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Simplifying the Process of Booking a Lost Share Certificate Advertisement
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On 1 April 2016, a devastating fire at the Faculty Center of the UP College of Arts and Letters resulted in the loss of irreplaceable items that held immense sentimental value to me. The destroyed items were the original copies of all my diplomas, from grade school to my Ph.D. In addition, my books and other publications, medals, trophies, plaques, and certificates were all gone in the blaze.
The fire also consumed my library, which contained souvenirs from my travels and studies overseas. Books, journals, newspapers, magazines, family portraits, photo albums with friends and students, blue books, drafts and papers of former students (since 1988!), and other memorabilia that held memories were reduced to ashes. Among the lost items were an antique narra trunk that belonged to my maternal grandmother and art nouveau narra chairs from my paternal grandparents.
The fire also claimed posters and invitations from plays where many students had been involved with theater groups like Dulaang UP, UP Repertory Company, UP Tropa, and UP Playwrights Theatre (among them, Kanakan Balintagos, Eugene Domingo, Frances Makil-Ignacio, Lani Sumalinog, and Buddy Zabala, who, with the other members of The Eraserheads, took part in Kanakan’s Manhid at Palma Hall Lobby). I also lost personal copies of invites to launch books from Anvil, Bookmark, Giraffe, Kalikasan, New Day, UP, Ateneo, DLSU, and UST publishing houses. A long table from my late father's library and sketches, paintings, and other artworks created by friends, colleagues, and former students from the UP College of Fine Arts (among them, Leo Abaya, Virginia Dandan, Neil Doloricon, Alexis Galvez, Sajid Imao, Maningning Miclat, Anthony Palomo, Annie Pacaña) were also lost in the fire.
The destruction of archival data from my research projects, as well as book gifts from mentors and friends, added to the overwhelming loss. The CAL Faculty Center, which was not just a workplace but a place of creativity and community and home to many National Artists, Palanca winners, and highly acclaimed figures, is gone. Since 2016, my colleagues and I have not had a designated physical space to write, read, prepare lectures, upgrade our expertise, and connect with students, colleagues, and guests from other academic units, universities, and institutions.
The fire's aftermath has left me grappling with unanswered questions about its cause and the extent of the damage. The absence of permanent offices and incubation spaces for CAL teachers, artists, researchers, and staff members is a bitter realization. Despite the loss, I am grateful for the memories and experiences housed within the Faculty Center, and I will carry them with me as I navigate this new chapter without a physical space to call my own.
However, In addition to the individual impacts on our work and well-being, the absence of designated faculty offices and incubation spaces since 2016 has profoundly affected the overall sense of community within our college. The lack of shared spaces where we can come together, brainstorm ideas, and collaborate on projects has resulted in a noticeable decrease in interactions and partnerships among faculty members.
This isolation from one another has created a disconnect within our college community, hindering our ability to work together effectively. As a result, our capacity to engage in creative and research projects has been significantly compromised. Without these essential spaces for collaboration, we are unable to fully leverage the diverse expertise and talents of our colleagues, ultimately limiting our potential for innovation and growth.
CAL urgently needs more than just administrative offices. We require dedicated spaces to facilitate and enhance our ability to work together, fostering a more vibrant and collaborative environment. By providing us with the necessary infrastructure and resources, we can better compete with other institutions locally and globally, ensuring our continued success and relevance in the academic community.
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Book Share Certificate Lost advertisement in newspaper online, We provide help for Certificate lost ad in newspaper, press notification for lost certificate like CBSE Certificate, Lost Marksheet and property documents.
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Pranks & Put-Ons Mark Old-Time Cincinnati April Fools’ Days
Readers of the Cincinnati Enquirer gasped in astonishment one day in 1887 as they read how Jocko, the headliner elephant at the Cincinnati Zoo, burst his cage, raided the park’s barroom and stumbled through a crazy bender, smashing cages and trampling flowers, finally charging a tourist train and beaning himself against the locomotive.
Astute subscribers would have noticed the publication date. Yes, it was April 1, and the entire pachydermic escapade, illustrations and all, was fiction, an elaborate April Fools’ joke.
