The Bowie News (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1963 Page: 5 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 20 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
BREEZE
■
SJOO
2
Quart
29c
2
1()-Oz. Box
FROZEN FOOD
Wixxly's—14-Oz.
SjOO
FISH STICKS
BOOTH
29c
5
Lbs.
29*
3
CAKES
For
For
For
MEAT MARKET SPECIALS
39c
6
For
Tall Corn Bacon
PRODUCE
SUPER SAVE
Lb.
. lb. 55c
!
Ml
Jj
$<1
2
2
25c
35c
79c
25c
35c
Garman
Chocolate
2 Vs
Can
Doctors
All Moat
All Grinds
Pound Can
King Size
For Dishes
A
I
Largo
Size
U. S. NO. 1 COLORADO REDS
Potatoes
I
SNIDER
CATSUP
COUNTY KIST
CORN
THOMPSON SEEDLESS
GRAPES
LETTUCE
• FOLGERS
COFFEE.
39c
39'
59'
39'
2SS29‘
Froah. Mealy
Lb.
29c
59c
Pint-.™™- 29C
ll-Ox. BAMA JAR
Peanut Butter
< 39' >
Half OQc
Gallon
Flour“
SHORTENING
3^49
-y HY-POWER
\ TAMALES
O 9-O».
X Cano
MellorineOkF™
SUPER SAVE MARKET
FUFF PABKTNr. lot AT REAR —USE OUR REAR ENTRANCE
55:29'
.49'
Orange Juice Golden Nip
7 Cans
PALMOLIVE SOAP
SALAD DRESSING • Beatmaid—Qt.
STYLE HAIR SPRAY
WS FRESH KOSHER DILL
PICKLES
CHARCOAL WP —10-Lbs.
GULF FLY SPRAY
SKINNER'S MACARONI OR
SPAGHETTI
ALADDIN
LOOSE LEAF FILL
BBQ SAUCE
29c VALUE
TASTY COOKIES
LIGHT CRUST
MEAL
LIBBY'S 300 Can
TOMATO JUICE
LARGE
IVORY SOAP
OLEO SUPER SAVE
RANCH BOY 300 Can
DOG FOOD
14-oz. 35c
BREMNER
tCRACKERS
10-39c
. THURSDAY, SEPT 5, 1963 — THE BOWIE NEWS — SECTION 1 — S
$119 -I
rm c.fr ’*
39c
Lb. 5'
Lk19‘
Each 7 9°
•£1OC
LEMONADE
Yellow Onions
For 25C
300 Count
39c
29c
4 Pkgs.
-89'
ft Bath
A Bars
"T* 1^^ Round - Loin • T-Bona
J I Q IX and Boneless Club
Ground Beef
BOLOGNA
CHUCK BOAST lb. 49c ARM .
1-Lb. 19C
I
i
ver
73 Junior Hi Grid
y
A good place to buy nationally
t
advertised TAYLOR MADE
MORNING GLORY
MATTRESSES, SOFA SLEEPERS, ETC.
schedule will be With Sacred
Heart of Muenster here on Thurs-
day. September 12.. Kickoff time
is 8:30 pm.
Then will follow two open
dates, and Henrietta will meet
the Cottontails here on Oct. 3.
Attempts are being made to
schedule several contests for the
seventh graders with neighbor-
ing schools.,
tried
vhirl
1. It
not
Ihris-
t the
! the
age,”
John
rised
can
Mrs.
Ward
and
Oth-
were
Ma-
idens;
rdner
Dor-
Hiite-
nders
erved
com-
get-
time.
H. F. BROOKS
S W. Tarrant • Bowie, Toxas '
orted
ville,
L C.
B.
>uted
Mrs.
Mr. and
. Worth
< was
Tu ea-
rs in
lizhop
y for
par-
[arris.
> this
demy
ictice,
th in-
home
11 call
•cting
i sev-
ad a
iwing
■' “ W World War if, -end
First game on the junior high
trons for the full 50 per cent in-
crease the company felt it need-
ed.
4. Several prominent citizens
refused to pay and the company
cut off their service. -
5. Suit has been filed by the
City -of Bellevue asking the
courts to require the company
to resume service to its patrons
at the old rate. A counter suit
has been filed by the company
asking the courts to set an ef-
fective rate. - •
In addition to this tug-of-rope
between the city and the com-
pany, a private individual. K. E.
Webb, has filed suit against
Nortex for 11,625,000 in damages
he claims the company has
caused his trucking firm by cut-
ting off telephone service to him.
Further developments will be
reported as they occur.
Prospects Suit Out
Bowie’s future football pros-
pects are bright, indeed, if the
large and enthusiastic turnout
of junior high school gridders
Tuesday is any criterion.
Seventy-three prospects greet-
ed Coaches Bob Rexroad and
W. D. Barnes, sending the coach-
es scurrying to lockers and
chests to find helmets, pads and
other equipment.
Rexroad will be the eighth
grade coach, and for the time
being, it will be the eighth gra-
ders who will represent junior
high in the 8-game schedule this
fall.
Of course, if a seventh grader
of exceptional ability turns up,
he will gladly be assigned a post
on the junior high team.
Rexroad will have the talents
of 41 eighth graders at his dis-
posal, in all stages of experience
and some completely without.
Barnes can call on the ser-
vices of 32 seventh graders,
practically all neophytes.
I Bellevue citizens and the Nor-
Itex Telephone Company are in
a knock-down, drag-out legal bat-
tle which grew from proposed
irate increases but promises to
take off in all directions before
the dust settles.
Sequence of events has been
more or less like this:
1. Nortex appeared before the
city and requested rate increas-
es amounting to about 50 per
cent.
1 The city granted a twenty-
five per cent increase.
