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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOMER 4, 1922.. Write About These Advertisers Antomobiles BUICK NEW AND USED CARS Hartford Buick Co., Connect Bread “WHITE ROSE™ “J. A" CIGARS, Alles & Cleansers and Dyers THE EAGLE DYE WORKS COMPANY 396-410 Woodland street Coffee, Tea and Cocon “HOLLANDS FAR EAST" BRAND Department Store SAGE-ALLEN COMPANY, Inc. N Maln 2 Druggist THE DRUGGIST d Pearl streets. ALDERMA Corner If; Electrical Appliances and Service Evaporated Milk SHEFFIELD'S “SEALECT’ BRAND Miner, Read & Tullock, Distributors. Florist_ COOMBS THE FLORIST No. 741 Main and No. 364 Asylum streets THE SAMUEL DONCHIAN RUG COMPANY No. Pea cet, Men's Outfitter LUKE HORSFALL No. 93 Asylum street. CONNECTICUT FURRIERS X street The Hallmark Jeweler, No. 1005 Main street, Furniture SHOOR BROTHERS 1112-1120 Main street. 1. Write something on every Zaln WRITING AD Contest, Offers Unusual Opportunity To Win Valuable Prizes GET YOUR SHARE OF $5,000 IN CASH AND PRIZES The merchants of HARTFORD and NATIONAL advertisers want your ideas on their stores or products. $5000 in cash and prizes are to be awarded for the best suggestions received. The contest has only three more weeks to run so START NOW—WRITE ADS—WIN PRIZES. ONLY FOUR RULES TO FOLLOW advertiser participating in this contest and listed daily in The Hartford Times. Study List of Advertisers There is something about every product and every store in this campaign that is dif- ferent and better than any other in the same line. Study the list of advertisers nrinted on this page. Many of them you will be famil- iar with but it is surprising how quickly ad- vertising ideas will pop into your head when you begin to look for the thing that you like best—the strongest advertising point— in any store or product. Equal Chance to Win You will be welcome at any of the stores to study as an ad writer. You will gladly be given any information that would assist you to win. Try the products advertised in this campaign and write ad-ideas—notice the ad- vantages you find in them over competitive brands. If you send in ad-ideas on the ad- vantages you find in these products you stand an equal chance of winning, jingle. 2. On each piece of paper write only one' ad-idea, poem, letter, composition or | slogan, \ test, care | Times. Some of the Special Prizes 8475 Becker Piano. $200 Sterling Range. $135 Universal Electric Washer, $150 Genuine Sable Choker. $100 Mahogany Davenport. $100 In Dorothy Dodd and Florsheim Shoes. $100 Brunswick Cabinet Phonograph. $65 Ladies’ Paradise Hat. $65 Western Electric Sewing Machine. $60 Oriental Rug. Any Horsfall Made Suit of Clothing Selected. $54 Eureka Electric Vacuum Cleaner. ' $50 Heywood WaRefield Baby Carriage. $50 6 Pinkam Associates Braided Rugs. $50 Sikes Swivel Office Chair. $50 DuBarr;" Pattern Ivory Pyraline Set. $44 Hamilton Wrist Watch, $45 Waltham Watch. $30 Chest Wm. A. Rogers’ Silver. $30 Set “Golfrite” Clubs. 3. Write your name and address on the back and mail it to the Zain Ad-Writing Con- The Hartford 4. Those who work in newspa- pers or at advertising are absolutely barred from this contest—it is only for ama- teurs. Valuable Prizes The person writing the best advertise- ment during this campaign will receive the grand prize of $500 cash. n addition to the $500 grand prize there are many special prizes that will be given to the person writ- ing the best ad-ideas about them. A few of these special prizes are listed on this page. See the Hartford Times for the full list. Simple and Fascinating Ad-Writing is simple and fascinating— start now and write at least one ad about each advertiser. You may be the fortunate winner of a valuable prize. You surely will not lose anything by trying. Start Now— Write Ads—Win Prizes. Your idea may consist of one word, one sentence or one paragraph. It may be an ad- vertising idea or a complete advertisement. It may come after careful investigation of the stores or products or it may come as a sudden inspiration. However, it comes to you do not waste it. Send it in to the ZAIN AD-WRITING CONTEST, c-o THE HART- FORD TIMES. ZAIN AD WRITING CONTEST Write About These Advertisers Lanndry THE SANITARY LAUNDRY COMPANY No. 330 Church strest Milk and Cream BRYANT & CHAPMAN No. 330 Woodland street, Millinery OUTLET MILLINERY CO. Corner Main and Pratt streets, Musieal Tnstruments Stelnway and Becker Planos, Victrolas, Vietor Records. WATKINS BROS.. Ine. lum strest, Real Estate T. D. FAULKNER COMPANY Hartford-Aetna Bank Building. Rhoes BILL BATTEY No. 1027 Main and No. 246 Trumbull streets. Commer=ial Stationevy and Office Fquipment THE GUSTAVE FISCHER COMPANY No. 236 Asylum street and No. 237 Asylum street. Frult Sveups PHROSTO Tooth Paste and BURI Varnishes and Enamel4 KYANIZE Hartford Sash and Door Company, No. 14 Central Row. Bank MECHANICS SAVINGS BANK No. 44 ear| street, Theater CAPITOL THEATER No. 595 Main street. Women's Shop KAVANAUGH No. 224 Trumbull street. Ginger Ale DIAMOND GINGER ALE Gasoline and_Olls DIXIE FIL. STATIONS Tce Cream NEW HAVEN DAIRY e the army, to come to the rescue of|actions that followed war expans!ons.