History explains why Zoo administrators may still cringe whenever the first day of April rolls around. Do kids still ask unsuspecting adults to telephone the Zoo and return a call from Mister Fox? There are undoubtedly Cincinnatians still living who participated in such tomfoolery. (Your proprietor pleads the Fifth.) Those phone calls to the Zoo were considered old-fashioned even 98 years ago, according to the Cincinnati Post [1 April 1922]:
“There was nothing new in the way of April fool jokes Saturday except the boobs who fell for them. Avon 134, the Zoo telephone, was as busy with calls from persons who wished to talk to Mr. Baer, Mr. Wolf and Mr. Lyon as it was on the day the joke first came from the feeble mind that invented it.”
According to the Post, a lot of people also called the dog pound, asking for Mr. Barker.
Cincinnati’s police and fire departments used to get their share of April Fool prank calls. In 1874, a cop named Murphy used the police telegraph system to report a fire at the corner of Sixth and Stone streets. Needless to say, there was no Murphy on duty and Sixth Street did not intersect Stone.
Even the local courts engaged in the spirit of misrule. On 1 April 1921, Police Court magistrate W. Meredith Yeatman gazed upon four sorry miscreants, charged with stealing rides on freight trains. The judge solemnly intoned a sentence of thirty days and a fifty-dollar fine, plus costs. As the defendants groaned, the judge brightened up and announced that was an April Fool joke. (He did order the men to leave town within three hours.)
In 1904, the president of the truck drivers’ union, John Mullen, saw one of his members dashing frantically down the street, still struggling into his coat. Mullen asked the cause of his agitated flight and the teamster shouted that he was late for work, it being after 5:00 a.m. Mullen informed him that the bells were just about to ring 1:00 a.m. and the teamster shamefacedly trundled home to confront his mischievous landlady.
How far back did Cincinnati endure April Fool hoaxes? Pretty far back, as it turns out – all the way back to 1849. In 1904, retired house painter Charles Stewart decided to celebrate his 55th wedding anniversary by getting a new marriage certificate to replace the original, lost some years before. As Marriage License Clerk Fred Bader issued the official duplicate, he noted the date of Stewart’s original marriage – 1 April 1849. Stewart confessed that, when he told his friends back in 1849 he had married pretty Martha Dawson that morning, they all thought it was an April Fool joke.
Reading about vintage pranks, it strikes the modern reader how casually cruel our ancestors could be. As you might expect, some old-fashioned tricks included exploding cigars or soap-filled cream puffs, but some could be dangerous and even fatal.
A group of Price Hill boys hauled a dozen empty coal oil cans up a hill at the western end of Gest Street for April Fool entertainment in 1872, and set them on fire. For added effect, they had filled one of the cans halfway with gasoline. When the inevitable explosion rocked the city, newspapers sent reporters scurrying to locate the cause. By then, they boys were in the wind, thankfully unharmed.
In 1901, someone sent word to a Covington widow that her son had been run over by a delivery wagon and was dying in a Dow drug store in Cincinnati. The elderly woman and her daughter hired a cab and raced to almost every Dow outlet in the city, being informed at each one that no one injured had been brought there. At length, they retreated to Covington where they anxiously awaited grim news. Eventually, the young man, ignorant of their distress, came whistling up the block, in perfect health. His elderly mother collapsed and required medical care. It had all been a wicked joke.
In 1904, two doctors, brothers Chase Ferris and Charles Ferris, ended up in court when their April Fool joke sent at least two people to the hospital. Both victims had eaten oysters and drank beer at a lodge meeting and became violently ill. Attorney Hiram Rulison alleged that the Ferris brothers had intentionally poisoned the refreshments as an April Fool joke, but had exceeded the intended dosage.
One thing was certain: Uncle Sam has no sense of humor. A Cincinnati lawyer discovered this the hard way. As April Fool’s Day 1905, approached, Attorney Charles F. Williams came across what he thought was the perfect gag for his girlfriend. A local shop sold a bundle of newspapers, carved through the center to hide a stash of fake candy – red-pepper-filled chocolates, soap-flavored caramels, that sort of thing. The recipient, believing the newspaper container to be the trick, was likely to fall victim to the inedible candy.
