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today morE T Tecis preaching service at Trinity church during July and Av" VIOLIN All String Instruments repaired Violina sold on easy terms ly 19th, 20th and 21st will o » 41 ggé:y. of voti‘:: in the Li beary Bring iIn your dimes and doll ars on {thepe, daya, and for. ouery. dolle i 1 aa1d \us,_ either lu': a u.l’;,,flu pass [} ‘we wi b4 .. [Yotes and 200 votes for every’ 10 cente You surely want your favirit es to P rary, _ai [Quantities of merchandieeiyot ¥ ieed. " Anticipate your neecls and - boost {your friends. A $500 Camera purichase’ means 110,000 votes for your femvorite s, Don't ‘¥riends. THE. CRANSTON 0. let others “catvol o _your — COAL AND LUMN.ER GOAL ‘Free Butning Kinds sand ‘Lehigh ALWAYS IN ST OCK A. D. LAYHIROP Office—cor. Market and Shetucket -Sts, Telephons. 46 1-12 'W. TYLER BROVINE, M. D. Eye, Eax, None, Thro: it, Electricity, | X=BAY/ 318 Brcadmey, Norwi b lcons | Ba s A P Summer'G fSAIL BOATS, PAIRASOLS, ME-. {CHANICAL BOATS, LANTERNS, |PAILS, AND SHOVEILS, PENNANTS, AND TOYS, BASKETS, CELLU- LOID TOYS, LUNGCH : SETS,:KITES, 'SOUVENIRS. . i MRS. EDWAN FAY ¢ ix Franklint8auare, ! & (McGrory-Building, .. nwg.,,. ZLondon Sunday, ‘| early in August for Woodstock, to,|ficer and her «of Groton, ¥ in Norwich. A 7 smuvgh. 7 & . hes Teturned £97" two weelks-in Holyoke-and Miss Josephine Fitzpatrick-of CIHft 517 eet has returned from a lengthy 1sit with relatives in New Milford -and ‘Bridgeport. Mr. and MMrs. 2 ‘Jordan with family of Sturtevant avenue, are pass- ing the rest of the season at ening | at Ocean Beach. thodist £ lin at ‘Colontally t+ ofhes There \will be no -Sunda The heat and humids crease ; fare causing r e obich hae BT é" of shore | Holden's parents-for erweek, because of the late s' G business dull e J. Allen Walker, rormerly of New S Londo Several from 1’ g, while in New |inn. Hhispect E is reported serious! ed. Columbuy roaxacwn, SniD, the il from a mervous-bi Miss Margerite Sullivan, a member of the 1916 class at Mount St. Joseph's ord, has-yeturned after pasu- ing -a Week ‘with MMrs. “W. H. Bowen of Smith avenue. sontinues good at fhermos Bottle company’s side, 150 employes find- Dan¢ ¥ to do in flling orders now & oy Mrs. Helen Malona, the Salem:libra- ough there §s no-organized ten- | rian, is to-spend two weeks at Storrs ‘dlocla,non in' Lyme, & team will |college in connection with her library ‘a”gotten together, and teams from | work. During her absence her place Saybrook and Pleasure Beach will be | Will be filled by Mrs. Carl Ro ‘Next Sunday morning at the Central | N, J. Baptist church, Mrs. Charles W. Gale | weeks' visit to Norwich. give a summary of the Northern | Miss Mary Bundy, of Buptist convention recently held at|accompanies them -home for a short o5 Angeles. visit. Outdoor workers declared Saturday e hottest day of the summer so far, because of stickiness and humidity, al- though the temperature was not far above 90 degrees. RURAL CARRIERS TO REPORT FOREST FIRES. Plan Worked Out By Post Office m /A Westbrook correspondent mentions Agricultural Departments. that the Waldron cottage, Chapman beach, is to be occupied by Judge and Mrs. W. A. Arnold, of ‘Willimantic, for | received advices from the department the rest of the month. dBllshop at Madison énext month. to Teceive .such imtelli- sence. 