Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 49, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1933 — Page 20
PAGE 20
2 PLANES ARE SET TO START ATLANTIC HOPS Transocean Flights to Begin Saturday, Is Belief. Bit I'nitrrl Prrat NEW YORK July 7.—Two transAtlantic flight* may start from Floyd Punnet t fir-ld at daylight Saturday ;f weather conditions are favorable. Maurice Rossi and Paul Codos, French fliers, are ready to fly across the Atlantic in an attempt to set a new distance record. Wiley Post also is prepared to start his world solo fight with a robot pilot. The French pilots had hoped to start today, but postponed t heir hopofT because of unfavorable weather. Post planned today to fly to Dayton, 0.. to have his compasses cal-
KROGER U uneoalW aVALUE BUY NOW dimt- S," L\ \\ MyA , Our buyer really made a scoop buying at a price much FiOUf 5 >ack Z4C II I ' 11 1 iliil i\ ■ \\\ 'W U\AWuVWWWV\niI V ioWer than loday ' s marke t and we are passing our Country Club. 111 |w|i!pP'|Jf Mgh^am,* 0 you at * sensatlonal |*K tor <W Gold Medal r iit 95c 4g% „ *£ £II LbS. JP%M E-Z-Bake 89c "■*'* %#■ #2© %r SoDfl &g , - CRACKERS Watermelons—- e > 39® “ 2c i7, KIDNEY Peaches 4u. 25c Celery *sc beans Fancy Hi lcy Belle—Freestones. Faney New Michigan. Country f* *1 _ J _ _ a _ ciub ■§* Mans § Tomatoes u. 15c Cucumbers 2‘"lsc , F Fancy Hothouse. Faney. Large. * Oranges l9c Cantaloupes & 10c f OFF L so Qc .luicy California*—2s2 Shu*. Large Salmon Tint*. Packed ID. H 1 M, §Q| JACK FROST iffff Lb. C Bill W®®! JmSl 100% Pure Cane Carton jg? 'tj|| if 8 OP® Country Club, “Newgrass” C Upm HIM m ImR Hbb|P Creamery in Roil or Lb. WimijW |j| |ji Quarter-Pound Prints DEL MONTE PEACHES 2 29 10VOTES5 ‘'lVwintlful” Xo. * 4 P 1 Swiss Steak “S> 23' QnJIW Shoulder Roast . 131,2 c Ground Beef * 12! 20 °'~ 0 Rolled Rib -22 c Boiling Beef - 8c Roast—Xo Bone or Waste. For Boiling or Stew. SHOEPEG c f )RN . 0 Pot Roast Lo Aris uck Lb -10c Co-'intry J Xo. ? Club rnns I C #■% JRK tk 9 FANCY BREAKFAST Jk Mk A| giir g B \S m | U Sugar Cured. Hickory Smoked . SEMINOLE DMW VIN SLICED 2 | C TISSUE Pork Loin i*. loc Frankfurters 3u- 29c 4 R0,,s c Luncheon Roll i>. 15c Chickens 23c SUr ' d - 1933 Broiler*. JUICE Smoked Picnics ~-~ " u 9%® 'nib' Can 5c ran j4’ W* A 4 ’ 'IIL'S' FLAKES wMmW&i CTwJPlIeCTrawsSi ©••■try 150*. 1 - , Club Pkg*. I Price* Effective Indianapolis, Greenwood, Plainfield, Zionsville, Brownsburg, % Mooresville and Morristown.
Balks Fatal Air Crash Muncie Manufacturer Lands Plane Safely With One Wheel Missing.
B)t Vnitfi f’renn piloting by Edwin Ball, Muncie manufacturer, averted a dangerous crash at the airport here Thursday night when he landed his plane on one wheel. One wheel of the plane broke as Ball took off from Evansville late Thursday for Muncie. Evansville airport officials telephoned the flying field here and a plane bearing a sign warning Ball of the danger circled about his plane when he arrived. Fire apparatus was held in readiness for the expected crash. In landing, Ball threw the weight of the plane on the wing opposite the broken undercarriage, ibrated. He said he would return quickly and wait at Floyd Bennett field for favorable weather.