Williams bought and mailed the booby-trap and then heard . . . nothing. A week later, he was summoned to the Post Office where he learned his joke was now evidence of a federal crime. By mailing the joke as “newspapers,” he had defrauded the postal service, because it should have been mailed a “merchandise,” which would, of course, have ruined the joke.
Uncle Sam was not laughing. Williams faced a potential $100 fine, plus a year in prison. By chance, Attorney Williams was known to Postal Inspector A.R. Holmes, who offered a lenient judgement of a $10 fine and postage due. Williams paid.
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In case of Loss of Share Certificates, a shareholder primarily needs to lodge the First Information Report, in order to request for marking stop transfer of deed against the lost certificates and prepare an affidavit and the indemnity bond agreement. Next publishing a newspaper advertisement for lost share certificates is mandatory.
Notice on newspaper for Lost Share Certificates is a usual practice. Shareholders might select newspapers of the region of the registered office of the company. By this, the public shall be intimated about the loss and the company shall then issue a duplicate share certificate in lieu of the original one. But the duplicate share shall be only issued once no objection is received within the prescribed time. Shareholders need to present the documents including the copy of the advertisement released in the newspaper to the company at the time of issuing the duplicate share certificate, failing which the company might not issue the same. The registrars shall issue the duplicate share certificate only after verification of the documents provided.
Now newspaper advertisement for loss of share certificate is booked in national and regional newspapers. Usually, these ads are booked in black and white classified display and display formats. You can check out the ad samples and the pre-designed templates on our website for booking them on your own. Classified display or display ads are column ads measured and charged on per square centimeter basis. The company logo can also be used in the ad content along with the ad text. Only a few handful newspapers allow booking public notice ads in text format. In order to find out more, visit our online portal. But before booking your ad, you need to keep your FIR copy or affidavit copy ready.
So browse through our portal and see the options that are available for advertising. We provide guidance from media experts to our clients so that they get the best response from the advertisement. We also offer different discount packages to our advertisers. Since we are accredited by INS, the publication houses share with us their rate cards directly without any extra commission charge and we update the same on our portal for our advertisers.
releaseMyAd simplifies advertising experience by saving time and money. It was founded in 2008 with the idea of booking ads online in national and local newspapers of India. With the aim to make advertising easy for the clients, we created a user-friendly portal. Now if you are convinced to book ads through our portal, follow 3 easy ad booking steps given below –
Visit our website and select the category ‘Lost Share Certificates Notice’
Then send us a query mentioning your name, contact information, and company
After that, you will get the quotation from our media planners. Once you receive the ad quotation, proceed on our website to clear the payment through our various online modes, while we process the ad for you.
In order to contact us, you may call at 09051444946 or write us at [email protected].
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In recent months, several Southern California school boards have been forced to relocate or cancel their meetings because planned discussions about ethnic studies led to threats of violence.
On July 11, a fight broke out during Rep. Katie Porter’s town hall event at an Irvine park, when far-right figures organized a confrontation and one of Porter’s supporters was arrested for throwing a punch.
Last week, a Victorville councilwoman was arrested after clashing with police as they tried to remove one of her supporters from City Hall.
Physical confrontations during local government meetings aren’t the norm. But they’re no longer a big surprise either.
And in the wake of Jan. 6 — when some Southern California residents were part of a mob that beat police officers, threatened lawmakers and stormed the halls of Congress in a failed effort to prevent certification of an election in which former president Donald Trump lost — there is widespread concern that violence is coming to the routine government gatherings that keep democracy running.
It’s not clear if there’s been a spike in violent incidents and speech at local government functions, since no one appears to track that data. Generally, law enforcement officials say arrests and physical violence during civic meetings in Southern California remain rare.
But police agencies also have ramped up their presence at some public events. Surveys also suggest public officials — particularly health, election and education officials — are more concerned about their safety than ever before, with most citing threats by a diverse coalition of largely right-wing activists. Other data shows a doubling of threats of physical harm against Congress members, while organizations that track hate crimes say they’re seeing an increase in hostility directed at local county, city and school board officeholders.
The hostility can include hate speech, which is protected by the First Amendment but can set the stage for physical violence.