5 Paint- |, Coeperation with state officers wil v ing the exterior will be let locally. HanEd by law o sysiem of fee o Of a native of Norwich the Danbw ection. he_state :and mational au- News saye: Hev. B B. Barber, pasiey | thorities will nform postmasters as of the Universalist church, will go. on | t0 Whom discovery of fires should be his annual veeation July 26, and -will | Feported, and each rural carrier should spend a month at his .sumimer: home | be directed to cooperate to the “full- Rt tirenas B est extent with such authorities in the manner agreed upon, namely, that the It is stated by & New Haven paper | carrier shall report-a fire to the near- contract bidder. . President C. O. Murphy conducted ‘meeting, ‘whtn e-minutes and Architect “Charles H. Preston present to open fhe “These were-as follows: Heat at East ‘Great Plain: J. J. Holland $348, C. O. Murphy $290, H. Breed $368.38, J. F. Tompkins $290, A. Wholey & Co. $290, David A. Dunn J. . Barstow & Co. $314, Wil- “Bros. ‘Rogler & Shlnlg Wholey Co. '$180, C. E. $110. “The -contract was given to Mr. ng ut’Pear] stre: Tompkins David A, Dunn m&o. $565, J. P. Barstow & et: Charles O, Co, $624, James Ibbitson $516. ‘went to Mr. Ibbitson. cellings at Mt. Pleasant - M. Le- | b Del . Del Cario. Thig is is in connection with putting in new tollets for this bullding and involves Plain, ut in-there was but one bldder, Mr. Del Carlo, who was Fiven the on_his bf1 of $196. STEAMER BLOCK I8LAND HAD REGCORD CROWD Norwich Residents Fled from sHeat of the City. One-of the refuges from ‘the intense heat of the city on Sunday was the steamer Block Island, which took 608 passengers from here On her morn- ing ‘trip .and -had to turn ‘about 109 city for Wateh Hill .and Block. the Teeord for the season, The #rolley 'cars_on the Montville line- and on the Westerly lne had about 11 the trave] they could handle numbers ‘they carrfed “all ‘was one degree warmer, while temperatures that ran up to 120 ‘thermometers ‘SUNDAY SERVICE AT KAMP KILLKARE, James L, Case, Y. M. C. A, President, ‘Was the Speaker. Visitors - from this city who went down to the Niantic river on Sunday and visited Killkare found the Y. M. C. A. boys enjoying tent life and out of door diversions quite as much as that Mr. and Mrs. H. Bolden Armstrong | est fire warden or mational forest of- | and family, of Bdgehil] Toad, will leave | ficer -on his Toute, or, f o-sueh of- | o5 lives on the —route, to arrangs spend a week ‘with Mrs. Armstrong's | through some responsible citizen to: eunt, Mrs, ‘Williamson. ::;lve him notify by telephone 1f pos- . An official well known here, Wallsce| In the spring and early summs Woodin, general secretary of %he|several bad forest fires occarred in Connecticut Sunday association, Who | this section, especially in P&:; heen'iflpendinghm fevtv‘ t:eevk':di; part of the country. 2an, pass the next:two fires in Northfield, Mass., at the.conference. | riers. 1t is boiarot Lt Since it became known that the new issue .0 fthe United States Pharma- copefa will mot contain captions cov- ering whiskey or brandy it means that - every drug store which sells liquor after the first of next year, will/have to take out a saloonjlicense. st e e artley, No. 541 Main st Tug George McCaffery, owned, by | Whom he had been tenderly easento the McCaffery line of New Yorik, ‘after | for the past ten weeks, William Roseoy coming from Promised Tand, L. &, Fri- phere, died at 9:20 o'clock on Sate day, with one light barge, praceeded | urday evening, following an of to Allyw's Point and Norwich, where | year and a half with cirrhosis of tha she picked up: five more light *narges. | liver and tuberculosis, He was bore She then sailed west with the ésix. in Griswold, ap November 16, 1882, the ol R B son of Annie K. Hinckley and the late hgye e ek George H. Lamphere. His youth was of securing thel names persons | pass; g0 Theiy routes \ihove' (ho ‘oo tan | ta " Siyuite “ith Wis” parosis "end B Lived there for most of his lte, Aas emplo; carriers compile a thorough jand com- |and for a Trae ty‘.’:':,..