• and taxied to a safe stop. The ! plane was undamaged. Claude Kinzie, Ball company ! official, was a passenger on the flight. i MAIL THIEF IS BIRD Farmer Pursues Feathered Robber; Finds Letter Farther On. Hit Vnitcd Prmt GREENVILLE. Mo.. July 7 —J. G. Meador, a farmer, has iound out who was stealing his mail. A few days ago he shipped some roosters to market, and -since he wanted the check from the poultry house, he watched for the postman. But ..e wasn’t quick enough to get the letter. As he reached into the mail box the thief flew out. A bird emerged from the tin inolosure, clutching I the check in its beak. The letter w T as found a quarter of 1 a mile away.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CHEESE SALES SENT SOARING BY NEW BEER Substantial Increase Here ’ Is Reported: 3.2 Is Given Credit. Once upon a time, according to legend, an old Arab herdsman trudged along the road to Damascus in the hot sun carrying his lunch of dates and milk in a bottle made from the stomach of a calf. He paused by the wayside to eat but to his consternation found that the skin bottle no longer contained milk. Instead, he tasted a yellowish substance formed by the milk and the dried digestive juices which remained in the calf's stomach. He uttered the Arabian equivalent of 'Eureka” and cheese was discovered. Today cheese manufacturers and distributors in Indianapolis and throughout the state are thanking the ancient Moslem and 3.2 beer for
a substantial increase in their business. “Sale of cheese in Indianapolis has increased greatly since beer was legalized.” E W. Mitchell, sales manager of the Polk Sanitary Milk Company, 1100 East Fifteenth street, declared today. *‘lt has been gaining all through the state, too. People, it seems, must have cheese with their beer." Officials of the Balfour Cheese Company. 19 South Alabama street, said that cheese sales had gone up
The quality NEVER VARIES “When you’re offered a substitute for the original corn flakes, remember it is seldom in the spirit of OF BATTLE CREEK
f Bsfiil&EESll .] 9 I p\ r I Ih' 11 q ■ ■ |l I’l'i/i i <>k itu\- \ \ i. ~k , /.esß Here Are the Rules of Contest: Boys and girls, all you have to do is save the votes given away free by every Regal Store with each Q^£@|||9SiPHßHpNfe£ 25c purchase. Ask your mother, your sister, your aunt and all your friends to shop in Regal $ Stores where they will get votes for you and where they will save on their purchases also. To the boy and girl in Indiana who has the most votes, goes these dandy bikes. Here’s a tip—Double votes given on all Proctor & Gamble Products. Start now—Win A Bike. CONTEST CLOSES SATURDAY MIDNIGHT, JULY 29TH BOYS AND GIRLS! All Procter & Gamble Items Carry Double ANY OF 1 HESE REGAL Votes—Here Are Three of Them. STORES P and G SOAP 1 0 27c SOUTH D. G. ARNOLD, 1706 E. Minnesota St. || If W O I Complete Large O. R. DUNHAM, 1232 E. LeGrande Ave. |jE I SJ |J 1 Household Soap p . / I (J C. L. FAIIRION, 138 S. Noble St. # m ■ W ■ r,, 6* * ■ DAA'ID FAHRNER. 1053 S. West St. GARD & BOESEL. State and Fletcher Aves. a* |j 1 Large Glass Mixing Se':SS SJL g p “ UnlohU Wi ‘ h 3 ' Lb - Can 0I C NICHOLAS MESALAM, 2329 Shelby St. E. C. OTT, 1248 Orange St. JOHN RICE. 1802 Shelby St. L. C. TOOHEY. 