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! PROBABLY FAIR TODAY AND TOMORROW. " Norwich, Saturday, Oct. 15, 1921, WEATHER Conditions Pressure continued high over thej . ) OF ihe country Sri0a¥| Judge Allyn L. Brown has harded down o 4 hours. fi%sts decisions in two cases recently tried be- Nea ki ommine in the| fore him in the superior court, a so-called it v o3 nihomn New | tPite fence case involying Norwich liti- Tand ond soutthuward to North Ca.|gants and a replevin case over an auto- S b ) = mobile seized by a Middlesex county dep- uty sherift, Judze Brown handed down his decision for the plaintiff Friday in_the suit of Thomas Twomey vs John Donezan, both | of this city. This was an action brought by Thomas Twomey, who-owns a house st 56 Hish street in this city against John Donegan who adjoins the adjoining | premises, 54 High street, in which Mr. Twomey claimed that Mr. Donegan had | erccted a spite fence of solid poarding ng the north side of Mr. Twomey's 0 as to 1hut off the light and air m the windows on the groand floor of lio Twomey house. Judge Brown decided .~ | ihat Mr. Donegan had erected the fence and | maliciously for the purpose of injuring Twomey in the enjoyment of his mises and that tha fence served no { useful purpose and theréfore granted an | njunction ordering Mr. Donegan to take | down the fence, and gave the plain- d $20 damages. X Attorney William H. Shields,. Jr., rep- ted the plaintiff and Attorney Lee ¢ Robbins the defendant. actlon was brought vailed indications are for generally and Sund: i 3 o .s—Centle to and fair turday e in [u:np(:'u-“-\ under two JUDGE BROWN: GIVES DECISIONS IN SPITE FENCE AND REPLEVIN GASES — gections of the General Statutes, 1918, which read as follows: Sec. 6150. Action for malicious erection of structure. An action may be waintained by the proprietor of any land | against the owner or lessee of land ad- Jacent, who shall maliciously erect any structure thereon, Wwith intent to annoy or injure the plaintiff in his use or dis- position of his land; and section 6049, in- junction against malicious erection of structure. An injunction may be granted against the malicious erection, by or with the consent of an owner, lessee or per- son entiled to thé possession of land, of any structure upon it, intended to annoy and injure any owner or lessee of adja- cent land in respect to his use or disposi- tion of the same. It was the first action of this nature that has been before the superior court In this county. X Replevin Case Declsion The other decision is for the plaintiff in the replevin suit of Lucy Childs :mdsl of Old Lyme against John E. Christensen, | deputy sheriff of Middlesex county and | Albert L. Dudley of Saybrook for the re- covery of a Ford runabout automobile. By the decislon, the plaintiff is allowed to retain the machine and is awarded um- ages of 60. SAY COOPERATIVE EXCHANGES ARE PROVING THEIR VALUE There is no question but What the co- exchanges, which Were or- g this past year by the are an unqualified suc- the Farm Bureau News. At request of the editor of the Farm an News the managers of these ex- zes as well as the managers of the \anges which were operating in .onddh county previously, have in reports covering the amount of iness Which has been done during the e months of this yvear. Thesa s cover the exchanges in Preston, Norwich, Waterford, Yantic This last exchange does its business in Tolland it & number of members live TLondon county. tot ness since January first o cxchanges, namely, Preston, Leb- Norwich, Wsterford and Yantic, The Jewett City figures but will doubtless go over mark, and a part of the the Columbia exchange was w London county. The Co- ange since January 1st has cars of grain, two cars of with an approximate value or r, warm- 1 osty in D, A. R. Loan Exhibit. Anna Warner Bailey chapter, D. A. R, | of Groton and Stonington, is planning to ibition at the Monument handiwork such as quilts, 13 embroidery, laces, gar- < . shawls 2pd other houettes, miniatures d other portrait work. The commit- n charge is Miss Rachel Larabee, C. 8. W. Davis, Mrs. Frederick P. , Mrs. Charles M. Adams, Miss an, Mrs. Charles Noyes and RELIEF CORPS DELEGATES ,TO NOROTON HOME DAY Sedgwick Woman's Relief Corps, No. 16, held its regular meeting Friday aft- ernoon at Buckingham Memorial with the president, Mrs. Annie L. Rawson, in the chair. Mrs. Rawson and Mrs. John Bliven were named delegates to the Nor- oton Home on Noroton Day, October 20th. The meeting accepted the invitation of | the Ladies’ Auxiliary to Flecher