A disturbing example played out at an Orange County Board of Supervisors meeting on Tuesday, July 27.
A member of the public who identified himself as “Tyler Durden” (a character from the movie “Fight Club”) and a member of “America First” (a motto championed by Trump and his supporters) directed his public comment at the board’s Vietnamese American Chair, Andrew Do. The speaker described Do, an American citizen whose family once fled a communist regime, as “one of these communist parasites,” and told him to “go the f— back to Vietnam.” The supervisor did not respond, but the comments drew cheers from the crowd.
“A lot of the attention is being paid to officials and agencies that (previously) people wouldn’t even know about,” said Brian Levin, a criminal justice professor at Cal State San Bernardino who directs the university’s Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism.
Levin said the center he leads recently started to track violent incidents and speech at local governmental meetings, a world he didn’t previously see as a hotbed of conflict.
“Traditionally, these have been sleepy places that have been off the radar,” Levin said, referring to gatherings of city councils and school boards, among others.
But he added that government meetings increasingly are targeted by activists who use violent speech — or the threat of actual violence — to raise their profile. The local events, Levin said, “are being amplified by a subculture that’s on social media, and is able to tie these meetings to some cataclysmic event.” That’s creating some trends that Levin described as “vivid” and “distressing.”
Peter Levi, an Orange County-based regional director for the Anti-Defamation League, said officials and members of the community can push back against violence before the trend ramps up. But, he added, those steps may require some training and tough conversations and courage.
“When good people do nothing, that is the big danger.”
Why now?
Violence in American politics is nothing new. Everything from the Civil War to the rise of the Ku Klux Klan (founded specifically to disenfranchise Black voters and later to enforce Jim Crow segregation) to the assassinations and bombings that punctuated American politics in the 1960s and ’70s, are examples of political violence.
Local government meetings have not been immune, even if the incidents are usually less spectacular than war or insurrection. In 2012, for example, police arrested a woman who refused to stop speaking during a Riverside City Council meeting. And in 2016 officials took a boxcutter away from a man at a Los Angeles City Hall meeting.
But Levin said a “confluence of factors” is making the current political moment ripe for actual violence, even in local meeting halls.
The public, he noted, no longer trusts former community touchstones, such as police and universities and newspapers and health experts. At the same time, ethnic and racial diversity, multiculturalism, and acceptance of all sexual orientations are changing in ways that threaten people who once benefited from the old status quo.
Toss in trends like the recent coarsening of political discourse, the rise of social media (where facts and propaganda and conspiracy theories co-mingle and can have equal sway), and the tension that comes from a global pandemic, and you’ve got a recipe for potential violence.
It’s the “democratization of hate,” Levin said, and a political landscape where “extremism has become mainstream.”
To illustrate that point, Levi with the ADL noted that Nick Taurus, a self-proclaimed American Nationalist who coordinated the July 11 confrontation at Porter’s town hall, is not running against Porter in the 45th District as a third-party candidate. He’s running as a Republican.
“They don’t even have to share the same anchored and rigid ideology,” Levin said, referring to people who might resort to violence to make their political points.
“The fears are amorphous, but the villains are particular.”
Targeted hate
When it comes to villains, there’s a long tradition of extremist groups on both sides of the political aisle opposing federal authority. But in recent years, Levin said Trump and some Republican leaders effectively directed the focus of a significant swath of the country away from traditional boogeymen that Americans of all political stripes once rallied against — such as Soviet Russia or ISIS. Instead, Trump and his supporters have urged voters to revile specific national political figures on the left, agencies such as the FBI (“the Deep State!”), and even local or state-level elected officials, who Trump, while president, sometimes called out by name.
In April 2020, after Trump used Twitter to air his criticism of Michigan’s Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmore, armed protesters invaded Michigan’s state capitol, prompting some elected officials to put on bulletproof body armor and call off a discussion about COVID-19 safety measures. And during the unprecedented attack of Jan. 6, Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol chanting “Hang Mike Pence!” and threatening to kill House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
When such incidents are discussed, critics on the right frequently mention violence from the left. They note that in 2018, when the Trump administration was taking heat for its policy of separating families at the U.S. border, Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters of Los Angeles encouraged supporters to confront Trump Cabinet members wherever they were spotted in public. Republicans also have characterized Antifa, which is short for “Anti-fascists” and is a loose network of far-left activists who typically organize to counter efforts by white supremacists, as a threat to America’s political health and safety.