“mipwm“'} plete list of all paitrons overpten years Mr. Lamphere was a old. upright character T e One of the largest: small mouth black bass ever caught im this state weighed 6 pounds, 8 1-2 ow s. The les of the fish from mouthi to tail swas/21 3-4 inches. Frank Clsv!houskj, Rockville, caught the bass in: Lake ‘amgum- baug, Coventry. The bait® was a crawfish. Mrs_ Katherine M. Spalding of |City, Herbert A. and Hemry A. Lam. Bridgeéport, who is visting her daugh- | Phere, of Mystic, Lyman L. Lam ter, Mrs, C. A, Jones, in Bermuda, will sail for home July 6. . Mrs. Sipaiding is prominent in club, D. A. R. King’s Daughters eireles jand Winflelq £ visited Norwich, wherelshe has a [Mhere number of friends, S car- It is believed .that the goven- ous fires, OBITUARY, Wilmot Roscoe Lamphere. At ‘the home of his sister, Mrs. ; is an instructor in the U. 8. ‘Naval acedemy. Besides her husband is ea three daugh. Terry At- Terry, Nataniel Terry, Jr., of J. A sister, Mrs. 5. Tisune, Ao Foe ‘from “were held Mrs, ‘Summer home at Lyme at 2:30 ‘and = son, | Montclair. N. e, ~ Vi -of indicate that is not the disease in the United States. oon. ORGANIZING CAMPAIGN / ! ‘Daniel Sullivan, - IN:BOSTON AND VEGIINITY| &t oiclock _W i mm Vice President of Industrial um;'mcm ‘and for mmny +.np, Union| Visits Hub City, va “the ‘track if el i it § ment’s plan will result in fewer seri- |.ao by the Sunday morning ser- vice, in which a number participated. The prayer was offered by Boys' Sec- retary J. H. Ely and the scripture for a Successful Life, and the young men profited by the maxims he laid wn and illustrated. The attendance at the service was swelled by the presence of a number of young ladies from Norwich who are camping not far from the Y. M. C. A. camp. DECLARING BAGGAGE VALUE New Law That Will Affect .Many Summer Tourists. “The new rules governing the trans- portation of baggage, i e, baggage that 4s sent from one state to an- other, need to be read by all who are sending trunks or other baggage out 1. For baggage ‘from point in one state to a point in another nly expressed terstate movement” (the Cummins’ amendment not applying to business wholly within a state) a written dec- transportation of - excess weight, liability of the company increases <tnird cents for each pound the the SECRET SERVICE MEN GUARD SIR CECIL SPRING-RICE A_Detail Has ‘Arrived .at the Summer “Home of the British Ambassador. Beverley, Mass., July 18.—A detail] ‘.m ‘service ‘men came hare ] i a i ¥, l R il ! ) FIVE DECISIONS IN COMMON PLEAS CASES, Given By Judge Waller—Two Judg- ments- by -Justices Reversed. Decisions in five cases that have been been handed Judge B. store. was for the plaintiff for The defendant is “also costs in the suit of Moses ‘Kitngon. against Leon Broder, both of Colchgs- ter, which was a similar case to the In the justice court the decision $96.24. to judgment for the sum of $250.41. The parties formerly lived in Lebanon. The Suit was rent of farm and a note. The lawyers Wwere Comstock and Brown & Perkins. In the East Lyfe cases of “Robert B. Gorton against Bzra Mortimer , guardian, judgment for $194:53 is . given for the plaintiff. In his opinion the judge says: I find the plaintiff’s claim o the mount of $194.53 is a just one and ought equitably to be paid out of the estats of Stanley M. Cobb, the minor, of which said estate Ezra Mor- timer Cobb is guardian. separate Is grantéd and answer must be filed before Sept. 10. It is a action for trespass on Groton -land. PEOPLE WANT PHEABANTS. Game Commission ‘Hus Applications from 103—5,000 Birds in Reserve. The fish and game commissi received 108 ications for to be liberated in private preserves in the fall. Two applications were' re- cefved one ‘from prominent broker in-Hartford and the gther from a woman ‘Who conducts a farm in ManGhester. There are about 5,000 pheasants in the game preserve at Madison and a few hundred more In the ome at Lyme. The demand for birds has been | With 50 great the