Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 24, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1932 — Page 14
PAGE 14
RHYME WINS $5 FIRST PRIZE IN TIMES CONTEST Mrs. Josephine E. Bennett Awarded Check for Sales Slip Jingle. Mr* Josephine F. Bennett, 1322 North Bradbury avenue, ha* $5 more to spend for shopping than she figured when 'he made up this erks budget. Mrs. Bennett U Tuesday's winner in The Times Pales Slip contest, which will continue until June 30. Six prizes are awarded daily and there will be a large number of awards at the end of the competition. The following Jingle, with a Morrison s sales slip, won first prize lor Mrs. Bennett: I lake I if. Ja*t > I Anri it. Thit D.pr.Mlnn t never mind It. A'viti watch adi in The Tlm.i. Anil a Bargain alwavi And. Tuesday s second prize. $3. goes to Mrs. W. A. Collins. 53 N. Hamilton Avenue— Mother Hubbard. the woman in the shoe, lost their banking balance; so would you. if The Times forgot to print Kroger's week-end lucky tips - ’ Third prize of $1 goes to Floyd !B Lytle. 2351 N. Alabama Street—- “ This sales slip proved lucky for me. Art Rose put his ad in The Times. 1 have anew battery; Rose has a new customer. Miss Elizabeth Laird. 2111 Lexington Avenue. Sl—“Shoes, shoes, shoes, galore, but my lucky ones were bought at Miller-Wohl.” Ernest Avenue. $1 —"I felt the luckiest guy, when thus bargain I did spy, at Efrovmson’s was the lucky buy. because in The Times they advertise.” Mrs. Hazel Gibson. 213 'N Belle Vteu. sl—‘With a bargain like I lound at Goldstein’s in shoes, and reading Th Times daily, this sales slip ought to make me a winner.” R°ad the rules carefully elsewhere In todays paper. Buy from Times advertisers. Save your sales slips and mail them to The Times Sales Slip Contest. Editor with a statement of not more than twenty-five words on why you consider your purchase and slip lucky. .Send them in today. Somebody Is hound to be luckv. It might be you. Times advertisers gladly give you sales slips. ‘SURGERY FATHER - DIES Dr. William Keen, 95, Performed Operation on Cleveland. Bit I >iiti'l /'rent PHILADELPHIA. June 8. Dr. William Williams Keen. 95, widely 1 known throughout the world as “the I father of American surgery,” died j early today at his Philadelphia home. He had been ill for some weeks. | His life had been devoted to work and study in surgery and all forms of science. He was one of two sur- j geons to perform a secret, operation on President Grover Cleveland in 1893. Grew to Present Paper June 14 Bit I rrrtl TOKIO. June 8 American Ambassador Joseph C. Grew will pre- j sent his credentials to Emperor j Hirohito June 14. The ambassador luid Mrs. Grew and their daughter will be the luncheon guests of the ■ emperor and empress.
ART SAYS:
New York s u perintend-1 ent of Anti-! Saloon League states that repeal of eight cent h amend m ent; will bring back the saloons. Impossible. The drug stores
p *** m ' \ s k L ft . \K
Art Rwe
have all the corners. * am Headline: “Will Ilavs to Take Reins at G. O. P. Parley.” But they’re liable to "whoa” when he says "giddap.” a a a Tire manufacturers are working day and night to fill orders before the new tire and tube tax becomes effective this month. If you buy now you effect a substantial saving. With Miller tire prices now the lowest in history and terms never as liberal, you’ll lie doing your purse a big favor by equipping all around at prices that you may never again be able to duplicate. mum CAtf C The Chief Tire Changer ROSE TIRE CO., Inc. 365 S. Meridian St. MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTORS TUNE IN TONITE 6:45 WKBF
Eye Glasses $5.00 to $12.00 Ex. initiation W ithout t hftrg. aatlafnrtion Guaranteed Hoosier Optical Cos. lit V ILLINOIS jT. Also Hranrh at Fountain Square 101.1 Virginia Asa.
ik Safety for Savings Fletcher American NATIONAL BANK C®r*MßT c* mq'lb? and
EVANS' EWE FOR ALL PURPOSES
8-A Graduates of School 21
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Top Row f<left to right!—Thelma V. Vaughn, Ruth Hastings, Opal Bennett. Frances Smith, Ruth Lydy, Dessie Calvin. Second Row—Mary Rains, Joan Bailey. Mary Suits, Dorothy Amos, Irene Dixon, Frances Brewer.
