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= Burdick, action of assumpsit; Gui- seppe Ciamalore vs. Joseph Gabrille, action of assault; Angela M. Guarino l Y Vs. Angelo J. Cappilcelo: action-of ase . | sault; Frederick D. Sisson vs. William H. Clapham, action of trespass on the case for negligence: Stephen J. Wea- ver vs. Harold E. Miner, alias, action of case for damages to auto; John Al- - Judge Do i <i In the superior court for Washing. 5 ran decided Kingston. len et ux vs. J. M. Pendleton, town ton county, Judge Déran, at Kingston,| Freda Schultz vs. the Mohican com- Monday, heard the case of Myron pany was heard on motion and con- | Lreasurer, °°“$°m"‘“°" of land pro- Plimpton against Dr. J. DeVere Bar- |tinued to Tuesday. ceedings relative to the Westerly sew- ber, alarming $15,000 damages for ne- narles H. Holdri o erage: State, Barber, overseer Zlecting to emre for Mrs. Plimpton. dridge 35 Erank W.lof poor, vs. Emil Mason, bastardy was on Attorney Davis’ motion. | cace. who died recently in Westerly. Judge igned to the first case in the No- a3 \hq‘;fiw el Herbert W. Rathbun, counsel for Dr.!vember session to be tried in Wester-| _Trial Calendar at Kingston—David b iai TURICCS N RA s \D P Barber, argued a demurrer to the dec- |1y, Hymne Ve A CTIBATA MOt action “'I first noticed red eruptions break il ey "‘“w\fi laration, ciaiming that the declara The complaint of state of Rhode Is- | 0f assumpsit; Erminia Bottinelli vs. out on my back. After a short time > e =5 T tion did met show any neglect in not|,, ' RBN T 0l 31 was heard | Westerly Automatic Telephone Co., they broke out on my face. They £ ), > ! visiting Mrs. Plimpton in eleven hours | A1 ve, Txank W, Cov et ai was heard | . fion or case for negligence: Baptiste | | would itch and burs sud T gould 12 . 4 2 in ome day. It might have been pos- | % 1 s i Bottinelli vs, Westerly Automal Sibly an errer of julgment. and the |PlAint, Fiftcen days were granted to| ri hone Ce.: Baptiste Bottineli v <upreme court of the state has de- 2 Westerly Automatic Telephone Co. ided that an error of judgment is not| The grand jury, after being out less| William B. Shepard vs. Springfield sctionable. Attorney Roche signed|than one-half hour, returned with only | First Marine Insurance Ce.: William “or the plaintiff, stating that Mrs.|one indictment, the smallest number| B. Shepard vs. The Northern Assur Plimpton had endured much suffering, |in vears. It was that of the State of | ance Co.; William B. Shepard ve. ‘hrough neglect of the doctor. and|Rhode Island vs. Chris Farrgro of | Phoenix Assurance Co.: Narragansett hat his client was entitied to the|Westerly, charged with aiding in an | Bay Supply Co. vs. Nora E. Whitford: amount claimed. Judge Doran de-|assault on John Lynch at Westerly | Stephen F. Tefft vs. Abigail N. Rey- clared that he would probably dis-[on Dec. 8th last. As Farraro is out | nolds, et al. miss the case in its present standing.|on bail and was not present, it was Tl and took the papers for further con- |arranged that he be brought in for | NCornelius J. Murphy of Westerly e by g L served as chairman of the commities Assignment Calendar—Court imme-) Motion Calendar—Julla R. Wilsen|pt SUS€CE JOPSHe , @1, The Soruld diately took up the assisnment cal-|vs. John H. Wilson; J. C. Tucker Co.| Nrramies Fedoration of Fabor heid | endar. vs. Harriet G. Brown. settled, stipu- | Qa8 Koo ora s on Of Do The following cases were assigned |lations to be filed: Thompson MOtOr| cciad contest, by a vote of 63 to 52 to Westerly: Mayer Narva vs. Albert|company vs. George Bishop, action Of| jjhert E. Hohler. president for the ¥ Jeameret: the Home Pattern com- |assumpsit. counsel agreed to file bill| S0Pt o FOWer presieent ot he Fisher Bros.. Rosario De|of particulars in thirty days: John M.|P3st.scuentosn, yegrs, was doteated Rosaris Bruno: Albert E.|Barber vs. Lewis 'S, Kenvon, action | 0L reclection by Jonm F. Murphy. | r . Peter Traggis: Mary Ly-|of assumpsit. request of motion com-|yapor Union. The other officers elect- <ober, pro aml, vs. Mary Menick, |plied with to be assigned to Kin&s-|.3 are: Richard A. McGarry of Provi- ‘work, my head would itch so. cufa and sent for a free Miss Ida Frank, 193 Rozbury, Mass., July 12, 1918. Cuticura for Toilet Uses Promotes Skin cum are all Dominick Leonette, assault and| A . o £ Stie, and | caph Gray, of Pawtucket. organizer: |titude of attempting to interfere e | William J. Guest, RodePick A. McGar- | the policies of the United States =ned for trial at Kingston. w g battery. sualty and | hatter of the Actna alias: Lioyd A. Tyler vs. Malcom “‘;HZ\P?"H'S"]’"! %:_ofl" > A"“‘“‘Z!l" dence. Henry Eataugh of Pawtucket, ~ e e lias- Stavros F. Peterson|MacNeil. et al, action of assumpsit, 7 e v i gy« gl e {agreement to be submitted: Robert L. ElhRnen o e AND DCOES IT QU!