Popularity Campaign
Have Confidence in Winning
PRIZE DISPLAY IN QUEEN’S ARCADE MAKES PRIZES FACTS
Still Opportunity for New Contestants
(From the L.yr, Ule Ca, *‘Paisn »Tou can do as much as you think you can. gut you 11 net or accomplish more; ((you’re afraid of yourself my friend. There’S little for you in store. For failure comes from the inside first, It is there if you only knew it You can win though you face the worst. U you feel that you're going to do it.” Confidence —that's the thing a contestant needs to make himself a winner in The Sun’s Great Popularity Campaign- A timid person, afraid of his own popularity, can never possess the villa or win one of the five beautiful motor-cars offered as the big prizes. The contestant who has confidence and knows he is going to win and joes out and works with that contidence and assurance of a winner is going to reach the goal and walk away with the big prize on the final night. “You can do as much as you think you can, but you’ll never accomplish more.” Think big and your thoughts will grow. Think small and you’ll fall by the wayside. Think that you can win and you can. Think that you will never be able to surpass the other fellow’s lead and it will be impossible. Thoughts are things that grow or die as the mind wills. There is no lead so great that it cannot be surpassed. Contestants who are taking advantage of the great bonus offer which gives 400,000 extra votes for each £lO in subscription money are the ones who are thinking big. They are thinking that they can
I win the villa, the Buick. the MarI queue, the Pontiac or the Chevrolet. | They are determined ~o WIN and they are going about it in the right way to succeed. Desire must be coupled I with action. Contestants whose names will be ! dropped on Saturday because they i la 7 e turned in only coupons and no subscriptions are the ones who are | tailing by the wayside and the ones ! v.ho do not think they can do it ! The ones who take advantage of the ! opportunity now offered by the extra ! votes are the ones who will carry off j the high honours at the finish. PRIZE DISPLAY MAKES FOR REALITY Sreat .display of The Sun’s £b,°°o m prizes now being held in ! the Queens Arcade, makes for leahty. Contestants can go and see Pri , z /' a , Lhc -y wish—feel them and know that it they put forth their utmost effort they can win them. All the prizes shown in the Queen’s a . Ue , , are Foing to be given away absolutely free on August 2. Xor only that, hut many more prizes will be . .? 1 . v ? n than those shown in the exhibition. There are several prizes such as the £lO gold watch and the’ £1- go.d watch, which are not. dis- . itaved in the exhibit, but are shown in the shop ot Messrs. A. Kohn, Ltd. J ms firm stands behind these prizes I and believes that in presenting them ' lo the winner they are presenting not only the prize, but the good name of their establishment. This same thing applies to every merchant who is displaying the prizes at the exhibition m the Queen's Arcade. There they are—ready to be won. It remains merely for the contestants to fix in their minds the will to possess tin- 1 prize most coveted. Confidence and i determination will be the keynote of j success.
A PIONEER
‘T came to New Zealand 25 years ago. I have seen the growth of the ! country, and 1 have watched the pro- j gress in Xew Zealand newspapers. I The Sun, to my mind, has been a step- j ping-stone in the newspaper history ini Xew Zealand. It is the paper that I presents the news in a way the people 1 like, and I am having a great deal of pleasure in introducing The Sun to my friends in this competition.” This j is what Mr. McLaren told the campaign manager when he called at the : office the other day. Mr. McLaren is j the owner of McLaren Falls, and j owns a large farm in that district. He ! is retired now and lives in Auckland. i
A HAMILTON CONTESTANT
“I ant having much pleasure in presenting The Sun to my many friends. The competition is an interesting thing. Nearly everyone has a good word for The Sun. We like it very much in Hamilton because it gives us l he news we want and gives it to us in the way we like it. I am going to do my best to win one of the big prizes in this competition.” This is what Mrs. H. Steele, of Hamilton, said when I she came into the campaign department last Saturday to bring in a lot of new subscribers from Hamilton. Mrs. Steel is out to win and she never takes no for an answer. She has filled her friends so with enthusiasm that, they have their subscriptions all ready when she calls, and she merely has to collect them and make out the receipts.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19300627.2.41
Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1009, 27 June 1930, Page 7
Word Count
877Popularity Campaign Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1009, 27 June 1930, Page 7
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