Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 30, 1911, Page 6

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COURT BUSINESS AT WESTERLY Collision Between Auto and Soil Cart Results in Suit— Arguments Closed Friday—Décision Reserved—Rail- ‘road Asked for Damages Alleged to be Due to Loco'-: motive SpaxksTPennsylvania Silk Man May. Enlarge Local Branch. There was a session of seven hours’ duration of the Third district court, Friday, Judge Oliver H. William hearing the cases of Charles S. lor and Roy G. Ames against George Davidson, both eases being tried joint- ly, with Rathbun B. Dixon for tiffs, and Albert B. Crafts for defend- ant. The cases are the outcome of @ collision in Spruce street on the night of June 27, when an automobile owned by defendant and at that time operat- ed by his sen Harry, collided with a night soil cart owned by Ames and upen which both plaintiffs were ridir The plaintifis seek 1o recover of 00 each from th defendant as owner of the machine, he being respon- efble for the proper operation, al- tho he was not in the automobile at the time Hilision Charles . Tavior testified that at the time of mishap the soil cart e i hand side of the road, the ing. It was about clock and the night was fairly r and street lights were burn- | g He to as it turned in- to Spri et from Cranite, the sldeligh burning but no head- | lights. The auto struck the cart head- on, on th right side, right back of the forward wheel He said the au- tomobile was goinz at the rate of 25 miles an hour at time. The wit- ness was thrown to the sidewalk with cone!derable force and was severely bruised and shaken up. He said that just afte the accident Harry David- son declared the first seen of the team was when it was siruek. There were twe other men in the automobile with farry Davidson and as a whole they irly zood cendition, but he iting liquor from and corner of the | broken, the horses freed torn apart and the cart put o d siness W s went to the offi Dr muel Webster for treatment and was unable to do any w ) weeks after the accident only ¥ s of the two fol- s, owing to his injuries. or further testified that the | ame up the street for a an road on the right hand side nd then swerved suddenly had and struck the cart er testiied that he re- office call from Mr ef the accident were sness tention Taylog and local The on | an night & him treatment# There za ses and general nervo tor gave Mr. Taylor e different eccasions. John H. Swain, principal Westerly high school, who was n gis plazza on the night of the cident. testified that he saw just beSore the collision s the rate of abeut thirty mil ie saw the automobile leave the hand side of the road near the in the street and go in a diagonal direction and coilide with the soil wagon. which was on extreme right of the highway. Deputy Chief Thor . Brown tes- tified that he was called fo the scene and when he arr the soil cart had been moved to left side of the gtreet. Harry Davidson, John Geary end Henry Larr been thrown from the autemobile. The witness gave special attention to Larrabee whe appeared te be unconscious. George Davidson, the defendant, was alled as witness by counsel for plain- t He said he owned the car that was in the mishap, and that his son Ilarry was free to use the car when- ~ver he pleased and witheut special pegmission. Both he and his son are A Stitch In Time Norwich People Should Not Neglect Their Kidneys. No Xidney ailment uni ant Don't overiook the slightest backache nary irregularity ture may he warning vou of approaching dropsy, or fatal Eright's disease. Kidney dis- s seldom fatal if tr ed in time, neglect paves the way for s kidner troubles. Den't nezlect a lame or aching back another day. Don't tano dizzy spells, irreguiar or dis colored urine, headache: T depression. Begin treating the kidnevs with he reliable, time-tried remedy, Doan's Kidney Pills. For 75 yea Doan's have beem curing sick kidne tiy ring permane sndorsed by h people. Dun‘el Donoghue. 193 W. Main S Norwich, Conn.. says: “T can recom- mend Doan’s Kidney Pills highly. I had severe pains in the small of my ack and across my kidneys and my back was very lame. Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured at D D. Sevin & Son's g Store, rid me of my trouble in a t time and T therefore cannot speak hly of them.” For by all dealers. P cents. Foster-Milburn Co. w York, sole agents for the tes Pemember the name—Doan's—and | take no other Common Colds must be taken Seriously For uniess cured they Sap the vitality and lower the vital resistance to more | serious infection. _ Pr your chil- Aren and yourseif hy prompt use of Foley's Hohey and Tar Compound 2nd note its quick and decisive results ¥ar coughs, colds. croup, whooping cough, bronchitis and tions of the thro; chest and lungs it is an ever ready and valuable remedy. The Lee % Osgood Co. A Dreadful Sight to H. J. Barnum, of Freeville, N. Y., was the fever-sore that had plagued his life for y in spite of many remedies he tried. At last he used Bucklen's Arnica and wrot “It has_entirely h with scarcely a scar left”” Heals Burns. Boils, Ec- zema, Cuts, Bruises, Swellings, Corns ana Piles like magic. Only 25c¢ at Lee & Osgood Co sesessescssesesasessessesresesessencansaccenses Wher: ta Buy in Westerl) wessescssescecesassassesesagenscacossessessesee INDUSTRIAL TRUST COMPANY Westerly Branch Capital ..Three Million Dollars furplus .Three Million Dollars Over Fifty Thousand Accounts. Liberal, courteous and eflicient in its management. Ratablishea 1901, Harold L Wells, 0. D., Optometrist. Detective viston corrected by the prop- justment of lei Room roi ‘Blask. Heaterly. in | plain- | licensed operators. The son was not | emplovea as a chauffeur, but had lib- | erty to use the car as his own. Roy G. Ames, one of the plaintiffs, said thaj he was driving the pair of o | horses altached to the Soil cart and that he was owner of the outfit and Taylor. He was driving | hand side of the road, | when the automobile came along at | the rate of twenty-five or thirty miies {an hour, and struck the cart, throwing himself and Taylor to the ground. He estimated the damage to the body of | the cart to be 340, damage to harness $25, and damage to one of the horses $100, as the animal cannot now he driven safgly for fear of automobiles. Attorney Crafts moved for a non- suit on the ground that defendant, owner of the autemobile, was not re- sponsible for alleged damage done by the automohile when drive by his son, as the son was on no mission for defendant or acting as his servant, and that defendant had not actually given the son permission to the | automobile on the night of m-.-x»l dent. Attorney Rathbun opposed the mo- | tion, quoting lezal authority in sup- port of his claim of the liability of de- | fendant. Judge Willlams denied [115\ motion. George Davi taking Charles ttomobile on h n, defendant, told nr‘ Berry for a ride in the night of the | F ] on. Upon returning to Mr. Ber- | 8 | store, he met his son Harry and | g Messrs. Geary and Larrabee. They all | i got into the aytomobile, and after wit- ness and Mr. Berry were taken home, his son and the two other young men went for a ride. He was not asked for permission to use the machine and did not give his son permission. Harry Davidsen testified that he was driving the car at the time of the col- | lision “and that the speed was not | above eight miles an hour. The street | was quite dark and the soil cart was struck as it was crossing from the right hand side of the road to the side where it properly belonged. John Geary testified that the soil | cart was going diagonally across the | street when struck and that the auto- | mobile was on the right hand side and close to the gutter. | Harry Larrabee testified as to the | | posttion of the automobile in going through Spruce street just prior to the | aceident in corroboration of the testi- | mony of Geary and Davidson on that | point, The arguments were closed at 5.1 Judge Williams deferred decision unt next court day. A suit for damages, similar to that | of Locke against was decided for plaintiff early in the week, the case of Edwin A, Kenyon | and others against the New York, N | Haven & Hartford