\, KXY ilias: James King vs. Charles | Bright ve Noah B Wilcos, mation to ‘ms of Providence, Howard v Tid Ribmer amd Isadore Rib-|vacate decree, passed for hearinz on A 3 : Mio g ht:-v:n-m‘h.\:in-- E\\Fr-d L. Do Monday _““‘:,' g '«”; °f lf”;"f‘” (!SI"““] Ha'vl\in: it FPro‘:1‘:'1(::’;‘0(:]‘2'(';”:;““.:{ & te_ Yol ot al appellants. vs. Richard E.|pvs Frank W. Coy Real Bstate Co. etlspooner of Newport, Edward Sawyers |mediate ~withdrawal of American et riod, Dover. appellee jal. to he heard after grand fury re-|of Westerly, James Dooley of River-|troops from Russia. actions of John M. Barber vs.{ "0 o ed for irat alSe hearing|Point. vice presidents, in order of se-| The committee reperted that. while Kenven and Alexander . e Hicomics 3Michael Taizs |Dniority: TLawrence A. Grace, of Prov-jhaving svmpathy for Russia. the ve. Vornen Hoiberton were| n m n fss; “2 UZZi | s30nce retary and treasurer: Jo-|members did not want to take the »n[ | | < ions acted upon faverably ded five offered by the National A motion to indorse the aims negligence. plea and | cl A Eligense; gt | purpose of the state Ameriegn Westerly Session—Tleanor providing that work per- ! Saturday with the stockholders 7! emploves be discouraged and penalized to cost $1 paid at double time ra {to have charge of the comsiruction of | Emma Anderson and Miss W For head or throat | were recommended by the commitiee t and the operation when|derson are visiting relatives in hEsneuirned catarth try the e ersTatiGhN will soon be ready for su vagie trestimant— The only resolution turned down was|Scription. A ¥ Stivers has returned from rd and son have one which called for the organi Stoningten Peinters. uts’ camp at Bear Moun- e e v‘cl‘s | requesting the Rhode Island t I walter Clark of Westerly s sev- ew York and New Jersey. - land Congressmen to demand the imrlm'cd connection with a market in K K3 EXX2 DR L - OPENING DAYS Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Millinery and Apparel For Women, Misses and Children This is the formal presentation of the Autumn styles in Millinery, and Apparel of-all kinds. We welcome your inspection of the many new modes. awake all night scratching and bath- ing them. I weuld have to stop ‘I saw an advertisement for Cuti- Then I bought more and I used two cakes of Soap and two boxes of Oint- ment and they healed me.” (sli:u‘) St., <i vs. G. P. Tusc - Ly P. Tuscano.| "¢ providence, and John H. Pow-|ernment. They reported non-concur- ote, trial 8 islati e of Woonsocket, legislative com- !rence. and the report was .susta: 5 At - i a showing of hands of 75 to 15, at- | A BOX ter a voice vote had been doubted. ! eock and. Wilgox, 2 | formed after 6 p. m. sed | officers of the Stonington 0% Cont fas night work compensat the [siruction and Trading com i of one for ry 45 ltive to t E th overtime work in postington va a five-masted schooner bag Stock for ¢ company| .rs. Jerome S. And ENTHOLATED Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal- i HOARHOUND COUGIH DROPS BREAK UP ANY COUGH OR. SOOTHES AN~ - IRRITATED THRCAT i gov- HANDY nd | T O LR STOP THE TICIRLE filed. heard | Federation of Postal Employes, Lo-| L8 haLe - Semanie it | oal 387, cAlling for an iiiccesse in pay [SCENTAIE0 SR 0 gevine wars ) and ] : $2400 a vear, the latter to bel T T C-A'BRIGGS CO:Camb hie end of the first vear STONIM ~TON s B 3 o avoring the bills before con- S 3 PR " b a provision to retire postall Frank J. Fulton was in consultation | . What'Is Going On Tonight. _Feature Photoplays at the Davis Theatre. . Motion Pictures at Breed Theatrs. Moving Pictures at tae Auditur.um Theatie. Moving’ Pictures at the Majestic Roof Garden, Shetuecket Liodge, meets in Odd_Fellow orwich ast, N meets in Owis’ Hall, Wauregan Lodge. § K. of P. #iyenian Hal Lodge, Na. 23 7. and A. m n Masenic Temple. Thames Lodze. No. 326, X o P. meets in Foresters' Hall. Clara_Barton Tent, No. 7, D. ef V., meets in Buckingham Memorial ANNOUNCEMENTS SOLDIER’'S INVENTION ADDS COMFORT TO FARM HOME Comf{prt, cheeriness and cleanli- ness in heating farm houses at a nem- inal cost has been made possible by an invention announced recently by & =oldier-engineer who has given much thought to the heating of hospitals, barracks and temporary quarters which have no cellars. It is really a complete miniature hot-water heating plant, built on the idea of a sectienal book case, so that as much or as little of it as is desired can be used at any time, and parts taken off or put on at pleasure. It is called a radiator-beil- er, and combines the uses of the eld- fashioned stove, the