilt at the County Fairi in Union
City, Tenn., the Tennessee..State.
Fair at Memphis, Tenn., and the
Montague County Fair to be held
in Bowie Oct. -4, 5, 6 and 7.
Mr. Huffstutter was born in
Tennessee sixty-eight years ago in
’July. HcmWRes "HS'liotije with
Mr. and Mrs. Jr N; Langston, Mrs.
Langston being a niece.
---------------o------;‘
Mrs. J. A. Burgess, and daugh-
ter, Miss Alleen Burgess, Mrs. J.
S. Eidson and Mrs. M. M. Mitch-
% ell visited Tuesday with Mrs.
•*• Eid*™ * daughter o f Irving. Bluegrove
TJowie ......1
Elder G. K. Wallace, well!
known minister of Wichita, Kan., I
will conducrrirTeVtUal—at the’
Church of Christ at Montague be-!
ginning Sunday, June 18 and con- i
tinuing through Sunday, June 25.1
The public.is cordially invited ,
to attend and hear tl>o fine
speaker. ’ -46tiwie Rotary club at the regu-
Scouts Qualify
For Merit Badges ; *-
Shortly after 7:00 ojclock- Satur-
day morning an explosion wreck-
ed the peace of the early morn-
ing’hour. '■
A 550 gallon gasoline - tank,
lying empty ’near the , Denver
used to burn weeds freyn thy
-r Way, passed near! fhe
tank. No one was injured.—
T^he tank, belonging to the Sin-
clair Refining—Gempany, was
completely demolished, —
Beneficial Rains
Fall In Bowie
i—..— ——*
Twice within a week Bowie re-
ceived beneficial rains. On June
5 one and three-quarter inches of
rain fell, while one inch fell on
Monday, June 12.
Farmers were jubilant after the
second rain and many were over-
heard to remark that it came at
the most opportune time. The
high winds following the first -------- —
the . * following ram had dried the earth forming John Hughes,
i m Mnntasue a crust and the second'rain’Vdk *u“
4
4
—<T
2
.....A
4 0
4 ’0
--3~O'
4 0
2 0
,1 0
Bowie Dodgers
Play Vashti Sun.
Bowie Man Makes,
' game of the season at Pelham
UUlllS aS nODDy |§?mP Park Sunday aftenioon.
ers favor '
Vashti's team will play
! Dodgers—Bunday afternoon
Pelham Park at 3:00 o'clock.
The following * Summary ts-
given of the garni’ played Sunday:
BOWIE—
Player
Hyatt; 2b. ‘
Bowling, rf
T. McDonald, rf
of G. (Doc) Jackson, Ike Parks, C.
C. Price and Henry Parks, will
entertain with several numbers.
Probably several other entertain-
ing numbers will also be pre-
sented.
-The caravan will form at Gol-
den Hardware store 4>n Wise
street for the trip to Bluegrove.
It is hoped to have a large
representation of Bowie citizens
attending the program which is
Bowie’s Goodwill Party for her
neighbors.
GOODWILL PROGRAM GIVEN
AT RLUEGROVE TONIGHT
....... ■ ■ ■■■ ’"t — -I ' ...........
H. M. Moore, program chair- -
man, has arranged a fine and en-
joyable program to be presented
Friday flight at the spacious Blue-
grove High School Auditorium.
—Dr. J. T. Lawsfln awill aid a> ■—
master of ceremonies.
The first number on the pro-
gram will be a concert played by
the Bowie High School Band.
A humorous one-act play, “Hill-
billy Justice or the Judge Refused
to Open the Case Until Somebody v
Brought Him a Chaser,” will be
presented. Mr. Moore directs Jhe
play which has the following
cast: Cecil Daniel, Ned Horton, 1
La Grande Henderson, G. (Doc)
Jackson, H. M. Moore, Ike Parks,
Mrs. C. S. Henderson, Hetin
Parks, Mrs Ted Moore, E. M.
Stallings and A. O. Bacher. ’
Dr. Pratt Irby is expeci
play a trumpet solo and a
7v?ntymr mo?.ndthyatl 1 h^ircem
tury in Bowie, played an “import-
ant part in the lives of growing
youngesteri-, The following story
from Mrs. Eth’Ol George Joplin
of Knickerbocker, Texas, will
bring back happy memories to
old timers of Montague and sur-
98 rounding communities. Mrs. Jop-
l lin is a well known resident of
Knickerbocker. She is a member
of the Poetry Society of Texas,
-------Xbe San Angelo - Poetry SnciCty.
and reporter on the San Angelo
Standard Times. • —
Her story follows: ■
Bowie! The word carries me
back many, many years. I see
myself a child of eight, black pig-
tails, freckled nose, brown eyes
eagerly straining to catch the
first glimpse of the red" roofs of
the buildings of Bowie.
The horses prance and shy at
the unfamiliar sights along the
roadside. The wheels of the wa-
gon ahead knock and rumble un-
der their load of two bales qf
cotton. The hired man answers
the many and varied questions of
my brother who occupies the seat
beside him.
My heart is-’in my mouth as
father patiently tries to calm the
team that draws the wagon in
which he with mother and the
children have made the eighteen
mile trip since day break. We
cross the old bridge over the rail-
road tracksr the most dreaded
part of the journey for me, and I
relax a little. Father urges the
bewildered team on until we
come to the main thoroughfare of
the little city. We climb down,
stretch our cramped limbs and
await the sale of the cotton to
begin our semi-yearly purchases.