} 1 the fire warden. December it will be a 1 gaingt the law Mr. Cook explains that a permit 3 Thlls law is in effect until Decem- | for any person to kindle a fire in | for the light’.g of a fire may be se. er and has been adopted as u( the woods or on property which the [ cured from him either by telephon- SMITH WILL FILED De- 2:(:‘a:ure o; precaution against un- | individual might own if it is situated ing him or seeing him personally at 'ssary fire losses, Mr. Cook ex- lhla office in the Hallinan block on | Main street. more than 500 feet away from any cers & ceased — Document Was Drawn | Plains. that as stockholders of the national firm “whose board of directors meets the *“old line insurance’ business the|closing out surplus stocks at great {army has conducted successfully for|sacrifice, shutting down factories and | 150 years. The officer was speaking| “discharging trained employes.” Makes Urgent Appeal for Ade- quate Military Budget to the convention of the reserve offi-| Retrenchment was promised, he Estate Is Left to Children of ociation and told his hearers|continued, but with knowledge that Washington, Oct. 4.—Stockholders of “the firm of Uncle Sam limited," were called upon today by Major Gen J. G. Harbord, deputy chief of staff of to guard and to insure the life of our country,’ General Harbord said “Our firm has been doing this class fact, our house flag has flown over us army was appealing to them for a vote of confidence in the shape of adequate appropriations Gen, Harboard pitched his remarks wholly in the language of the com- mercial world, saying he did so be- cause the citizen officer to whom he spoke were business and professional “carrying soldiering as a side He described congress as the directors of a great holding controlling the destinies of all government industries, including the army, whose princ business at of national life and fire in- men line. board of company m to help guarantee and without change fcr a longer period the existence under their present form of incorporation of any of our principal rivals.” Once every 30 years on an average ke declared, the business faced a war expansion H “Pape’s Cold Compound” Acts Quick, Costs Little, Never Sickens! ch offices” s and ‘over two million to Europe under manager Per- In a few hours your cold is gone, head and nose clear, no feverishness, headache, or stuffed-up feeling. Drug- gists here gu tee these P ant tablets to break up a cold or the grippe quicker than nasty quinine. credit balance in the very morning of They never make you sick or uncom- | their lives and will never come home fortable. Buy a box of ' i Compound” for a few cents and get | rid of your cold right now our pres shing.” ‘Some of added, “closed their accounts with a our representatives,” he Reactions of War. General Harbord described the L] Well Dressed Men are Well Fitted Men IT never goes out of style. HICKEY-FREEMAN Cus- tomized Clothes are as correct in fit as they are in fashion. “A Hickey-Freeman for Fit" FITCH-JONES (CO. under the dome of the capital” the;| recalled that within |2 had been|P “there was an irreducible minimum below which our firm could not go.” “The management cannot bring it- | self to believe,” General Harbord de-| The will of Mrs. Adeline J. Smith, clared, “that you stockholders wish|drawn June 18, 1913, was filed to- to perpetuate the vicious circle of |day in probate court. The life use false economy bringing unprepared- land income of land and bulldings at| | ness with its train of untold costs in| 253 Corbin avenue is directed to a blood and gold compelling fur!hPr"rlaughter. Evaleen Jones, until her parsimony to bring about a repetition | death or her marriage, at which time of the same ghastly history in time the following distribution is ordered: yet to come. We claim that your|A division of the property into seven board of directors does not know.parts, one to go to Evaleen Jones, if your wishes or if it does, it does not jiving; one to Helen Westover of Or- act upon them and substitutes its junqo, Fia, one to Lillie Jones; one {Judgment for yours. its judgment con- | to Daisy Mitchell of Hartford; one to ceived in the comfortable office of | goggie Andrus of New York city; one the politilac nseeking to prpetuate !y pme Carieton, a grand-daughter: ll‘«l';:x:flxind]:r (‘;}T“E“Y"“‘ judgment g g one to be divided between Evelyn / ; guns of the enemy|,ng Qlver Andrus of Bridgeport, and matured in the slime of the i trenches and the reek of battle Bpanioicren oy s Money in the