Men of progress; biographical sketches and portraits of leaders in business and professional life in the state of Rhode Island and Providence plantations . efirm name of Noyes &: Dubois. In September 1872he was appointed Clerk of the Police Court inHaverhill, and resigned his position in November1877 to remove to Providence and practice law inRhode Island. Mr. Dubois removed to East Provi-dence in 1878 and has since resided there. He waselected Town Solicitor and has held the office formost of the time since. He served as State Senatorfrom East Providence from 1883 to 1885. He waselected Attor


Men of progress; biographical sketches and portraits of leaders in business and professional life in the state of Rhode Island and Providence plantations . efirm name of Noyes &: Dubois. In September 1872he was appointed Clerk of the Police Court inHaverhill, and resigned his position in November1877 to remove to Providence and practice law inRhode Island. Mr. Dubois removed to East Provi-dence in 1878 and has since resided there. He waselected Town Solicitor and has held the office formost of the time since. He served as State Senatorfrom East Providence from 1883 to 1885. He waselected Attorney General of Rhode Island in 1894and re-elected in 1895. In politics he is a Repub-lican. He married, February 24, 1872, Miss Jennie MEN OF PROGRESS. 103 Roberts of West Gardiner, Maine, daughter of Henryand Mary J. (Potter) Roberts. They have had threechildren, girls : the first died shortly after birth; thesecond was Blanche Emma Roberts, since deceased ;and Desiree Jennie Dubois, born April 5, 1877. EARLE, Charles Henry, physician and Greenwich, was born at the homestead of hisfamily in Cranston, R. I., near Fiskeville, January. CHAS. H. EARLE. 15, 1861, the son of Charles WilHam and CynthiaJones (Hawkes) Earle. He came of good oldRhode Island stock, and is a relative of the latewell known Dr. Pliny Earle. He received his earlyeducation at a private school, at home and in thepublic schools of the village, and was graduatedfrom the Friends School in Providence, in was engaged as a teacher in the public schoolsof Rhode Island for five years, during which timehe held the position of Principal of the grammarschool at Auburn for three years. He adoptedmedicine as a profession, and was graduated fromBellevue Medical College, N. Y., in 1889, and fromKings County Hospital, Flatbush, L. I., in graduating from the hospital he establishedhimself in East Greenwich, R. I., where he hasbuilt up an excellent practice. He has acted asexaminer for various li


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidmenofprogres, bookyear1896