McDowells was one of Sydney's smaller department stores, and like so many others, began as a drapery in the 19th century. It was founded as John McDowell and Partners in 1889, and became McDowell and Coogan in 1893 when one of the original partners dropped out. In 1895 it became McDowell and Hughes, when Hughes bought out Coogan, finally becoming McDowells Ltd in 1917.
McDowells prided itself of old-fashioned service and providing value for money. Staff often spent their whole careers there, and discipline was considered to be firm, but fair. (That didn't stop one enterprising manager stealing 70 dozen pairs of stockings from his employer in the early 1920s!) Notably, McDowells refused to reduce the pay of its employees during the Great Depression.
McDowells did a lot of business via mail-order catalogue, which brings me to this publication from 1941.