New Britain Savings nder their judgment and with g |bank and the Society for Savings at (,h:. ’}““‘ phliancitimeniand ‘t?"’ eCeS| Hartford, is directed to Evaleen Jones. Sy for beonomy our OPErating APl !The remainder of the estate is to be tal has been much reduced and our |’ , reserve prospects diminished. Our | divided among the children of the de- ceased, share and share alike. plans for your development during | the summer just gone were delayed | e and hindered by dilatoriness in pass- ing the necessury appropriations and e number of our trained em- ves were discharged."” i Trying days were ahead, General Harbord said when ‘“wildcat schemes of socialism and bolshevism" would seek to impair the standing of the June 18, 1913. ' JUMPS TRACK. Persons Returning From Danbury Fair Have Narrow LEscapes. TROLLFE Danbury, Oct. 4. —Fifty persons re- turning from the Danbury fair had firm in the country and when a|wper o o AR mJ";yQ;’fs:fld'iy ‘much advertised substitute called 1::{1”:;” '.Tf”;;;‘czgrg:;"[':e MR ‘disarmament’ ese. v a {2 N louses to conmumption” would pe|9OWh an embankment. Many of the offered against the firm line of na.|DRsSeNSers were women and children Pty e e {but all escaped with slight bruises. “This is in the interest of firms 7T T who are rivals of ours across distant seas and especially in the Oriental trade,” General Harbord warned. "It is being handled on the market by the same class of irresponsible specu- lators who have for years dabbled in similar fakes and cheap imitations." The substitutes for the army's old | line insurance would be offered by “the smoothest agents in the busi- | ness” General Harbord said, including “those who in the enthusiasm of newly conferred suffrage and anxious | to do good,” would urge the substitu- tion “with all that fascinating incon- sistency of mingled charms and hys- | district to be careful about the light- terics which so often characterizes | ing of fires or the burning of rubbish lovely women—without whose ap-| Mr. Cook asserts that the fire season proval no war has ever been waged.” |is now on and no fires, unless they In conclusion, he said are started on premises within the “We do not wish war any more than | 500 feet liydrant system of the city the ordinary life insurance company | can be lighted without a’permit from wishes for death or longs for Asiatic cholera, vellow fever, a bloody battle or a sickly season. But no business | man cancels his fire insurance policy | when there is a conflagration raging in the next hlock | “See that your representatives, our | directors here in the nation's capitol, 'know your wishes, and under the lash of your displeasure that they carry | them out. Give us a rising market on the army, and we proimse you heavy | dividends in the next emergency.” IMUST HAVE PERMITS TO KINDLE FIRES Fire Warden Walter Codk Issues Warning to Residents Living Within the District Limits. Walter Cook, fire warden for this district this morning, issued a warn- ing to all persons residing within the Theron Wolcott Hart Instruction in PIANO, ORGAN THEORY SONG COACH Studio: 14 Prospect Street Tel. 2531. ] Nara, ancient Japanese city, is a classic center of Shinto worship, and was the first capital of Japan. A bathometer registers the depth of water beneath vessels without sounding. From now until the first of | city fire hydrant. | ——————————— CLEVELAND SIX THE WONDER CAR OF THE YEAR The Sport Car of the Season Newest and Smartest - of Sport Cars URPASSING in its smartness and bewitching beauty, anything ever before attempted in popular priced cars, this new model is styled to the moment. This new Cleveland Six model is the most alluring five-passenger sport type car you have ever set eyes on. And its performance is as flawless as its beauty. [t has the uwgiimited pep, power and flexibility of the highly refined Cleve- land Six overhead valve motor. Mounted on the new Cleveland Six chassis, it has all the strength, safety and delightful riding comfort which have made the Cleveland the most popular light six of the year. Its economy is remarkable, No other sport car within hundreds of dollars of its price compares with it in style or quality. $1,260 F.O.B. CIJV'!LAND Styled to the Moment Kbaki Top Individually Tallored Spanish Leather Uphol Brown-Blue Dulnp e :lolw *‘Beige Bn?wu" Body Finish olid Aluminu Protecting !k:y.r Bn-l:-k Npch nd Five Wire Wheels Aluminum Steps, Rubber Padded Individual Heavy Gauge Fenders Windshield Side Wings Big Nickeled Double Bumper Motometer and Winged Cap Cowl| Ventilator ; Windshield Cleaner Rear Vision Mirror Nickeled Radiator, Windshield Stanchions, etc. New Drum T Headlights and Sidelamps Nickel-Trimmed You Wiil Want to be Among the First to Own This Winning. Car PALACE MOTOR SALES CORP. 15 Main St., New Britain CLEVELAND AUTOMOSBILE COMPANY Tel. 1530 CLEVELAND