railroad Co., re: on trial before Judge Elmer Rathbun | and a jury in the superior court for ashington county. It is an acti to recover damages for a fo st fire alleged to_have been caused by de- fengdant. It is claimed that eariy in the afternoon of March 29 last, a fir was started by a passenger engine near Carolina station within the rail- | road property, that with a strong west wind the fire burned over a large area of land, and that it reached the farm of the plaintiff, and burned o trect of fifty-ons acres, of which for seven acres were sprout woodland about elght vears’ growth. The plain- tiff is represented by James C. Col- lins and Alonzo R. Williams appeared for the railroad company The jury took a ride of eight miles view ‘the burned over tract of | Tand. of Local Laconics. *Margaret Pickering has purchased for Gurdon P. Thompson two lots of | land in East avenue. Rev. John G. Dutton will tell of A | Trip to the Orient at the evening serv- | ice in the Broad street Christian church | Sunday. | At the Calvary Baptist church Sun- |} day morning, Pastor C. F, A will preach on the Useful and Christians. Rev. J. W. Ford of the First | tist church will préach Sunday ing on The Sacrifice of Isaac. The evening subject will _be TH® White | Storm and the New Name. President E. J. Lipp of the nna Silk Mill company of Bethlehem, Pa, is in Westerly specting the local branch with a to improvement and enlargement. morn- | Lacka- MYSTIC . : Lively Intersst in Vote on License— Temperance Rally Sunday Evening. Great interest being taken in the n on both sides of the river in re- rd to the no-license question Prohibition Rally. Sunday evening at the Lyc to eum thea- i | ter the Mystic Valley Tem ance un {ion has arranged for a r Sl o | speaker will be ex-Governor Utter of | Westerly. The winter schedule for the Groton ! {and Stonington street railway went |, linto effect on Friday. General News. John Forsythe has returned from a sit with Mr. and Mrs. Enos in Ledyard 1 | Catherine Dickerson left Thurs- day for Northampton, where she en- | tered a preparatory school for music. Floyd Ry 1v:f | from "Denison avenue, Mysgic, to Old | 4 Mystic. | Mr. and Mrs. James Gaffner of San | Franeisco have been spending a few | days in town former Mystic bo Lis native town. Mr. Gaffnex wa and is slad to v a Of the 19 mines producing «uicl ver in the United States last ) were in_California and 2 each in as and Nevada. Absorption Process Makes Faces Young (From The Home Maker) Success has at last come to tists who for yearsthave sought some eifectual method of removine the outer facial skin in cases of unsight- | complexions, which would be both | | rainless and entirely non-injurious. he new process is so simple, th means 3o ordinary, €o inexpensiv | the wonder, is that no one had « 1('nxerul the same long | It has been amply monstrated at common mercoliz to be had at any drug-store, completely re- | | moves, by gentle absorption. all the | withered, 'lifeless cuticle, showing the | youthful, roselik: skin underneath. | | The mercolized .wax is applied at | night—Ilike cold cream, but not rubbed | |in--and washed off in the morning | The absorption also cleanse pores, increasing the skin's breath- ing. capecity and®capillary cireulation. preserving the tone, color and natural beauty of the new skin almer, and which | i i I LEAN ° raess PORK , . ¥ Lo Shnulderslzzs el GHECAN COMPANY] Saurday Specials == LIVE AND LET LIVE == Satirday Specials When You Take Advantage of These Exiremely Low Specials We Live and You Live Better and at Less Cost Thau You Ever Have Before - Prime thllnastIZ'u Ib. 6%c Small Logs of SALT PORK - - b 8%c Ib. 8¢ 2 uu I_A MB Ib. I ] 0 [Fresh Kilted FO\Q;L - 1. 16¢| Ib. 10c | BACON--in small strips b. 12%c | STEWING LAMB lh. 5¢ Fores of LAMB - Lean Pot ROAST - Choice LAMB CHOPS Prime CHUCK ROAST - Ib. 10c | Lean PORK CHOPS - - | 15¢c | Native VEAL ROAST - 1. 