commission fears it may not have “enough to ‘supply all who want the ‘birds. In One or two places young pheasants have been liberated by private owners, but the superin- tendent of fish and game, Mr, Cramp- ton, thinks it is rather early to liber- ate young birds, as they are not yet able to take care of themselves. will birds The not give to the owners of private preserves that and which ‘the ‘public is excluded in the shooting season. The policy of the commission has been de- fined by the statement of an official: . ure for the Sportsmen of the state, whose license money main- tains this department.” This clarifying of the commission's | there policy is malle public is ‘an ‘1m n ‘some quart A that private preserves, in ‘which the,|plaintiff had committed -delfberate people of the state are not -allowed to shoot, are stocked with birds from the state preserves. The plan is to give each member Of fhe com- 1 i§ wod fi entrance to plain g 15 Bl g ¥ it £ upper floor; thiug ‘at all ‘suad. § § HE hil f | %’E‘ o i i H i ] i8 ng elevator and the floor above occur- red. n ‘testifying in this “The ‘plaintifr, 1Pyt — ‘coming up; that he walked over to the elevator and stood by it, and ‘as the elevator came slowly up to the level of the room floor he stepped onto it, and the elevator made a jump of a foot and a half or two feet, and threw him down, and then went up so fast elevator and the top of the room. The plaintiff ‘had, “héfore brirging Climax -Co., floor of the building and in support of that sait mmmwl = m testimony had a n accident absolutely different ‘from that to which he testified in this ac- action against the Climax plaint contained two counts, the first -of “which alleged a sudden joiting and ‘starting ‘upwerd, similar to the allegation in the first count in action. The -second the com the' present count 13 the that the plaintiff stepped into the elevator, and while he was on it ‘he “was t, pinched, bruised, great force and violence between the floor af the slevator and the mill floor above. The plaintiff in his testimony in the former mction said mothing about any. jolt, jar, or sudden starting upward, although his first count called for such testimony; If it could truthfully have been given, and it was so evident that his testimony entirely failed to sup- port_that count, which all starting, jolting, that the trial judge in the Climax Co. case instructed the jury that there could be no recovery by the plaintiff upon the first count in the complaint; and the supreme court ruled that there was no error in the Judge’s excluding this Tount from the consideration of the .Jury because was no evidence to support it. this action i perjury in efther one the other and, tn the opinion of ‘the" judge, in view of other testimony in the case, he had ‘done it twice, meither of his on the -floor ards the room, with his legs agha south side of the 5 fag 1 ! i zii_%" up again. In the application for a Clmax Co. action alleged | tice ring after passing a week with Mrs. Mass. Josenh' concern as there is a ¢lalm that the |the next two weeks at Pleasant Vi property of “the 50 & witriess. The attorneys Brown, J. J. Desmon: Miss Martha L. Osgood, ot street spent the week end with cottage to do so, | guests of their daughter, Mrs. Jum: | be condinued lleged sudden | next DROWNING AT few weeks at their camp BEACH Was Cramps—Taken to New London Hos- pital. While half way out to the public 7aft gt Ocean Beach on Sunday aft- €rnoon, a young man who it was found latef was Joseph Morris of Norwich, J. Moore of Oneco street. Mr. and Mrs. L. have returned to their home passed Kinley avenue, having Breeze-on-the-TI a3 the } at B 0. Chester Johnson, who has § 8 guest at the home of his paav Mr. and Mrs Oliver L. Johnsom Union street has return: home in Plainfleld, ed to !