Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 31, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 June 1932 — Page 13

.TUNE 16, 1932

PRIZE WINNERS MAIMS SALES SLIPS TO TIMES No Depression! $115.85 Is Spent With Advertisers of This Newspaper. Sending in nineteen sales slips with a total expenditure of $115.85 must mean that there Is no depression in the Fletcher family, 2424 E. Tenth street. These sales slips were sent in by Louise and Llewellyn Fletcher. They are coW'mners for Wednesday's first prize gifts in The Times Sales Slip contest which runs until June 30. with six daily cash prizes and many grand prizes at the end of the competition. Each of the Fletchers will receive a check lor $2.50. The slips they sent were lrom the following: Three from Richman Bros., three from L. Strauss, two from Marott Shoe, three from Wm. H. Block and eight xrom L. S. Ayres with this verse: Sine* giving these store* a lucky break. We find we're almost broke; Hot as Bread east afloat returns as cake. We should he lijrkv fell.. Mr. German, 5847 Rawles avenue, was second prize winner of $3, with a Morrison sales slip, with the following verse: Ivervuhere a dress I sourht. Flnallv at Morrison's I bought, A rood buv. It proved to be. for this lucky sales slin it hrnurht me. The four $1 prizes wej-e atyprded to th* following Times readers with their statements: Jimmy Hagan, 3235 North New Jersey street,: W alklnt around the streets. Needin' a pair of shoes. Here's s slip from Leader's. Bo slip me a buck from youse. Mrs. Laura Miller, 318 South Addison street! Order the Times, read the ada, Bar in In* from Miller-Wohl and the Fair. Have made many rlad. Mrs. Lizzie Ware, 2111 Lexington avenue: First I was a hit slow. But after reading Times ad. I waa michtv rlad To Askln A Marine I did go. Mrs. Minnie Miesel, 558 North Traub avenue: Mv husband hasn't a job. And I wouldn't dare to rob. So tho Store Without A Name shines When you have only a few dimes. Send in your sales slips from Times advertisers to The Times Sale* Slip Contest Editor. You must sign your name and address on each so lee slip. Then send your slip with a slogan of not more than twentyfive words on why you think your slip is lucky. Every one has an equal chance to win. Sparks Ignite Foundry Roof Sparks from a furnace in the P. & D. foundry, 424 South Pennsylvania street, resulted in $25 fire damage to the company’s roof today.

MOTION PICTURES CL AFTER fe P.M. 3 M*T' HW < I 25c s ma^fc t TD &RH. i

r~ rrriTfrrrnr ~i Hail! A New Team of Screen Lovers! g Together for First Time! jm MILLUKAfi —as the ‘‘other man"...torn /^8 between friendship and love! BSmt ALLULAH AHKIUADIB the wife who is madly in love her husband's very best friend! l JSt Paramount dramatization of the l mL& . Jgj Thomas Rourke novel, also featuring M OyK^ JB&: Charles Bickford gpk i ml Ralph Forbes aL mu. i ml Gene Pallette jm Ml TOM HOWARD* H / in the howling comedy [/ \\ m “WHAT PRICE AIR" W flauf \ 1/ ANNA CHANG / . " ay ‘ ’ 1/ in “Singapore Sue” AO6 E. BrOWII memmi TenderfooP^g

Meet ‘Foxy’ Dog That Pulls His Own Teeth

- - - '■ <’ .

Foxy,’ the dog dentist, pulling one of his teeth, and (inset) the dog as he appears "at rest.”

Trouser seats of neighbors of Mr. and Mrs. Tobe Childress, 559 North Hamilton avenue, are safe, and all because Foxy, the 6-year-old wirehaired bull terrier, pulls his own teeth. Foxy is shown dn the inset in just a normal beefsteak chewing mood, but in the lower photo he’s at work on a mean molar with string and paw. His course in self-applied dentistry began a year ago when his bicuspids became one continual ache. Mrs. Childress took “Foxy” to a veterinary. “One dollar for each tooth I pull,” the “vet” advised. “Nothing doing the depression’s on. I’ll try the home style with door-knob and string,” Mrs. Childress retorted. She pulled “Foxy’s” first tooth, but noticed in her attempts that the dog just wouldn’t leave his paw off of the string-forceps, Anew ache came and Mrs. Childress tied another string on the offending tooth, placed “Foxy’s” paw on the string, coaxed him to jerk his head quickly, and “presto” out came the tooth. With each new nerve bellow in “Foxy’s” jaw out came a tooth. “He’s pulled six so there’ll be. more as he grows oider,” Mrs. Childress says.

“Foxy” is entered in the Believe-It-or-Not contest conducted recently by The Times. “And if we win a prize we may get him a set of false teeth when he’s yanked his last one,” Mrs. Childress declares as she gave the dog dentist a pat. SSOO IN CASH A CHANCE TO WIN ... AT NO COST TO YOU! Six Lucky Sales Slip awards to cash winners every day. Get in this contest today.