hot-air furnace, and the elaborate hot-water heating This radiator-boiler is not as large This radiator-hoiler 1s na tas large as many base-burning stoves. It ean be set up in the parlor or lving reem just as a stove, and is more attrae- tive. The trimmings are in nickel, and the body can be painted or enameled in any shade desired—as a stove can- ¥rom the radiater-beiler rums the piping, cither in_view or hidden in walls and partitions. to as many reems as are to be heated. The radiater- heiler itself has a heating surface e that f: heats the room in which it stands—but unlike a stove, it canmet overheat a roem. One very attractive feature to eewn- try dwellers that the new heating plant does not have to be set in cel- lar or basement. Tt can stand on a level with the rooms it is to heat In the past, farm houses have been heated either with stoves or het-air furnaces. In the case of steves, there was either a stove for each roem, with a fire to be kept up in each; or ene stove was expected to heat seweral reoms, which it did hv making ene too het and leaving tha others tes cold. The hot-air furnace, of eourse Stonington ana nis frie Inim a’ handsome lea NOANK SOUTH COVENTRY has received a| Rev. N leanor have days, retur p ney Wilcox wireless message from her son Wlcox who with his wife and on is on his way home from France t He has been on transport duty for|same teacl during last year. { months and has now been discharged from service. rs. Wilcox has just| returned from Worcester, Mass.. where | she visited her daughter, Mrs. Howard | il Tracy and her new grandson, Paul e Wilcox Tracy. GALES FERRY Albert Patterson spent the week-| . end at the home of nis parents, Mr.| The Loal TeimE |and Mrs. Willlam Patterson, having|SePing orders for gelivering coal been on transport duty across for sev- s Ferry, hav jeral months. The boat he was one, il it the Zeppelin, has been turned over to e e e its original owners by the government ANNOUNCEMENTS andand Mr. Patterson expects his dis- en away-for a evening. | | delivery stes Marjorie Miner, Miss Mabel| torium. !} Turjee and Miss jattending the Vocational High school | turned in At in New ILondon commencing : | studies onady. lsves || Lester Smith is attending Kingston | trav | college. e {| Charles Barrett has returned to his|ca | business in New York after a visit of | AT ia few days to his wife and child in|was excruciating | Terrace avenue She Sndicrt T Jarvis Ackley has returned to Bal-|finish. Pearl Danfor timore. after visiting his daughter, Mrs. | Ott Compa A. R. Meister in Spring street v hes hact { Miss Nellie Bailey of High street is|)oran. | improving slowly after heing in {ll| ! heaith for more than three vears. | Dr. and Mrs. Fred Fitch who spent { the summer at Groton Long Point, ar; admirers, a tage who has been ill for some time, does Sunday night, but will positively not improve. | pear in te Hezekiah Wilcox is detained hy ill- | their acrebatic at Main street and his place is filled by William Jarvis. Miss lda Kearns who has been suf-!cast. Don’t fail to see this show. somewhat leaves in a few in had to be in the ecellar This new radiater-hoiler, the stand- lard future heating plant of the farm home, requires no cellar and but ene fire, which takes no more fuel than the ordinary base burner—and heats visit o rela-| .1 tne rooms in the huse to the same temperature. DAVIS THEATRE TODAY. Married! The recerd signed. The words at the altar spoken. The warld informed that this man and this wa- Beebe and little daughter|man were one till their lives shewld 16w | end oal Co. are now ac-|man. finer, nobler than an And it was all a ghaetly lie! Monday with the| He, a wastrel, traded his name for a wife. and money to spend on his par- arlow returned to her| amour. 1in last Friday after]” She,'a sweet and Inmecent girl, was mother, who has been|gold like a slave to feed her fath- er's lust for power. Seold to a man she loathed! Yet she was glowing with vouth, thirsting fer leve and lifs. Then came t inevitable—anether she had in | known. g extended their| Was she wron ? See “The Woman Thou Gavest Ma,” at the Davis teday. See Hall Caine's startling romanee of a woman's soul. A= a novel, it stirred two contiments and has been tramslat- arge from service in about two|Lyons Merrymakers Score in Musical [ ed into every civilized tongua Farce, Oh! What a Baby, at Audi-| As a bicture it is a stupendeus seven-part Paramount-Arteraft Spe cial; pulsing with emetion: vivid are| The Auditorium this week has been|with action: filled with sensatiomal rons’ | scenes in Fncland, Tndia, Afriea and opened ‘their|the Polar region the musical ex-| Plaved by a br a Baby, from| Katherine MacTionald, Theedors