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NORWICH BULLETIN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15. 1918 DANIELSCN Employes of the Connecticut mills —and they number hundreds—are very mmuch interested in a profit- sharing plan, as it may be called that the company has offered them. This opportunity consists of a chance to buy shares of a new issue of stock of the company, to be used in increasing the equipment as well as 1naking extensions to the present big plant, but beyond that the fine onomic prespect of bringing the em- ploves into closer relation with the employers—the company—and thereby cetting the superior organization that a2lways has been shown to foliow the idmission of employes as partners in manufacturing bu , for such the new stockholders will be. When interviewed relative to the - on Wednesday Agent Obadiah nd Superintendent Amos Mo- rin stated that the new issue of stock will be preferred and non-voting, this to carry an 8 per cent. cumula- end rate af the option of the company and be redeemable at §115 3 share on any quarterly dividend date, If notice of at least 30 days is given. Tt is also to be understood and that if and hen the sub- fo! is shares of prefer- | shall at the same time the privileze of purchasing com- mon stock of the Connecticut mills for | cash at par, $100 a share, up to a to- ! t of 10 per cent. of the face v: e preferred stock that he takes. of Those who hold the common stock know that it st 100 per c<nt. above T e isn't any sale at any 3 rice The manner in e hecoming inte the opnor- become kholders of the s an indication of the suc- cess t he plan will meet twith. Many of the employes have been with ne concern since it bezan do ness in a verv small way here decade 0 and have witne: wonderful expansion and development undergone and the remarkable company has to become partners ity that not Reaches Age Limit in October. Dar e in Octoher, w of aze ation an rarily will be fix an- who know is jus about to re. yman S dur- vear bat £ Seap Is My Ideal for preserving, purify- ing and beautifying ! Especially when preced- edbytouchesof Cuticura Ointment to pimples, redness, roughness and druff. DANIELSON AND PUTNAM NEWS Complaints PUTNAM Miss Bernice Carmeletta Gahan, daugiter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Gahan, Elm street, and Morgan Har- rison Delaney wene married at St Mary’s church at 8 o'clock Wednesday morning by Rev. N. A. Routhier. The bride was given in marriage by her father. The bridesmaid was Miss Inez Mulroney of Rockville, a cousin of the bride, and the best man was John W. Gahan, brother of the bride. Sister Charles played the music of the mass, which was sung by the choir of novices from the mother house of the Holy Ghost, Church street. The bride’s gown was of white geor- gette crepe and net, trimmed with lace. Her bouquet was of American Beauty roses. She wore the veil of the Chil~ dren of Mary. z Miss Mulroney wore a gown of pink georgette creve, with hat and shoes to match, Her bouquet was of pink as- ters. After ception parents, flowers the wedcing there was a re- at the home of the briue’s which was decorated with cut and fernms. ater Mr. and Mrs. Delaney left for their wedding trip, motoring to the mountains of northern New England Mrs. Delaney is well known in this city. For more than six years she has been the cashier at the ticket office at the Bradiey theatre. She is a gradu- ate of St. Mary’s parochial school of this city and a former pupil of Put- nam High school. Mr. Delaney is the manager of the Putnam A, & P. store and has been a resident of this city about a_ year. His ome in North Hinsdale. N. H,, where he will visit with his bride it during their honeymoon. Th> bride received many beautiful gifts of silver, cut glass, linen and other articles. Among the out of town guests at the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Francis McGinley, Gardner, Mass.: William ‘alsh and family, Wooneocket, R. L: Katherine and Alice Connor , Woonsocket: Wal- r Gahan, West Willington; Mr. and Ralph Guibord, Melrose, Mas rs Gordon Taylor. New York: Mr. and| Mrs. William Farrell, Bridgeport: Mrs. Mary Farrell, Dockville; Mrs. I Muiron Jennie Grahom, M 4 n, Web- ster; Miss Lucy Van Dyer, Boston. August Quota 40. This district’s quota of men to go to camp for general military service during August is 40, according to an official telegram received here Wed- nesday. The men will be entrained f the 1917 registra- °mains of that sroup, istered in June of ve list of those z compiled and »e announced tomOrrow. Men who not in the who wish to go may have the T by rcquesting the board to their order numbers. When this group s there will be no more n of the 1817 registrants future cal ill have to be men who registered in June vear and men who are to reg- r this month and next. uncement v imade by the board Wednesday afternoon that der of the war department, there will be a ation Saturday, Aug 24, 1018 have reached th June 5 of this year. s to all men, whether citizens or not. L of the men from. this distr includes the towns of Pu Thompson, Woodstock and Ashford—must come to o registe istra court a from ng until ration ted and Is for the specific is not to be co t come later T n hetv@en 15 quired to register, from 21 to 45 Against Private Barbour. | | i | | | | i {E ille to_this city | ' 1 u 1| concentrate ail our efforts on the stud: L85 ek W anastodk | O PR e O ANERICANSLING) he_ : e e e Br 1?