Father haggles with Daube,
intendent of the Denton District,
pl Vdched Sunday inOl l>iiig at the
tn church mid aljo
held the third* quarterly confer-
During the conference, W. H.
Stephens was elected delegate to
the annual conference to be held
in Denton the latter part of
October.
Mrs". Mays accompanied Rev.
both were
Mrs. J.- H.
Eleven Boy Scouts from BbWie
and two from Montague, accom-
panied by Orville Haralson; as-
si.-tant scoutmasmr of Troop 98 of
Montague, returfied Sunday froth i_ ,
■ ; Old Age Assistance' --
°“ic?Open June 2128
Dale Eales, scoutmaster of Troop : For Registration
91, E. W. Bullard, Earl Gregory |
and Ned Barlow, who went up :
Saturday to stay over night in|j. B.
camp.
During the week
aac.caa a. as.aaa a.. inStrUOtfon WaS h*'"’
morning, the opening sermon of Jhg impressive camp
the revival. Hisr-evdhjng sub- monies were givei
Miss Vivian Lewlyn and Lawrence Edgin drowned when
they became excited when their motor boat Shipped water.
Alarmed they jumped up throwing both into the water, along
Cloud, owner of the boat, was piloting. Miss Jackson held on.
to her life preserver and flash light and was able to see Ed-
gin. and Miss Lewlyn go down locked in each Others arms.
McCloud undertook to break them apart and was dragged
under once<
Edgin who was about nineteen years of age was consid-
ered, to be a good swimmer. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. D. '
L. Edgin who reside about four miles east of Bowie. He was
a graduate of the local High School finishing with the class
of 1938 During the last two years in High School he gained
fame as an outstanding football player and was captain
of the team his senior year. He has been employed with the
Western Auto Supply Co.
Miss Lewlyn was the grand-daughter of Mrs- E. R. Sloan,
with whom she’ made her home. Her father besides in
Sweet wale r, She is a niece of & R. Sloan, prominent resident
- of Ringgold;-—■*---------1— ---—■ • ■————----
At the time of the accident C. A. Wilson and Hershel
Stephens wereTisKihg" within a few hundred yards of the
young people who were within 150 feet of the shore Mne in
water ten or twelve feet deep. They made a desperate at-
, tempt, to reach the young couple but as far as they'TOUld tell
they never came to the surface, * ->■ .,
When* word of the tragedy was brought to town several-
hundred persons went to the lake, many to aid in the search.
At midnight Thursday the bodies had not been found.
Widening of bridges and cul-
verts on U. S. Highway 370 from,
Bowie to Henrietta and Henrietta
to Wichitrf Falls will be started
next week, with . a tentative
schedule for operation to start
Monday. June 19.
This will be a WPA project
Lby rthu-iState- Jiighway.
Department.
Drainage structures with rails
vvTH be widened to thirty-six feel
from twenty feet ' and' smaller
structures without rails will be
extended .to forty-two feet?
A Holiness revival starts Satur- ...
day night in the Rock Hill com-[Mr. McNatt arid Mr. Ayres joined
munlty. The closing date has | this week.
not been set. Rev. J. O. Webb, of! Miss Ella Francis Golden, club
Selma, and Rev. Sammie Case of sweetheart, was at the piano for
public is cordially'invited [ ~
?.d. ' soi
Three new rnembers were .in-
ducted into membership of the
—’Harwcrkiy'luneheorrhcld Wcdncs-* assisted in controlling the disast
'day at the Morrow Grill. 2’ r ;
T, P. Evans gave the induction, business blocks of Nocona before I
. talk ■accepting into membership midnight Saturday. 7 \ 7’1
Henry T. Ayres, Mayor J. CzMc»
Natt and the Rev. J. H. West-
--brook, , —— -----------:_____:
Rev. Westbrook became a mem-’
bgr at last week’s meeting and
I Mr. McNatt artd Mr. Avres i
mi. 4
date has 1 this week.
"'s1:!:, cf i Mice El!_ E.____L 2.12______
.... .. , swec’’
Bowie, will conduct the services.’ the sing-song.
The public is cordially' invited “' J. A,. Burgess and Frank Ben-
to attend- - —| son' were"guests*of the club.
Endsley, ss. ,
Williams, 3b,
Coffield. lb.
imug io uveupj nun, wnvn nv iwiv Nichols. It
not busy at her bedside, he took Simmons, e.
His wife died Fincher, p.
three'years ago but he found the Evans, p.
to make lovely
I
all
ork
ow
■
1
in the County Fair at Union City, Tenn., the State Fair at Memphis, Tenn., and the Mon-
St H. Huffstutter and his lovely jjuilt, “The Twelve Chosen^ which^he plans to exhibit
tague County Fall Fair. .. . —
• •
*
?s
Ig
8
/'ell
?od
50c
BOWIE. MONTAGUE COUNTY, TEXAS FRIDAY, JUNE
7 1939
NUMBER
VOLUME XVIII
BUILDING
F
L&
L-
MONEY SPENT AT HOME
IS THE CORNERSTONE
OF COMMUNITY
YOUR" COUNTY PAPER
8 Pages
OF LIVE LOCAL NEWS.
RURAL NEWS. EDIT-
ORIALS AND FEA
TURES IN THIS ISSUE.
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Perry, Coy. The Bowie News (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, June 16, 1939, newspaper, June 16, 1939; Bowie, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1363707/m1/1/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bowie Public Library.