Here Is List of Rules for Sales Slip Contest
Here are the rules of The Times Sales Slip Contest. Read them carefully. You will find them easy to follow: 1. Anv one end every one may compete In the Sates Siip Contest except employes of The Indianapolis Times and their families. 2. Any one may enter the Saies Slip Contest bv sending saies slips of merchandise they have purchased from Times advertisers, accompanied by a brief statement of not more than twenty-five i2si words telling why they think any one or anu number of these sales slips should oe luckv or why they have been lucky tn patronizing a certain store or why the purchase has a lucky association. 3. In preparing brief statements at not more than twenty-five words, give simple reasons vou think of which can be associated with Luck. Here are a few examples: Example A—“ These sales slips should be lucky because the prices comprise the luckv numbers of 7 and 11.” Example B—“ This sales slip represents a luckv purchase. It s the greatest bargain of the kind I have ever seen." Example C —“lt was a lucky day when I saw this merchandise advertised In The Times.” Example D—“l have had nothing but lucky breaks since I bought this dress at my favorite store.” Example E~“The new hat I purchased at (name storei was lucky because It also brought an engagement ring from my future husband.” 4. The brief statement may be written
Just Do This 1 — Save the sales slips that you get with any purchase made from any Times advertiser. When you make a purchase, ask salesperson if that store’s sales slip is eligible in The Indianapolis Times Sales Slip Contest. 2 Write a statement of 25 words or less telling why you think the slip should be lucky. 3 Mail the slips and the statement to Lucky Sales Slip Editor, The Times.
Valued like TheAe Invite COMPAM §QIM The Famous 17~JEWEL “GRUEN” BAGUETTE ★ 14-Kt. Gold Filled Case Gorgeous, modern creations—so tiny—so Jr&t flOgl •/ ) slender, ret guaranteed to give accurate, dependable service. Complete with cord or link band Take a Whole Year to Pay! See r.nr complete line of beautiful XTT "Gruen” wat*-be* at the lowest prices on record. Beginning tomorrow these watch*’* will be sold for the first time on the deferred payment plan Thursday and Friday Feature! Ladies’ 17-Jewel BAGUETTE ★ Graceful, slender model* with fine 17.tewei movement*—New wft style link baud included at this low prii-e.. ■ ftfl * M wP 75c DOWN—7Sc A WEEK! * Indies’ 7-Jewel Baguette Wrist Watches, $14.95
P MILLEIV. JEWELKY COavcJ
31 North Meridian Street—Corner Meridian and the Circle
Third Row Freda Knoke, Eileen Higginbotham, Lucille Longhelt, Martha Campbell, Leon Bright, Ray Freeland. Fourth Row—Walter Pollard. Charles Munsey, John Sellars,
on the reverse side of each sales slip or on a separate piece of paper. Also write your name and address plainly on each sales slip. 5. There Is no entrance fee or charge of any kind. It is not necessary to purchase a copy of The Times to compete. The Times mav be examined at its office or at public libraries free of charge. 6. Sales slips from ail cash. C. O. D. or charge account purchases made from Times advertisers are eligible. Sales slips or evidences of time payment purchases or note plan purchase are also eligible. Where no immediate sales slips are given with time payment or note plan purchase ask store to acknowledge your purchase on firm letterhead and send this in to The ; Times the same as a sales slip. No matter | what vou have bought, so long as the i purchase was made from a Times adver- j tiser. vour sales slip or other evidence of I purchase is acceptable throughout the sales slip contest. 7 Contestants mav enter one or anv number of sales slips (accompanied ov brief statementsi each and every dav throughout the sales slip contest. 