Levi, of the ADL, said his group does track hate crime from the left, and that his chapter recently provided training to local law enforcement on how to identify such threats.
In April, a group of about 10 men dressed in black who identified themselves as Antifa said they were attending a Los Alamitos Unified School District board meeting as “peacekeepers,” after the board’s previous discussions about school programs aimed at reducing bias drew raucous crowds. Police eventually directed the school board to hold meetings on the topic virtually for safety reasons.
But Levi and many others have said the data is clear: The vast majority of hate-based violence currently is coming from white supremacists and other figures on the far right. And, to date, there are no reported examples of far-left activists disrupting regular government meetings in Southern California.
The Orange County Board of Education planned to hold a July 27 forum to discuss critical race theory — a decades-old view of systemic racism that’s become a new hot-button topic for Republicans — in the unincorporated community of Rossmoor. But after the Orange County Sheriff’s Department told the board that 69 deputies would be needed to maintain security, and that the board would be asked to pay $96,000 to cover that expense, the board moved the forum to their offices in Costa Mesa.
This month, city council members in Huntington Beach were escorted by police as they attended public meetings to discuss how to fill an empty council seat. The seat had been left vacant when former Councilman Tito Ortiz — who mocked masks, espoused conspiracy theories and become a local hero among Trump supporters — resigned because he become uncomfortable with the negative attention he received as an elected official.
Huntington Beach Mayor Kim Carr said she did not feel nervous or fearful at the meetings, and that she welcomes “dissent.” But police recommended extra precaution when Ortiz supporters pushed loudly for the council to choose as a replacement a woman who previously embraced language used by white nationalists. The council went a different direction, appointing civil rights attorney Rhonda Bolton.
“I think sometimes people try to intimidate you with this type of rhetoric,” Carr said, referring to heated political discourse. “It doesn’t work on me. I’m not sure who it works on. I’ve never seen it be successful.”
Some of the speakers, Carr said, walked “right up to the edge” of voicing comments that could be considered threats. However, she didn’t believe anyone crossed that line or instigated violence.
“But you don’t want to under prepare,” she said. “You need to always be ready in case somebody decides to take things a little too far.”
What can be done?
Southern California law enforcement agencies say it’s standard practice to have at least one uniformed officer at government and political functions. Agencies also routinely monitor online chatter and other sources to determine if they need to send additional support or recommend other safety precautions.
For Porter’s town hall, which was punctuated by violence, Irvine Police Sgt. Katie Davies said her agency was aware of planned protests before the event. The police, she added, communicated with the town hall organizers and eventually staffed the event with five officers.
Police generally recommend that political events be held in private locations, where access can be controlled, Davies said. Porter’s team planned the town hall in a park, since the event was billed as “family friendly” and outdoor gatherings are less likely to spread coronavirus, and because it was Porter’s first big in-person event since the start of the pandemic. Porter’s team did not ask for police to limit access to the event, and Davies said that would have gone against police’s responsibility to guard freedom of speech rights.
Porter declined a request to be interviewed for this story.
Some of Porter’s supporters criticized the Irvine PD for not having more officers present, and said the officers who were on the scene took too much time to respond when the fight broke out.
But Davies said that based on the information police had prior to the event, “the amount of police personnel was appropriate.”
“Our role is to be a uniformed presence, keep the peace, and respond to any criminal activity that may occur… . If criminal activity occurs, we handle it appropriately, as we did in this case.”
It’s a complex issue, to be sure. Many leaders on the left generally want police to be less aggressive, particularly in the wake of police violence during last year’s Black Lives Matter protests. And some elected officials fear that having a line of officers at a town hall would simply raise any existing tension.
But Levin said his Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism generally advocates for better securing all political gathering places, from federal and state capitols to local school board meetings.