12%:c CORNED BEEF “Cors® - - b 8¢ | Salt SPARERIB - - - I 10c | HAMBURG STEAK - - (b 10c TOKAY GRAPES ont, 09 | MATCHE PURE CR. TARTAR Mealy Cooking POTATOES - pack 23¢ MOHICAN FLOU BEST BREAD FLOUR Campbell’s Soups 3 cans 25¢ doz. 95¢ 3 Ib. pkg. 12c jr 9 | Sunny Monday Soap YELLOW > g ZSCIONIONS Ohio Double Tipped Noiseless SWEET POTATOES 10 s, MIL Tall Size Peas--Early June - S E1 22c| 19C X::\p’s 29%¢ b. 8c | H55%°bkerr Salad or Cooking Oil can 21c 6 bars 25c | Fresh Shredded Cocoanut 8ok Ib. 14c FRESH MOHICAN CI!EAMERY FRgg}lE- CHEESE lh- 37 c BUTTER - I, 9908 - - doz. Bt s T HOME-MADE BREAD, PIES, COOKIES, CAKES, Hot from Our Ovens Daily CBREAM o 12 ¢ iBROWN At4R M 6'8(: ANGEL CAKE lIoaf 15c] GERMAN 8400 Delicious DOUGHNUTS bxs. Can SEASON PACK Baking Powder - b tan ¢ SEASON PACK. Buckwheat N. B. C. Ginger Snaps Assorted Jams and Jellies |PURE LARD Ib. fle Limited 5 Ibs. to a_customer BAKED BEANS 12¢ BREAD loaf TWO-LAYER CAKES loaf 8c| COFFEE CAKE inf With Gream Filling = doz. THREE HOUR SALE THIS MORNING-8 to 11 o’clock Sugar Cured Smoked Shoulders - - 1b. 10¢ YANT!C HAPPENINGS. William Shanks Woolen Mill. COAlL. AND LUMBER. ii COAL | BALTIC | The Election of Mr Stevens Will Count | Supt. for Economy. Resigns at The Ladies’ Specialty Co. I i | | | | | Nir. Editor: I ved the 50th an-| He’man Vesta Leonard pick- nual town report of the town of | ed several crowdoot violets Friday. = | ague today, out of the usual rou- | Purictual Pupils. . P - | tine of getling them, and have been| .. 2 B 5 l w ¢ S M h | JFetng them. and have beeh| Chigren present i Sodom scnoot| It WaSN't 30 Much of the. Breceding vears that T|for the month ending Septembe | e Mt ere Alfred Brown, Fred Ladd, Tyler | ¢ iept. Having resided’ here for | \Were : e LBl h F ll OUR SHOWING OF 'ty odd vears, I naturally take | Ladd, Olive Ladd Carl Leonard, X. the ra | an interest in anvthing that pertains | \°Ste Leonard, Fierman Leonar Jokn t killed the man- as the sudden | ) ’ to the town. It pleased me to read |- A % - PR | ch-up en the pavement { 2 14 1 1 that something had been finally accom- Entertained Church Members, You can expect a sudden change in plished in the way of progressing with- | ; S = Bt tiesalen noll e ® | adies an 1 ren’s out increasing the debf of the town.| Mr. and Mrs George Manning en- | Veather N ; | Being a rareful readef and good ob- | teriained ten members of tho Bean | Better have some Coal on hand. ) ser I think I can say without re- | Jill Mefhoaist church = Wednesday | | serve or fear that in the last ten or ©Venng, An enjoyable evening was | arments - eleven years, with the exception of a | spent A : | CHAPPELL Co0. | SaaId b s, the present candidate, | Mr. and Mrs. Kreaofski have moved ! R J. Jodoin, for-the office of first se- from Yantic to a house in Norwich | Gentral Wharf and 150 Main Street. | lectman on the democratic ticket, has | Which they have had built recently. | | or SA U had control or a monopoly of that Mr. and Mrs Dennis Powers and | Telephenes. | fice. It needs mo going into details to | family have moved from E. A. Jones' | tell you how this man Tandled the rib- | house on ScHoolhouse hill fo a house | I um B ER | bons and drove the .good old _ horse, | in Bean Hill | . 2 Sprague.” Tt is sufficient to. sy that| Mr. and Mrs. William Hurech have | i is very interesting for those who anticipate der his driving the town last vear,| moed from the Edward Jones cottage - | : % According fo the present report, had 4 | on Main street to an apartment in the buying a garment for fall or winter. 3 5 | <n Washington street. { | th Mr. Jodoin, John | liam Shanks has resigned as su- | | | (¢ Donovan is a candidate for the of- | perintendent of the VYantic woolen | ! Our new modeis of DRESSES are the best values obtainable for fice of d selectman. These two| company and is preparing to move | I s 5 50, $10.00, $12. men formed the board of the year 1909 | from the village. | | the price we ask—$6.98, $7.50, $8.50, § . $12.50, ete. i and 1910, and, according to the report George. Kzhn and Thomas Murphy [F Burni K d d Lehiey I Our SUITS are very at(rncg;ve and perfect fitting, at prices from increased the debt by $3,40 and left; have been spending the past week in .98 to $25. unpaid bilis to the amount E Braniiies, wheve A Kann has nis cats | 168 BUTRING ‘ |Il>S. and Lehig » ¥ g a | tle ALWAYS IN . STOCK. The press can not give justice to the beauty of eur large variety A rt and daughter Helen v and \ l“of” Worcest St R A. D. LATHROP. of Fall and Winter COATS. We have them in double face and man- money, Surely not where any one has| Mrs, J. W. Frink. . U " nish cloths. BRCHE o e e _— Office—cor Market and Shetucket Sts | - PLEASE GIVE US A CALL. i onday’s election will be pu 9 cal, and the question of a man's party Would ;Rather ‘He Spaaker. | Telephone 163-12. ! or naticonality sh w0t be an issue.