‘({1 of f:n{::.’\‘l'ém‘n‘;‘ Wt e A Ay o e u i 1917 as land pla ‘ o “hmh-t‘tz‘?dp"fir s_t:te ‘r;",afigufil : Co number | Vesle, Aug. 14—(By A. “From one o necessifatods [Luke) | the | pai | # fairs to'be-held In- Connic end to the other of the Franco-Am B sround gypsum “‘"’l ac”,dm c;;‘bj:ct?—n‘ame!\' the ey o iney hoteieny Soleons andd r 1 N ins to be adopted to protect rgsident ot it a5 and far into the back areas Sk after the war, the Gov el S e ermans dropped bombs from the | sy eer Wednesda: ; hefore davlight today. The re- |, s ernment will be urged fo renew its { MacKenzie, daughter of | - of the day was confined to a | e orts, upon lines objectiol Gl e, ':u"nr‘, S reciprocal artillery duel R “":“ pan ized labor, to induce immigrants to | . da Adams, has moved g e Jduel. pposed [ P n the ub o C. he | ed have there been aerial raids of the | rresid S . i : zo | magnitude of the one today. e Am- become as plant | B e s e B Dlanti WHO MAKES NEEDLES? | for | bardment. The front line was pound- hese elements =re present | the United States. We make re | ed ahd almost every village and the 1, and its application to ands of things and we have! has come and is i |.zoads between were subjected to the would therefore be o © manufacture of a great many | overnment's demand | hombardment, but the great number otbers since the war began, but, al- may be met. The reg- | Tombs fell on unoccupied ground.| Some old that | though we make sewing machine > ai the Jibrary of the | AFis was taken top indicate that the . make nonporous | needles and darning needles, the littie fration i : “ e ious to water and to|sharp sewing needle come to us from EVER H P. Woodward, Lieut Burton | hampered the enemy somewhat. | Ground fngland has always led the w«_ar!dh . Roland State presgut German lite, which is | in neediemaking, and Japan and Ger- are well pleas a i regarded as only a temporary one, |3 many began to make needles not more PRESE ING ion received by | depends upon a defence of machine | and is of value to the farmer | than ten, years ago. Scotland fur-| Rv of the Third State Guard reg- | suns and zirplanes. The enemy has siarting grain and grass crops,] nishes the steel wire from which the iment, to which the local company is | concentrated machine suns at about|as it holds moisture where the roots|are made and English needle factori attached. This regiment had the best | one cvery ffty vards, a denmsity rarely |of the small plants most need it. The |cut the wire into pieces that are twice | PANS KETTI.ES FRU'T JARS tendance of officers of any of the| effected. Their aerial defence relative- | use of ground | the length of the needie to be made. | iments that have been in camp at|lv is far superior to any established|in a dry, hot Pundles of these lengths, 20,000 to the | ntic, getting a rating of 92 per | hitherto on this front. moisture from bundle, are put into a furnace which cent. There has heen no recent informa-l tion from the company that is to build Dani b : DUEL WITH SUBMARINE - . A hicEir int. Danielson’'s motor truck for the fire soils of arid regions, as in California, | which grinds each end to a poi 5 ¢ s to when it will arrive 2 i | Nevada, and Utk | After that the eyeing machine punches “CONSERVO” STEAM COOKER AND CANNER Bt said that the chances| AN Atlantic Port, Aug. 14—The| " pio® Vio W ¥0 1115 Dlag f | two holes in the center of the piece of 3 5 will not be in Daniclson unti] | Members of an American transport|priniied freely on manure Cook a whole meal or cook 14 quart jars the winter, and possibfy not | AITiving here this evening zave ac-|giajle fioors, absorbs the valuab 5 Xt spring. The delay is due to | SOUnts of a duel Tuesday afternoon|monia in the manure. Three or fou T of preserves at one time 2 demands upon’ the plant | Petween the naval gunners of thelr|;,ungs of powdered gypsum per an Frankili\ z ing the truck. ship and a German super-submarine|mal per day scattered on the stable Brovidence, R. I. BLUE FLAME OIL STOVES F. Woodward and Miss| Whicd aftacked their boat 300 miles|liiter will unite with the nitrogen of M h' Taleshensss Watherine D. Aviward visited their | Off the American coast. the manure to form ammonium sul- acnine eRanee ster, Mrs. Timothy Taylor, in Web- | About eight shots were exchansed.