8. Anv one or anv number of Individuals mav send in and enter a!' their sales slips obtained through pi /-chases they have already made from Times advertisers. and have them credited to some special charity, church. Sunday school, hospital or anv other worthy institution. In this case, be certain to sign the sales silo with vour own name and address. as well as the name and address of the Institution vou want to treeive credit. And also be certain to write the brief statement with each of these slips or each batch of sales slips vou enter in this manner. 9. Each entry in the sales slip contest must be sent to The Sales Slip Editor. The Times bv first-class mail, fullv postpaid. Entries with insufficient postage will not be accepted, but returned by the postoffice department. 10. The Times can not. and does not assume responsibility for returning sales slips to anv contestant. All sales slips entered in the sales slip contest become the property of The Times. Sales slips which have anv personal value to contestants should not be entered. 11. The first dav's prize winners will be announced the dev after the start of the rontest and following this, dailv prize winners will be announced each dav until the close of the contest. Final prize winners will be announced a few davs after the close of the contest. 12. The decisions of the sales slip contest iudges on the merits of the brief statements submitted, telling why one or more sales slips should be luckv and the final disposition of awards, will be absolutely final. The entrv of a participant is a complete acceptance of all the conditions and regulations as printed. Neatness, originality and brevity will rount. but no elaborate treatment Is necessarv. Simplicity is best. In case of ties a duplicate award will be given each tying contestant. IS. Cash prize winners will be selected bv Judges each dav of the sales silo contest based on the merits of the orlef statements submitted. And in addition, the Judges will also select what they consider the next best brief statements arcompanied bv sales slips submitted each dav and these, together with all dailv cash prize winners, will comprise the brief statements from which the Judges will select, on the basis of merit, the final grand cash awards.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Jack Christensen, Fred Border, Max Handy. Fifth Row—Cecil Schnarr, John Flanagan, Maurice Carter, William Logsdon, William Julian, Earl Whyde.
HAPPY EMPLOYES BEST Do 8.5 Per Cent More Work Than Unhappy Ones, Survey Shows. By I nitrd Prr as PHILADELPHIA. June B—Happy employes do 8.5 per cent more work for employers than unhappy ones, a four-year study by Rexford B. Hershey of the industrial research department, Wharton School of Finance, reveals. The survey, seeking the influences affecting the emotions and efficiency of working men, discovered that wives play an important part in the attitude of a man for his work. Influencing him to live beyond his means is one of the chief ways in which a wife may develop “negative” or unhappy emotions in her husband rather than “positive - ’ or happy emotions. CAR FUMES ARE FATAL George Miller Overcome by Gas at Work in Garage. While working on an automobile in a garage at his home Tuesday night, George Miller, 1856 Singleton street, was killed when he was overcome by carbon monoxide gas fumes. A rescue squad of the fire department used an inhalator for nearly an hour and a half, but failed to revive him.
; V"-' '. W i|p JpT : ’ j ’ *'■Wyp'i ■ .. * : •• • • x , W WMBikl .Km Jsh MX SH w \ X V ’ '"j- - \ .s’.-:'"." Wf X &m\ p 2 I"m m W C-;' r M Per • r ' v ,. is. rjEs.ti. med. s sa* Boswju Aiex RUTH ... ; SiSiERS Gray ETTING ™ NA* iHlirtlT owd NOIMASI B*3NS H: *E NOW 1 p* m * | Eastern Daylight / / COLUMBIA NETWORK / / / THEY’RE WITH MILLIONS.. • 1552, UocrrT A Mmu Tobacco Cos.