Post, No. 4, American Legion to attend the chow er and social to be held at the arm Armistice day, following the Armistice day parade. The women will meet at the Buckingham Memorial on that after- non and following .their meeting will go in a body to the armory where be the guests of the Legi The corp is planning a soc held on the evening of November which they will entertain the members of Sedgwick Post, No. 1, G. A. R, and the local Daughters of Veterans. The meeting closed with ihe American creed and the salute to the flag. JUDGMENT FOR §1,000 IS GIVEN IN ARSON CASE Judge Allyn L. Brown disposed of a| number of matters at the short calendar s on of the superior court in New London Friday morning. Judgment for $1,000 was éhtered in the case of Harris &gzainst Mdi which a clzim for damages because the defendant set fir burned the housg and barn of the plain- tift in Preston. A demurrer was argued in the case of Wright vs Elgart, et al, and the judge took the papers. Judgment was entered for the defendants upon demurrer sustaind. Allowanes of $35 to defend were order- ed in the cases of Henry Moses Marsh and and w depu at once to Te; ed that they went the red 1 or just an| the syste L It _covers ‘irri- | § 2 healing and | § phlegm and e Lee & Osgnodl ey will | vs Jennie E. Marsh; Calvin W. Edmins- ton ve Etta B. Edminston. The petition of the Troy Laundry Ma- chinery Co., Led., for delivery of certain property by the receiver was granted. A motion of Fred L. Cressy for per- mission to file claim with the receiver in the case of Neleber vs Colchester Farm and Produce Co., was granted. Two wecks in which to file answer or other pleadings were granted in the case of Spitz vs Shalett and three weeks in the case of Tyler vs Kimball. Second orders of notice were granted in the cases of Earl S. Bootl vs Ethel M. Booth; Casavant vs Casavant and Moore vs Peguot Casino assocation. The semi-annual account of the recefv- er was approved in the case of Di Fran- cesco vs Amantia. . \ Bonds of §75 for prosecution were ord- ered in the case of Agnes H.*Amburn vs Frederick V. Amburn. An order ex! z the time to Nov. 15 for the filing of the semi-annual statement of orders and deta agceount | 8 of the condition and prospects of the tate was granted in the case of the U S. Trust Co. of D York et al vs Shore | Line Electric Railway Co. | Cases were assigned for trial nest weel as follows: Tuesday—King vs Ki American Rai Hobart vs ! p Co., Whipple | o vs Finnegan. ! s Vs Ches: Mathewson vs Caswell. Thursday—Mansfield vs Mansfield; | karz vs Town of Preston; Mystic Auto| Station, Tnc., vs Salov. WORK IN CHANGSHA DESCEIBED T TO PARK CHURCH WOM . Latham ann ily Pearson of K Nov. 0-10, | aven on Nov. 9, 10, It was voted send Do to sixteen years, are ca men educated. N 1to the n a1 of 120 or more be teaches nurses and New York’s Latest Sho , THE MUSIC BOX TELLS YOU TO SAY IT WITH MUSIC THE FLORIST TELLS YOU TO SAY IT WITH FLOWERS SUPPOSING THE BUILDING CONTRACTOR TOLD YOU TC SAY IT WITH BRICKS That Would Bz No Joke ow THE PASNIK CO. _SAY LOW PRICES $1,500 ¥O ACCIDENT he earne L 50 a swend verior court on November. o 1 me on Aug. 5, in Pe- ber. weeks from follow- 2 painter at week. §250 for medical ex- The suit is returnable before the s —_— + Asks Divoree For Desertion. Divorc en the grounds of desertion , 1918, is sought-by Georgs of Lyme from Etta E. Clark|To hug the wealth ye canno use, were married at 1916. brought is returnable before the sm ior court on the first Tueésday in He was A Some_recompense Thrice lovelier,shine the .things CELLENT, . .. As we wax older on this Till many a toy that cha us seems Emptied of beauty, stripped of worth, And mean as dust and dead arf dreams— For gauds that perished, shows that passed, § the Fates have sent: that last, The thinga thak are more excelicut. Nzught nobler is than te be free; The stars, of heaven are free" . In amplitude of liberty > Their joy is to obey the la From servitude of freedom’'s name Free thou thy mind in bondage pent; Depose the fetich, and proclaim The things that are more excellent The su ovem- my life. INJURIES brings quick relief. many § { of Eatonic for druggist’s guarantee. The car o n out, son Overcoats for father and son, — Ulsters, Ulstercttes, Chesterfields — All the popular fab- rics and colors. And Suits, too, $25 to $50 vercoat Store Ready—for your inspection, the largest stock of Overcoats we have ever assembled. The Best Styles—the Finest Over- coatings—the Greatest Values. Come to Overcoat Headguarters this season and you are sure to find juet the kind of an Overcoat you want, at the price you want to pay. Great QOvercoat Values single and double-breasted styles Our Suits beat all competition at these prices. They arein a cless 'by themselves, because fabric for fabric, tailoring for tailoring, style for style—no suits can equal ours at the prices asked. Investigate and you'll invest. 