4009 Shelby St. . I R. WALDEN. 717 Shelby St. j JACK FROST SUGAR 5 b “;27c G. O. PERKINSON, 1931 W. Morris St. ■ lIWWI WWMmi WBdg *■ PERKINSON & LeGRANDE, 3002 W. 16th m* g si m • pH ■. i. w.™**.Del Monte Grape Fruit 2 25c NORTH BRYANT’S MARKET, 4907 N. Penn. St. fiffieW LIRIR S@3RS Flavor 2 Cans 23C LAW r REN CE CAIN, 16th and Columbia a * ■ a , y , * a FRANK COLLMAN, 1831 Bellefontaine St. OIIISI6rS OPIRGCh Can 10C DAVIS GROCERY, 5903 College Ave, r N. M. DAVIS. 932 Broadway Sifted PfiaS Regal—Sweet. Tender 0 Cans J. C. GOLDSTEIN, 1306 N. Senate Ave. OIIICW £ HESS BROS., 11l W. 30th St, ROYAL BAKING POWDER 'll 1, 39 c OTTINGER & DAVIS, 3961 Boulevard PI. OLD RELIABLE °“ p c T :r 25c D. O. TAYLOR. 3760 N. Illinois St. IlfciiiinW km Coffee W east Posl Toasties Re * siac 2 DAW’SON MARKET. 801 N. Gray St. MaCarOltl or Spaghetti. Eagle Brand Pkg. Af* JOHN R, DORA. 7902 E. Washington St. muwHiwm v R 0. S 3 ™ R E: 4 T™th'sT' I '' R9gal COII Sweet County Gentleman Can J. E- REEVES, 2030 Rrookside Ave. W'. E. RHEES, 5046 E. New York St. ■ ■- ■■ ■ RAY RUDD. 503 N. Emerson Ave. ITDCTErf C*P C" C* f STEINFORT & GREER, 2432 N. Station I *iCbCb ■ ■ fitt ■ F. W. STEINSBERGER. 2037 E. Tenth St. , „ T . , a 9n „ p .„ P a C t an <x: harry* STEINSBERGER. 3308 E. Tenth A Tom Mix Mask With a A 2-Oz. Pkg. POST BRAN Martin stuckwtsh. 660 e. New York Package of FLAKES with purchase of a F. W*. WESSLER. 2809 E. Michigan St. Pkg. of POST BRAN W*ESSLER’S MARKET. 3379 N. Sherman D. Rstlctflll O 8-o*. Pkg. ( 13-o*. Pkg. R. H. WOODS, 2418 Southeastern Ave. ndi5HJIl J 8 \ *• Wheat Cereal 9C \ I 3C R II TT F D Quality Meats Fruits and Vegetables Gaunr.,. VEAL ROAST ORANGES Hoosier Geld Lb., 28c shoulder Lb. ] C w“ST On. "| §C Pink Salmon 2 23c v,al p<,c,te * R,ast Lb ” 9c r , hhat , B v . h b. “- Frankfurters 2 Lbs.. 19c Cabba S e N *' tb ” 5c T “ na Fi ?t >. .. 2Cam 25C Minced Luncheon Lb.. 15c Celery Stalk, 5c Jello New style. J JIU Beef, Pork and Veal Lb., 12V 2 c Lemons 360 SiM Dor,, 25c All Flavors. W Ground for Loaf. —2sc. BEEF ROAST #PP ' es 4Lbs ” ne -7c "“I K CANTALOUPES 29c Fancy c, 1 lie ■3 <" 25c Prices Gooii l*'V Wiymr"! Each store in Indianap-H •-Ml TX mmk U| Kb ■ 1 J| Individually •Hsfnly A. 4 "L. q W m 9 3 Ownad
at least 10 per cent since the advent of legal beer. Limburger cheese, they declared, is one of the best sellers. Officials of a large milk and
THE CROWD CONTINUES TO PATRONIZE WHERE QUALITY IS HIGH AND PRICE IS LOW! Em 1£ * r'\ ssn&jtez I 1 *-x.'„- -*f ilia te. ™ J ■ tvya tth a d A °f fiJf ason abl e Jl offer# 1 evs. chicWe ! S ’tVie i arw - a \ l c y? to C om e ' egeta ble "T M \ sVe te S ,0 •& f Be Sure to Visit Tomorrow the h.l C lA# OPEN AIR tH Ci W MARKET OPPOSITE OLD CITY MARKET Alabama at Wabash
cheese distributing concern, who refused to be quoted because of “dry” customers, said in effect that the recent dry propaganda that sale of milk would fall off because of 3.2
.JULY 7, 1933
beer was "poppycock.” Milk sale have increased, they declared. Wholesale and retail grocers were unanimotis in stating that beer had helped the cheese business materially.
