NECROLOGY. 203.. 



NECROLOGY 



Time flows swiftly on and with each recur rint;- annual 

 Roll Call we find an ever increasing number of our fellow- 

 workers who "have been called to lay down their imple- 

 ments upon earth" to join the great company of those who do' 

 now rest from their labors. 



Death has robbed us of their presence, but their loving 

 memory remains. 



It is therefore eminently fitting that amidst the activity 

 and success that attends our work and our meetings that we 

 should consecrate these brief pages of our report to the com- 

 memoration of those of our members, who, during the past 

 year, have joined the innumerable caravan to that mysterious 

 bourne, where each shall take his chamber in the silent Halls 

 of Death. 



Since our last Report was issued the following 

 list of deaths in our membership has been reported to the 

 Secretary's office : 



Cyrus Hart Blair, of Nezmigton, died in January, 1907. 

 He had been a member of the Society since 1905. 



Benjamin F. Colby, of Kensingtoii, died in May, 1907. 

 He was a well-known fruit grower and an active member of 

 the Society since 1903. 



RoswELL Allen Moore, of Kensington, town of Berlin, 

 who was Treasurer of this Society from 1883 to 1905, passed^ 

 away at his home September 19, 1907. The following sketch- 

 of his life is taken from a New Britain paper: 



"Roswell A. Moore, postmaster of Kensington for the last fif- 

 teen years, one of the most prominent business men in this sec- 

 tion, (lied at his home there last evening, at the age of seventy-- 