STADIUM GETS NEW GARB FOR POLITICAL SHOW Chicago Palace of Sport Soon Will House Conventions. BY RAY BLACK t’nited Pru* Staff Correspondent CHICAGO. June 8 —The clang of steel on steel and the cheery whistle of the man at work rang through the Chicago stadium today as the vast structure was decked out in it*' party dress for the Republican national convention six days away. Hour by hour, the block-square palace of sport on the pear west side underwent transformation into the color-bright forum of politics where the two major parties will pick their presidential candidates and shape their platforms within the next thirty days. Work Is Speeded From the vast basement that a few months ago stabled the steers and ponies for a rodeo to the airy reaches of the oval dome, the sta- | dium rang to the thud of hammers, the whine of saws, the clatter of riveting machines and the hiss of welding torches. “We will have every flag in place and every seat fastened down by next Thursday midnight,” promised Martin J. Doherty, superintendent of construction. “The signal has been full steam and a clear road and there’s no stopping us now.” Two tons of structural steel were riveted together today to form the big platforms on which members of the national committee will sit and from which Senator Simeon D. Fess of Ohio will speak, when he calls the convention to order next Tuesday morning. Nearly 250 carpenters, steel work- ! ers, electricians, decorators, seamstresses and other workers hummed jor whistled as they worked. Almost ; without exception they had been part of the army of unemployed until given work by Doherty to get the stadium ready for the conventions. Pay Scale High They rejoiced with good reason. The scale of prices paid was: Superintendent of steel construction. sls a day; steel workers, $1.35 an hour; electricians. $1.70 an hour;carpenters, $1.34 an hour; decorators, $1.35 an hour; laborers, 97 cents an hour. In the basement, the telephone and telegraph companies have completed hooking up 30.000 feet of wire over which the descriptions of procedure will move to newspapers, homes, radio stations and cable offices. scores of wood-fiber hutches for the press writers have been installed and almost half a ton of telegraph instruments line the long operators' table. A radio “preview” of the convention will be given Thursday night over a nation-wide hookup. Horses Die in Fairground Fire By l nitrd I’rr** BOONVILLE. Ind., June B. Three race horses and several others were burned to death w‘hen fire, started by lightning, destroyed barns at the Boonville fairground Tuesday. Loss was estimated at $5,000.
THIS IS ANOTHER RENO Divorce Colony to ray Tribute to Long-Wedded Couples. By l nitrd Prr* RENO. June B—The often-mar-ried members of Reno's divorce colony will have an opportunity to view the other side of the domestic picture here Sunday when the town pays tribute to couples who have been married to each other fifty years or more. The occasion is a Reno “golden wedding” party to which all possessed of the necessary qualifications are invited. More than a score from every section of the state and the slope of northern California adjacent to Reno have signified their intentions of attending. SCHOOL CHORUS ON AIR Final WKBF Broadcast by Tupils Set for 9:30 Tonight. The junior chorus of school No. 26 will sing and Milo H. Stuart, assistant school superintendent, will speak, during the thirty-fifth and last broadcast of the public schools from 9 to 9:30 tonight over WKBF. The chorus, which has fifty voices, will sing four selections under direction of Mrs. Martha Hill, music teacher.
DR. FORSHEE OFFERS | SENSATIONAL jdpSfci. SENSATIONAL low (emmSSi scientific PRICES DENTISTRY extraction A j All Work DR. FORSHEESj // VJT I ~\ ®|,<v * >onC * >r ’ PROVEN .j J I ■ n Forshees METHOD .. E*'*f —if TT ~'W, In NO CHARGE I*-" As lt\ V\' *Wa3 BROKE* Uwn WITH OTHER vou V R *“" SI Laboratory " ORK roR C CR A ED r IT j&jjft lHf^ll r VBgA, *J| • I Dr. FOKSHEE'S Or. FORSHEE'S NATURAL r \ FACE FORMING BEAUTYPLATE/ \ PLATE 1 .OU ful contour \^ 0 / IMateWed at this price! Perm restores all ‘ fectly matched Teeth—Conforms J. l ;r- plates c o ir; $U /jj .50 expressi 0n.., . \ tour of the If /If ___ ,c n As Low As... *r face. Guar- ■ # ■ ffin Regular .j GUARANTEED anteed. $35 '’L”’' - value. t ppfr or Lower Value HNi Finest Pis Workman *h ip— I T..oti. Guaranteed
Plans Tax Parley Call Representative Miles Furnas. Republican caucus chairman of the house of representatives, announced
A// thr Hard Work Done for You in Our THRIFTY SERVICE ALL SHEETS PILLOWSLIPS TABLECLOTHS—NAPKINS and TOWELS are returned IRONED WEARING APPAREL returned DAMP READY to IRON. COSTS LESS THAN HOME WASHING THURSDAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY 7c Lb. (Minimum Bundle. $1.0!) Paul H. Krauss Laundry DRY CLEANING Riley 4591 RUG CLEANING
JUNE *. 1032
today he will Issue a call for G. O. P. representatives to meet July g’ on the eve of a special season of the legislature, to discuss remedial tax legislation.