|phate - The ammonia in this compound Union 963 Two or three burner, wick or wickless ster Wednesday. As the transport under full steam drew |is easily available as plant food: it |C0m AMNY Union 1857 : *. A. Hamilton is at Bridgeport at. | 2Way, the U-boat ceased firing. |is not given off into the air nor is it p y tending the State Firemen's associa- tion convention. Some thermometers hung up other record of nesday. Edward William F. and Mrs. Davis an- 9 degrees here Wed- A k of Rahway, N. J, are visiting Day- | seaplane fell into Pensacola Bay, it|sum itself has no bad effect on the Latae e A Bulletin Building, 74 Franklin Street ville relatives. was announced today. Fenton held|soil, as it is probably converted, in Miss Gertrude Brooks of North| the rank of chief quartermaster. part at least, to calcium carbonate in General Mill Repairs. Telephone 531-4 Sterling, formerly of - Eimyville, is ~ the manure, 5 i . spending - a -few -weeks in ‘the Whucl 1t is seldem safe to judge a man by! Land plaster may be applied to the Special machinery of all kinds. monntains. Min awn oninjar of himself. vestigation. | AMERICAN TRANSPORT HAS Fenton of Bellows Falls, Vt, a student COMING TO NORWICH SATURDAY See the Great Parade! Mammoth Unduplicated Cavalcade! The Greatest and Last of Its Kind! A Breath from the Historic Far West! See the Mlgah Dust Fly! A Examine the Tremendous 8000 Ib. Wagons! SCHEDULE OF | STOPS ‘ 10 A. M.—2192 Central Avenue. 10:15 A. M.—285 Central Avenue 10:45 A. M.—276 Main Street. 11.00 A. M.—72 Franklin Street 12:30 P. M.—158 Sturtevant Street. 2:15 P. M.—159 Sachem Street. 2:45 P. M.—88 West Main Street 3.00 P. M.—303 West Main Street. 3:45 P. M.—93 Main Streeet. 4.00 P. M.—319 Main Street. Watch Borax Bil ¢ : Tern a Corner See the Celebrated 20-MULE BORAX TEAM From the hottest place on earth--Death Valley, California Hear Tarantula Pete Talk Free Samples Distributed Found Dead in Cistern. it may be sowed broadcast, in | wire and t machine cuts the [and that they dominate the governor's t Jaffrey ranging from 200 to 300|two need nd smoothes off the | office and the food administration. As - to the acre. end of each . long as Henry B. Endicott refuses to & of gypsum as fertilizer in| Up to this time thinzs have gone)become interested in Mr. Fitzgerald's . an arts of the United States is|pretty fast now the needle takes|specific charges, there will be a con- % found d hown roughly by the quantities sold |a rest, for it lies in a bundle with its|siderable contingent of citizens who : i laven for use as land plaster in the gypsum- | fellows in a mixture of emery, soft(will listen to the former mayor with Walters of Barre, Vit roducing States. soap and oil. Then it goes into the Putnam on Wednes: deep attention.—Brockton Times. and Mrs. Willlam ¢ d MIGRATION AFTER THE WAR. ! i In and afterward the polish- d orting and sizing had _beer Winning Its Way. death s X ¥ Gl . to dro 4 £ = s an American|{ sSome of the Missouri editors weare Several registrants from | b Sk nnual convention of the Trades | inventior the needles on|presadiced against the name Yanks at trict were caught in the haul of sev-| | havotiad Congress of Canada will be | cioth, fo them in papers and ties|first, but all are coming to it ral hundred men made at i b N R e city of Quebec. commencing | them, ter pape o the bunch and!name so perfectly designed to fit in- Tuescay evening in an effort | e ey D ber 15. An official circular.) four bunches to the package to the headlines is bound to become up siackers ad | rs. Levi P. Morton Dea ined by Mr. Waters, the president,| Before the war we had twenty-five | popmiar with - newspapermen. ana men of this | hkeepsie. N. Y. Aug = {needles in 2 paper. but now we Zet|inerefore, with the public.—Kansas fication cards, Morton. wife of the for The war is about to enter the fifth|only tyvent The United States | orey mimes. hem, and there were w { dent governor, died #o-|vear of general devastation and UP- | spends” §200,000.000 a year for needles. B 3 as to| ca Is from Webster to t > 1| 4 n.;’l ecliff, the o e in lhl\e‘_erlt‘)ma’!'r‘;eg‘fmx:glsliz\ % His Possible Reference. | and they were mar. ] been laid aside in order to devote ever BT £ velllearare “We are masters,” exclaims Luoden- ing_that the e i to the mighty task which _ John ¥ zgerald contimues to|dorff theatrically, referring, perhaps corralled had been reies S SR S | c struggle has gimposed upon |N2mmer the fish trusi. declaring that|to the umarmed hospital ship situation W were being held for fu GYPSUM USED AS FERTILIZER country, so with m’?ongre s mat- | 1tS directors laugh at State authority | Philadelphia North American. 5 o which would, undef® other circum- first uses and command special, attentign NEMY DROPPED BONBS ¢ to be overlooked in order (o WIRE FRAMES FOR PANS OR BOILER All shapes and sizes a crop from dan plas s employed kali that f takes the temper out of the steel. Then the lengths are rolled till they are to a ms in many of the | straight, when they go to a machine readily washed from the manure heap by rain, but is saved until the manure is incorporated with the soil. Tt isj supposed that the gypsum causes also the potash and phosphates to be re- tained in the manure and that the gyp- Student Aviator Killed. Pensacola, Fia, Aug. 14.—Joseph J. Engineers Founders Manufacturers of LI1SS ENGINES, Engine Repairs, Shafting, Hangers, Pulleys, Bear- ings, Couplings, Clutches. Machinists HARRIS-COR- viator at the Pensacola station was illed late Tuesday night when his The Household soil by drillinz, or scattered in the