Ameri- | Roberts. Miltan Sills, Fritsi Brunette or. Pete and Jack Holt. comedy end and If weu have read the Mook youT funny and kept|surel vsee the picture. If vou havem't rs from start to|read the book—you must see the ple- late of the Bob | ture! received | The other featurs on this programme also Harriet|is Dorethy Dalton in ‘The Heme- t scen here with Homan's|preaker,” a delighttul 5-part Para- Musical Revue. The male members!mount comedy drama. Alse the latest all playved their parts to good advan-|Burton Helmes Travelogue, “Geing nd the pretty chorus which was Down to Buenos Aires” Don’t miss handicapped hy the three Bennett sis- | this wenderful shew. of the mouth 1liant cast, inclu@mg have returned to their home in East|ters. the stronz sister team and the = Hampton. mainstay of the Lyons chorus, being Mrs. Mattie Wileox of Elm street|called to a near relative's bedside late BREED THEATRE. ap- Coming with the reputation eof ba- == | | i | use for over thirty year's,has borne the signature of "and has been made under his pers sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow 20 one te deceive you in chis, 'ADl Counterfeits, Imitations and * Just-as-good * are bug Experiments that irifie with and endanger the health of What is ORIA Castoria is a harmiess substitute for Castor OB !ééfiudd Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contams meither Opium, Morphins nor other marcotic substance. Itz age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has | ‘®een in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, i Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising &herefrom, and by reguiating she Stomach and Bowels. aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural slecp. | Zhe Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friead. Bears the Signature of (4 In Use For Over 30 Years “The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUE Commant X s R Aol ae s & ~ GENUINE CASTORIA aiwayvs 4 - performance with | ing far the most powerful offering | ancing specialties.| that has ever fallen to Dustin Far- | ness from his duties as crossing tender | The costumes worn by the chorus|pum’'s lot and affording a speeial at- H were of worthy mention. The company | traction by its magnitude, thriftag will be seen tonight with its entire|story, talented acting and unique photography, “A Man in The Open” e | s _assured of large and welcoming audiences for its engagement at the breed today. This powerful remanes of the Big Northwest is closely based on the thrilling novel of the same title hv Roger Poeock and, as its name - dicates. is staged largely in the Great Outdoors. Mr. Farnum will be sean in the role of Sailor Jesse, wrecked om an ocean voyage, adopted ints the comradeship of rugzed landamen, but tricked into marriage with an ad- venturess. Then follows his start¥ag adventures in.the great forests and mountains where he lives as A Man in the Open. and where the startfmg denouncement of the great story takes place. Others pictures an the bill incluén Evelvn Greely in “Bringing Up Betty.” a delightful comedy drama and the Pathe news. - 2 T L SIS SN MANSFIELD FAIR. Attractions which will appeal to the taste of evervone are to be found in the offerings of the Connecticut State Agricultyral Society at its fair open- ing next Menday and continuing dafly throughout the whole of next week. The gates will swing onen at 10 o'- clock every morning. The society has enlarged and improved the automobile parking space, realizing that the number of farmers owning autes has increased greatly and it will bBe the vehicle of transportation coming te the autn show. The sight of the thousands of automohiles, representing a great wealth in pleasure investment is. to be seen at the fair and is a sight worth seeing. ent Webster, who is in fun 3 of the stagine of the fair this vear prediets that this fair will be classed with the firest in New Emg- . “Every effort has been made this vear to enlarge the quantity of exhibits in every ciass and to im- prove the standard. We have had ex- cellent shows in the past. but the fair this vear will be the hes: ever. I am particularly proud of the entriss af live stock. We have canvassed for the best bred stock in this section of the country and will have Ii to show There may have heen hetter midwavs at former fairs. but there have heenm 1 don’t knew when it was. and T have been going to fairs here for twentw five vears. We have lots of chows and other features.” The automobile sh™w is going to be held this year in the merchants’ bnfld- ing ad new 1920 cars will be shown Horses for the racing events are naw coming into the stable and some of ths best horses in New The