12 fnhlgn “Kuppenheimer, Society Brand and Clothcraft dotbes.” Saved My Lif Uith Eatonie Says New Jersey Woman ‘I was nearly dead urtil I found Eatonic and I can truly eay it saved It is the best stomach medicine ever made,” writes Nrs. Acid stomach canses awful mise: which Eatonic quickly gets rid ;’l by taking up and carrying out the | acidity and gases which prevent good digestion, A tablet taken after meals Keeps the stom- ach healthy and helps topprevenc the s 80 liable to arise from ex- cess acid, Don’t suffer from stomach | miseries wuen you can get a big box trifie with your LEE & OSGOOD 131 Main Street | lish shipyards. To_dress, to call, to dine. to break No canon of the social code, the first Tuesday” in | The little Jaws t 4 lackeys make, The futile decaozue of Mode— How many a soul for these things ltves With pious passion, grace intent ! While Nature; careless handed, gives The things that are more excellent And lack he riches all may gain— Oh. blind and wanting 1o choose, Who hr;nsc the chaff and burm tiw grain And still doth life with starry towers Lure to the bright, divine ascent!— Be yours the things ye would; be ourg The things that are more excellent. The grace of friendship—mind and heart Linked with their fellow heart and mind ; The gains of science, gifts of art; The sense of oneness with our kind¢ The thirst to know and understand ; A large and liberal discontent— These are the goods in life’s rich hand, The things that are more excelient. Tn fau'tless rhythm the oceans rolls, A rapturous silfence thrills the skles; And on this earth are lovely souls, That softly look with aidful eyes, 'rhnng): dc.:(rk. O God, thy course rack, T think thou must at least have meant That rlmul;;hl which lives should wholly ack The things that are more excelient. —Willlam Watson, in Indianapolis News. HUMOR OF THE DAY “Harold, T wish you wouldn't be quite so scornful of all hair that ism't golden.” “Don’t you like my letters, dear?" “Of course I do. But some of the girls 1 show them to haven't golden hair."—Louisville Courier Journal. Amateur Golfer—The day I ge around these links in less tnan a hu..- dred I'll give you a shilling. Caddie—Thank ye, sir. It'il come iy handy in me old age.—Exchange. “How did you order your steak sir™ the waiter returned to ask after hav- ing Leen gone what seemel like & weck to the hungry diner. - “Like a fool, I did it personally.” bellowed the patron. “If I'd had any sense I'd have ordered. it by mail, a month in advance."—American Legion Weekly. “Three drinks of this stuff,” sai¢ the wily bootlegger, “and you'll hear “Not today,” said the cantious ei- tizen.'“I had a friend who tried that prescription and it wasn’t long before there was singing all around him, but he couldn’t hear it."— ge. “Can I get off to‘vv?" asked the office boy. 3 “Somebody dead in your family, 1 suppose,” rejoined his sarcastic em- ployer, “No, sir, not dead, but dying.” “Dying, who.” “I am sir, dying to see a ball game.” —Boston Transcript THE KALEIDOSCOPE The Agricultural Colim of Michi- ! gan is preparing to supply radio re- | ports on the market and weather, and even to supply music to the farmers of the state. Great Britain was assessed $15,500.- 000 for the damage resulting from the Confederaje cruisers .Aalabama, Florida and Shenandoah, built in Eng- Custom rules that there shall be no children born on the island of Miya- jima, Japan, and any mother giving birth to a child on the island is exiled for thirty days. In Finland there is a stone which, like a barometer, forecasts the weath- er. This tone it is said, turns black | or blackish gray when rain or bad | weather is approaching, and small white spots appear at the approach of clear weather. King George, sane, healthy-minded man though he is, owns up to cer- tain superstitions. He - can’'t endure that a wineglass should ring, if acei_ dentally touched, at his dinner table. The ringing will mean a deathe in his family, so he firmly believes. And ir the slightest ring is heard, every meme ber of his family and guest at his ta- ble rises up on the inswnt and stands in siience. It's his wish.—Londea Op- inton. Ladies Attention! Buy your fall and winter coat- the mill at mill prices. Fine