MOTION PICTURES TODAY—KAY FRANCIS in “STREET OF WOMEN” | $Ke livec/ fvvo 'week ends W ONLY . ..SHE MADE WEEKENDS PROFITABLE BY BRIGHTENING UP DULL PARTIES. . . IT 11445 *6OOO RACKET UNTIL HER BOYFRIEND HAPPENED IN ON THE SAME PARTY AND ySI*iPN T BELIEVE IT WAS FOR " WEEK ENDS ONLY/" nvitm Trofn the novel by SEN SV©N WARNER FABIAN (Bliwn FLAMING YOUTH '

The APOLLO] IS HAPPY TO ANNOUNCE A DRASTIC PRICE ! REDUCTION— j WITH GREATER PICTURES FOR THE SUMMER SEASON Effective Tomorrow! a— ALL SEATS MATINEE J... 10:45 A. M. PICTURE W% IP" r tO6R M * PARADE M l% DAILY Is Coming I wggg “Rebecca Sunnv Children, 15c Always Brook — Farm” i ■\T'v ALL SEATS with ArSl MARIAN NIGHT q NIXQN AFTER JANET - TANARUS, Yf m G AYNOR 6 P. M. CHARLES FARRELL Sundays to 2S. 25c YEAR” *]J DED v ‘‘The 4 Hours FREE PARKING Battalion” || DURING THEATER HOURS The^f°"'* DAY OR NIGHT AT -■ '= Plaza Motor Inn VJZ* Only Three Blocks From Theatre—Ask Cashier

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BILLS AIMED TO CURB UTILITIES PROMISED AID Bush Says He’ll Support Any Measure Designed to Cut Charges. “Utility charges are an indirect tax. I will support any legislation at a special session aimed to control and reduce utility rates.” This quotation forms a postscript to a letter from Lieutenant-Gover-nor Edgar D. Bush to Jap Jones, Martinsville, business manager of the Municipal Rights League of Indiana. It paves the way, Jones declared, for introduction of the league’s utility bill at the special session of the legislature which will get under way July 7. The bill, as prepared at the legis-

tonights e priuntations at YOUR NEI&HORHOOD THEATER/

NORTH SIDE pjwwwjnr® Ta,b< > t i Tina st. Sylvia Sidney <i> ' | Chester Morris in “THE MIRACLE MAN” J ■ |f‘l B IB and Collette Ina Claire—Joan Blondell in “GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR THEM” Noble at Mass. uiaaeia Eric Linden in ‘ARE THESE OUR CHILDREN” NANCI CARROLL in “WAYWARD” WEST SIDE Wash. & Belmont IjUJiiWkMI Sylvia Sidney and HHBHBPHHHi Chester Morris in “THE MIRACLE MAN”

lative reference bureau, provide* for removal of public service commission jurisdiction over municipally owned utilities, makes possible the purchase of a local plant by the city,! upon a referendum of approval and also permits any city to enter the field with a competitive municipal plant. This latter provision is to make possible a last restort Effort to force down the prevailing high utilityrates, Jones explained. He said that a pre-convention meeting of legislators is to be called by the league to be addressed by Carl D. Thompson, authority on municipal ownership. The meeting is designed to arouse enthusiasm for passage of the

FREE DANCE Tomorrow Night LAND-O-DANCE 8500 EAST WASHINGTON

lyric m BICACTSRKO VAUPIVLLI BICCEST SHOW .n TOWN

Coming SATURDAY LEW AYRES MAE CLARKE and BORIS KORLOFF In Universal’* New Hit “NIGHT WORLD” A playboy and dancing- girl take their fling at love and life! —■and on the atage— NORMAN THOMAS QUINTETTE “Syncopated Breeze from the South*' .... EXTRA ' STOCKMAN KIDDIE REVUE OF 300 6 tss? VAUDEVILLE MOTION PICTURES

fl&fflflftt'* GALA PREMIERE! I |j v • TWO Shows-ONE Price 8 8 All persons attending the final showing of “WEEK-END MARRIAGE” tonight at B | 8:30 o’clock, will be invited to remain, without extra charge, for the 10 o’clock pre- j H miere of JOHN BARRYMORE’S “State’s Attorney.” TWO MIGHTY SHOWS AT ONE “NEW LOW SUMMER ADMISSION PRICE!” | | IMF CIRCLE IfilAfi -BußsL! f i GOD HELP HIM IF THEY EVER LEARN THE TRUTH' Meting Out Justice to Other Souls While His Own fgHj Held a Secret No Man Dared Face Freely J Bn Man He Threatened to Hang Barrymore wM States attorney kAm WILLIAM BOYD JILL ESMOND MARY DUNCAN HELEN TWELVETREES w(o/f/lf/ffl*rtfc ... This Week ...Next Week... AND EVERY WEEK THE CIRCLE HAS THE PICTURES g m jjg I It's Always Healthfully t.joi at im; * t. -us 9tHHKKtKSKKKBUHKBBHK& Phone RUev 55M

league’s bill as a tax and economy measure, Jones pointed out. Citieowning their owm utilities have n great tax problem, he declared.

MOTION PICTURES .... a PRICES ABE SLASHED ! I daily I (W^Kr (Except Sun.) Imagine Seeing Such Stars As Garbo, Crawford, Shearer, Dressier, Gable and Others at I mr * ci huumcd liit Kir\ a ■ These LOEW Prices- I B G SUMMER HIT NO. 1 Are Parents Always Right? ■ DAILY SK 5 l:H:::::::: I Do Mothers Know Best? cun guni imo ii s.v I A Daring Drama of Modern Youth! UU ' “ nwt After IP. M 35c ■ Children 15c Any Time. “N EW MORALS FOR OLD ’ (mtk J mJrltOL MARGARET PERRY LEWIS STONE MYRNA LOY R “First in War” gH Fitzpatrick Traveltalk F L / m G M Hearst Metrotone News £ , /" Picture

LOEWS PALACE • ' • ' l ‘ -

Akron Back at Lakehurst R;t United Prets AKEHURST. N. J.. June 16. ” naval dirigible Akron was back

PAGE 13

In it* home hangar today afte* a thirty-eight day transcontinental round trip, marked by tragedy as well as success.