Employees at The May Co. department store prepare merchandise for downtown Dollar Day. Tom May, executive vice-president of the company predicted this Dollar Day would bring in record-breaking numbers of customers
Employees at The May Co. department store prepare merchandise for downtown Dollar Day. Tom May, executive vice-president of the company predicted this Dollar Day would bring in record-breaking numbers of customers
Employees at The May Co. department store prepare merchandise for downtown Dollar Day. Tom May, executive vice-president of the company predicted this Dollar Day would bring in record-breaking numbers of customers
Employees at The May Co. department store prepare merchandise for downtown Dollar Day. Tom May, executive vice-president of the company predicted this Dollar Day would bring in record-breaking numbers of customers
Female employee at The May Co. department store prepares merchandise for downtown Dollar Day. Tom May, executive vice-president of the company predicted this Dollar Day would bring in record-breaking numbers of customers
Picture of the side and garage entrance of the Huntington Rubber Company. Negative sleeve implies that the warehouse was being used for fake circulation sheets. A sign reads "RECEIVING DEPT".
An out-of-focus photograph, from left to right, of Larry Wolfe and H. H. West, Jr. posing beside a truck parked in front of the H. H. West Company's warehouse on East Olympic Boulevard. A sidewalk enters frame along the bottom edge and stretches back on upward angle from left to right. In the near distance, the H. H. West Company's warehouse enters frame at left. It is viewed at an angle from the front, facing right. A garage stands open on the left side of the front of the building. A driveway extends from the building and to the right. Larry Wolfe and H. H. West, Jr. pose in front of a truck parked on the driveway. It is viewed from the side, facing right. The two men flank the passenger door. Text on the door reads, "H. H. WEST CO. WHOLESALERS [1230] E. [OLYMPIC] BLVD. TU[CKER] 3716." Ray Norton crouches in front of the truck at far right. Signage posted along the top of the building reads, "H. H. WEST CO. 1230 FACTORY DISTRIBUTORS 1230."
Photograph, from left to right, of Larry Wolfe and H. H. West, Jr. posing in front of the H. H. West Company's warehouse while Ray Norton fixes up a truck. The warehouse is viewed at a distance from the opposite side of East Olympic Boulevard. East Olympic Boulevard stretches across the foreground. The H. H. West Company's warehouse stands on the far side of the street at center. It is viewed at a slight angle from the front. The building stands one-story tall. The garage at far left is open. Larry Wolfe and H. H. West, Jr. stand at left, in the driveway in front of the open garage, and pose. To the right of them, a truck is parked in front of the building. It is viewed from the front. Ray Norton crouches in front of the right side of the car as he fixes a license plate to the vehicle. In front of the far right side of the building, another car is parked in the driveway. It is parked in front of a closed garage. Signage posted along the top of the building reads, "H. H. WEST CO. 1230 FACTORY DISTRIBUTORS 1230."
A May Co. employee packs hats in the department store's warehouse in preparation for downtown Dollar Day. Tom May, executive vice-president of the company predicted this Dollar Day would bring in record-breaking numbers of customers