Their recommendations include making sure uniformed law enforcement is present, not allowing firearms at the scene, and quick removal of anybody causing a disruption. Also, Levin said, everyone from police to political leaders to members of the public need to read the room and be aware of tension at a meeting, to avoid being caught off guard if violence breaks out.
Better data can help drive better safety planning. So Levin also is advocating for creation of a statewide commission on what’s been termed the current “State of Hate.”
Levi, of the ADL, said violent extremism doesn’t emerge from a vacuum; it starts with violent language. And that’s why, in his view, hostile, xenophobic, homophobic rhetoric that’s becoming routine during, say, the public comment portion of the O.C. Board of Supervisors meetings, needs to be addressed. That kind of talk, in his view, can escalate to something more serious.
Levi also says people shouldn’t directly engage with extremists. “You’re never going to convince them (to favor your opinion), and it just feeds into their narrative.”
One of the tactics employed by extremist groups is to come to public places and use aggressive, violent rhetoric as a way to bait a response from the other side. If the counter protesters take the bait and throw a punch — which might be what happened during Porter’s town hall — the violence can be described as having been committed by them, not the original agitators.
Instead Levi doesn’t recommend total silence. In the case of hate speech made during public comment periods, Levi said elected officials should “use their power and authority to condemn such… speech, and say it has no place in their chambers… rather than passively sit there.”
Several local leaders have spoken up to condemn the racist comments recently directed at Republican Supervisor Do. State Sen. Dave Min, D-Irvine, called the comments aimed at Do “despicable” and “unacceptable.”
Levi said he’d like to see a hotline to encourage people to report hate incidents at public meetings. He also wants to see resources spent to train police, public officials, teachers and others how to recognize and react to extremist language and behavior.
Some community members are organizing on social media to counteract extremists.
But, in this case, the mere threat of violence is exerting its own power.
Many who want to push back believe it won’t be safe to attend local meetings and express their view — particularly when agitators include people who refuse to wear masks or get vaccinated for COVID-19.
“This is the major problem,” tweeted @InMinivanHell, who regularly shares examples of what she views as extremism at Orange County meetings. “The only people speaking up & having their voices heard are far-right conspiracy believers.”
“As a community,” she said in another tweet, “we deserve to be kept safe from threats and racism when attending govt mtgs.”
-on August 02, 2021 at 12:00AM by Brooke Staggs
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Prompt Action: Benefits of Reporting Lost Share Certificates in Newspapers
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How to Become An Expert At Newspaper Ad Booking?
Advertising in newspapers happens to be the first choice to advertise in for most brands because giving ad in the newspaper provides many advantages to the advertisers to more effectively reach smaller, niche audiences, of all age groups and all income levels, both in cities and rural areas.
It is the most important part to promote your business within budget as due to high readership number it creates an opportunity for you as an advertiser to get your advertisement to get the maximum attention of a million readers as It reminds them of the product or the service.
The easiest way of giving an advertisement in newspapers is through an online ad booking site releaseMyAd. As it India’s largest online ad booking portal, Our portal is very first of its kind as it is a user friendly comprehensive online advertising booking platform designed in such a way so that advertisers can book their both classified ad & Display ad directly at lowest rates depending on Different category & size without any hassle.
So to become an expert in ad booking without making any mistakes you need to know certain basic rules before placing an ad in a newspaper, let us discuss below.
1. Ad Formats:
There are three ad format in newspapers:
Classified Text: In These type of ads format enhancements like screen, tick, color can be added to the ad according to the advertisers choice.
Classified Display: These ads consist of Text ads with pictures.
Display: Display ads which can be on any page and of any size or colour, You may use images, logos, and graphics along with texts. These are more expensive than text ads.
2. Categories allowed:
Certainly before placing an ad you need to know the category under which you should place your ad.
Matrimonial
Property
Jobs
Obituary
Business
Service
To Rent
Computers etc.
3.Documentation Required:
The general documents required for all paper are given below:
For a change of name: A notarized affidavit not more than 6 months old or a gazette copy.
For Lost & Found: FIR copy or General Diary (GD) or Notarized Affidavit(not more than 6 months old )
Different documents required for notice ad such as (public notice)
F.I.R or G.D copy required for share certificate lost, C Forms lost, or loss of property papers & For the company documents lost etc.