| After having been speaker of the | What the town wants is an honest man | house for several terms, Uncle Joe | ° ° who has the combined assets of run-7 Cannon finds golf too tame to be in- | B | b ning the town on eeonomical lines teresting~Des Moines Capital, | - or friends. Mr. m.,m\ ) | e selfish, reckles: e =1 those qualities are | t burns up clean.” i not a ompatible with a conduct of affa cound policy or ' BABY'S TERRIBLE SUFFERING Franklin S Norwich, Conn. town Well Seasoned Wood || 248 Main St, JOHN A. MORGAN & SON, | .Coal and Lumber Central Whart Stevens took the in ve “When my baby boy was six months old, jides te stigiy nd_althioush having | his body was completely covered with large | 1S YT has shown won- | gores that seemed to itch and burn, and cause | | W results. 1 hope thal there are ! terrible suffering. The eruption began in | | —y 5 enough of fair minded, level headed | pimples which would open and run, making | C. H. HASKELEL. ! e voters in the town 16 re-elect him, | large sores, His haie came out and finger | oo . | and see if the results will not be per- | nails fell off, and the sores were'over the | — "Phones — 433 ‘ fectly: satistactor. | entire body, causing little or no sleep for baby | _ | | or myself. Great scabs would come off when | | | 1 removed his shirt. | “We tried a great many remedies, but | nothing would help him, till a friend induced | ! me to try the Cuticura Soap and Ointment. | Delegate to Firemen’s Convention Re-| I u;edlbhe Cugn(;._um !boap x‘;l‘:e;)‘;?:?e‘ 3_\: — | @ short time before I coul e Pamonal fiee | improving, and in six weeks' time he was 1 from | entirely cured. He had suffered about six weeks before we tried the Cuticura Soap and . || Ointment although we had tried several other a shor Do You Need Printing ? ) Teiephone 884. Miss Annie Daboll has retur: to friends in New. York. James Mahoney and M returned from Norwich. . McDonald of Prospect home from a business trip to SCHOOL SUPPLIES | things. and doctors too. I think the Cuticura Remedies will do all that is claimed for them, and a great deal more.” (Signed) Mrs. Noble | Tubman, Dodsofi, Mont., Jan. 28, 1911. Although Cuticura Soap and Cutlcurs | Pads, Books, T Boxes, Slates, Richard Weeks, who has been visit- 64-66 Franklin Street Hartford e e v - SR ¢ | Oitment sre sold throughout thie world, a & o an’s Missionary society of e 5 e e e e i ¥ty | Nberal sample of each, with 32-page booklet | Paints, Crayons, Glue, “Mu- S meeting Eriday. afternoon at the home | on the skin, will be sent, post-fee, on appli- | |\, L o o L of Mrs. Susan Kldredge on High | cation to Cuticura,” KK, Bostou. | e A NG s e s e e ST B The BULLETIN Co. treet . | Folding Cups, Lunch Boxes, Baskets: { ing friends in the village. has returned | “EADQUABTERS FOR ete. | '”R?v‘.“j"l.xex"nwl-"_ McDonald of Hartford | Lresh S‘X‘,';‘O “;‘.gff;: ‘:W L‘:‘,i’,\“ Sk 5 | {01, whss he dg.vufi oot The ‘Westerly House, | wHEN you wani o put your misi- | WHES you whne, to. put vour biisl- convention. Arthur Carson of Pearl street was a secial valier in New London Friday, ness before Luc.public. there is no me- ness before the public. Ahere is no ‘me- Ui dium better than 1hrough tie advertis- ing columns of The Bulletin. THERE 1s 1o advertising medium In Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bul- letin for business results Formerly D. J. O'Brien's, 68 No. Main. . 8.3z um better than through the advertis- Kenyop & Pickhoves, Xreps. ing columns ef ¥ua W

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