3. Bills were sent out to pa-
Bowte Personals
Miss Judy Wright and David
McGowan of Borger spent Sun-
day night with Judy's grand-
mother. Mrs. L. P. Bray Mrs.
Bray’s sister, Mrs. Leona Smith
Linda and Jerry and Bobby
Camper of Odessa and Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Smith and sons of Dal-
las spent Thursday and Friday
with Mrs. Bray.
Labor Day guests of Mr. end
Mrs. Will Kranow were Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Duncan of Wis-
ter, Okla., and Mr. and Mrs.
Hoyt Duncan an* children of
Duncan, Okla. Mrs. Jessie Stin-
son and Mrs. Amber Fa rar of
Dallas were also visitors
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Monroe
had as visitors this week Dale
Monroe of Liberty Hill, Ralph
Monroe and family of AMerfa,
Karen Foster of Abilene Chris-
tian College, Jude and Opal
Chadwick of Ponca City, Okla.,
Stacy Andrews of Lawton, Okla.,
and Hough and Geneva Buck-
ner of Friona. Tne .Chadwicks
and the Buckhers * attended the
Park Springs Homecoming Sun-
day and visited with many form-
er friends during their stay.
Mrs. Flora Sauls
Dies al Electra
Funeral services are to be
held today for Mrs. Flora Sauls,
aged 90„ who had lived in Mon-
tague County most of her life.
The daughter of Col. and Mrs.
John A. Wilson, eerly county
pioneers, she died in an Electra
rest home where she resided tor
the past few months.
Services will be held at Bur-
gess Memorial Chapel at 10 a. tn.
today.
Interment will be in Elmwood
Cemetery under the direction of
Burgess Funeral Home.
Mrs. Saul was born in Mc-
Norvilic, Tennessee on September
18, 1873.
She is survived by one brother,
Boone Wilson of Bowie, and two
sisters, Mrs. C. W. Wiley of Fort
Worth and Mrs. Jesse Wilson
Hill of Wichita Falls.
Pallbearers will be Fuy Can-
trell, Amos Noel, C. E. Hill,
Johnnie Johnson, O. C. Wolsey
and Sam Cleveland.
ellevue Patrons Go to Court
* • *
Phone Rate Increase
J. W. Thompson
Dies in California
John William Thompson, aged
42, former Bowie resident, died
Monday in a Veterans Adminis-
tration hospital at Redondo
Beach, California.
Funeral air an Moments are
pending at the Burgess Funeral
Home i» Bowie.
Thompson was a veteran of
attended
Bowie School before entering the
service.
He is survived by his step-
mother, Mrs. Bertha Thompson,
six sisters, Mrs. Dorothy Woolf
and Mrs. Bemiece Oliver of
Bowie; Mrs. Ernestine Ray of
Odessa; Mrs. Gracie McNatt of
Graham; Mrs. Ola Mae Denton
of Oklahoma City, and Mrs.
Maggie Wallace of Wichita
Falls; four brothers, Kelly of
Oklahoma City; Lonnie, serving
with the armed forces in Ger-
many; Horace of Starr, Texas,
and James of Dallas, and one
son, Don of Redondo Beach.
Newport
The cemetery association met
with Mrs. John Lemons, Tues-
day, for the regular meeting.
Old and new business v/as dis-
cussed and refreshments were
served. The next meeting will
be at the home of Mrs. Luther
McManus. ..
Visiting in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Luther and Mrs. Jen-
nie McManus, Jerry, Karen of
Bowie, Mr. end Mrs. Donald J.
Gartz of Wichita Palls, N
Mrs. C. L. Welborn of Ft.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Roberts of
Denton, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Martin and boys of Irving.
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. McDaniel
and Tommy, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Jones, Kay and Karen of Fort
Worth, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Coyle
and family of Graham, Mrs.
Grace Pickens of Bowie all vis-
ited in the home of Mr. and Mr.
Hobart Coyle this weekend.
Mrs. Cecil Pickett and Mr.
and Mrs. Lindon Smith and
James of Jacksboro, left for Cal-
ifornia Friday for a 10 day visit
with relatives there.
Visiting in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. John Lemons this
week end were their son, Mr.
and Mrs. Johnnie Lemons and
children of Oklahoma City and
their daughter, Mr. and Mra.
Kenneth Schmittou, Vicky and
Kendall of Nocona. Mr. and Mrs.
John Lemons visited her sisters
Mrs. Vera Chapman and Mrs.
Mozeil Spikea in the Henrietta
hospital Saturday. Both had maj-
or surgery.
Mrs. Jim Hardin and Tracy
of Wichita Falls visited her par-
ents Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Ogle
and the girls a few days this
week
Mrs. John Woody visited her
son Mr. and Mrs. Richard Alex-
ander and family in Wichita
Falls during the week.
The date of family night has
been changed from the third
Monday night to the first Mon-
day night of the month.
1
f
7
8
3
4
6
z
SHRfflRDCKJF?
I QUALITY. ..
I / 09 \ MEASURE
byyourcar*8
IS
/ I-
We don’t want to make an
ISSUE
SWIM SUITS
Gayle Bradley
JEWELER
199 WEST WISE
of it, but we believe we have
the best selection of silver
plate in this area. Wish you
would come in today and look
through our selection Whe-
ther you like clean, strong
lines that might appeal to
professional
GRIDDERS
instead of dinner jackets For
informal or formal dinner
ware, you’ll find shelves full
of bargains here.
or the delicate and intricate
patterns out of the traditional
past you'll find patterns in
our silverware selection that
will please you to a “T".
You’ll want silver for more
formal occasions, stainless
steel for your informal dining
—where you wear
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lynn, Emerson, Jr. The Bowie News (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1963, newspaper, September 5, 1963; Bowie, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1364076/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bowie Public Library.