Housing society:Ad Matter should be written in society letterhead, duly signed & stamped.
A letterhead from a practicing lawyer full ad matter should be written, along with his signature, registration number seal & date is required as a proper legal supporting document .
For Obituary or remembrance advertisement:Death certificate issued by the General Practitioner (GP) & Doctor’s Note stating name & date of death of deceased person receipt from crematorium or burial ground
4. Things that are compulsory for ad matter
Always mention contact details like phone number or email address in the matter.
Always keep the matter short & precise.
Avoid spelling mistakes.
After knowing all the above point you ready to book an advertisement in newspaper with the help of releaseMyAd.
For more information, or have some other queries? mail us at [email protected], or call us on 09830629298.
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What Matters Most With Newspaper Advertising?
Newspaper Advertising is one of the most popular mediums to advertise among many options available for advertising. & it is the most cost effective method of advertisement especially when placing an ad online.
The most important things for newspaper advertisements are discussed below.
Selection Of Correct Newspaper:
As per the data available with the Government, a total of 1,05,443 newspapers/periodicals are registered with the Registrar of Newspapers for India (RNI). There are a variety of regional & English Newspapers on the basis on which advertisers can reach local audiences as well as choosing correct newspaper on basis circulation, reach & category helps the advertisers to get better response.
Proper Selection Of Ad Format:
Newspaper Advertisements are of three Formats: Classified text, Classified Display & Display, among which Classified Ads are budget friendly allows the advertisers to place the ad respectively under classified section making it a focus point for the readers.
Display ads are more expensive than classified ads. It can be placed at any page according to your choice & budget (For example First page, Middle page or back page) moreover viewers find it attractive due to better design & image quality.
Selection of Right Packages & Editions:
Firstly you will have select proper publication for your preferred location it might sound difficult than choosing correct newspaper but it will far more easy if you have the idea about the readership of every edition moreover if the newspaper you have selected does not have an edition or package for your selected location then you should go for the Package or the edition closest to your selected location.
Documentation Required:
As per the publication rules it is mandatory to provide the documents.
For a change of name: A notarized affidavit not more than 6 months old or a gazette copy.
For Lost & Found: FIR copy or General Diary (GD) or Notarized Affidavit(not more than 6 months old )
Different documents required for notice ad such as (public notice)
F.I.R or G.D copy required for share certificate lost, C Forms lost, or loss of property papers & For the company documents lost etc.
Housing society:Ad Matter should be written in society letterhead, duly signed & stamped.
A letterhead from a practicing lawyer full ad matter should be written, along with his signature, registration number seal & date is required as a proper legal supporting document .
For Obituary or remembrance advertisement:Death certificate & Doctor’s Note stating name & date of death of deceased person receipt from crematorium or burial ground.
Properly Composing of Ad Matter:
If you want successful newspaper advertisement it highly depends on how you compose your ad.
For example if you as an advertiser placing an Property Ad & want to sell the property & then you should properly describe the property & location, cost & Contact details.
For your reference take this ad matter for example.
Ready to Occupy Well Furnished Spacious 2 BHK Flat with 1252sft near Aravinda School Tadepalli for sale (Approx. Rent 12K-15k/Month).Genuine Buyers only. Contact: 9652056696 .
This helps the reader to know about the property, its location, cost & contact details.This helps the advertiser to get proper response.
Choosing Right Enhancement:
It is very important to choose the right enhancement like Tick, bold, Screen & color that makes the ad matter Attractive so that it can grab the attention of the reader better, thus making your newspaper advertisement become a success.
Choosing Correct Focus Dates:
Different Newspapers have different focus days for different ad Categories. Like for example Matrimonial Section is the most famous category in the newspaper & for the most of the newspaper it is booked on Sundays that means matrimonial ad cannot be published on any other day. & for general categories ad can be booked on every day but a particular day can give you more exposure than other days, like a recruitment ad can be given every day in Times of India but giving it on a Wednesday & property advertisement giving it on a Saturday Makes it get more response. This is because Every publication creates a special page focusing on a particular category published on a specific day each week for better response.
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Protect Your Assets: Importance of Advertising Lost Share Certificates
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