-tea o' ° “For the Good of X 1 Jck .. - the Game” ti w Q Permission of the Minister Objects: For the pur- ' Jl;. 'X’AJZ” '"Yqz'X Internal Affairs. pose of raising funds ’ J i for the purchase and HI,. K- ™ equipment of football N >€FZ/ PRIZE LISTgrounds in Taranaki, y , .U ‘„ FIRST POAAft Trusteed: I prize - I Sir Walter Carncross, /iK.A/dj Sff F Kr nrrxz'MKTr’k Graham? J. s' McKay, PRIZE XivVU D - Malone - 3rd Prize - - £250 I A £2,000 Try—and YOU can score it just as easily 4th Prize - - £lOO as the next man—a half-crown ticket will do the trick. sth Prize - - £5O Make a bolt for it NOW, and buy your ticket—better 3 Prizes of (each) £25 still buy a book—the Winning Ticket may be sold gl2 Prizes of (each) £lO TO-DAY—will it be to YOU? I 81 Prizes of (each) £5 Closes July 31st, 1930. Drawn Aujiust 21st, 1930. g ALL PRIZES IN ALLUVIAL GOLD | 101 PRIZES > AWT MMfcsKls Have a Pot at the 1 son? 3 p.6. box isos. Go ™-i I°‘ day - W Mail Coupon. ■ I Box 1505> Auckland. JL- ** Z) J. F. DUNDAS, P.O. Box 286, Invercargill. S' nooks . Please send me tickets IXI 2? RUGB Y art un.on. I enclose remittance of (f \j ,\l ( / r Tickets 2/6 each, or book of 9 for £1- JRIAf wAI V Y F Enclose stamped addressed envelope for reply. d) Name VJ 1 jaFfi Address JL’ CT W WSjZ Tickets obtainable at all Tobacconists, Newsagents, -JUt Wg and other retail shops, or by mailing this Coupon.
jß..' W IF/ SCHNEIDEMAN’S, DEE STREET DOWN With The Prices FINAL DAYS OF SALF FINAL DAYS OF SALE Our prices take another downward fall for the last few days. The Greatest Stile in the History of Invercargill is on at— SCHNEIDEMAN’S INVERCARGILL 754 HAND MADE SUITS SINGLE AND DOUBLE BREASTED
• I Made in our own workrooms s::uss::ss;::::2k CHALLENGE TT- 1 1 Make vour selection High-grade us reserve materials offered for you, while you at unheard-of make any compariprices. son you desire. h IhhL" OVERCOATS A OVERCOATS 246 of these High-class Overcoats marked down at Unheard-of Prices. Smart Fabrics—Silk and Satin Lined. COME AND TAKE THESE BARGAINS AWAY. Schneideman & Sons, Ltd 64 DEE STREET INVERCARGILL. (NEXT GRAND HOTEL)
EDGEWORTH—AGED IN WOOD. To make tobacco mild and give it flavour many artificial methods have been used, but none of them can compare with the natural method of ageing in wood. This is the one right way to take out all the bite and all the harshness, and make the tobacco mild and mellow. Ageing Edgeworth in wood costs the manufacturers more—very much more but it smokes cool and tastes better, and you can’t get that good taste in any other way. Remember—Edgeworth aged in wood. —Advt,
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ST19300531.2.118.1
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Southland Times, Issue 21097, 31 May 1930, Page 10
Word count
Tapeke kupu
462Page 10 Advertisements Column 1 Southland Times, Issue 21097, 31 May 1930, Page 10
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Southland Times. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.