Turning Back The Pages

100 years ago — April 1920

ORE HILL — Master James Meehan returned home Saturday after a stay of eight weeks at the Sharon Hospital on account of a broken leg.

 

Avoid confusion by turning your clocks ahead one hour next Sunday night. The business places and their employees as well as most of the rest of our citizens seem to want the daylight saving plan. At the meeting on Monday evening it was voted to adopt the plan. In order to make it work right everyone should fall in line.

 

50 years ago — April 1970

The New England Trail Conference, meeting at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, March 28, adopted a resolution to oppose the proposed construction by Northeast Utilities of the largest pumped-storage hydroelectric plant in the world at Falls Village or Sheffield, Mass. The group believes that construction of the project would be a serious threat to the environment.

 

Funeral services were conducted Tuesday at St. John’s Church for Miss Edith Scoville of Taconic Road, Salisbury, and New York City. She died in her city home Saturday after a long illness. She was born Oct. 18, 1881, in New York, a daughter of one of Salisbury’s Ironmasters and outstanding patrons, the late Nathaniel Church Scoville and Frances (Wasson) Scoville. She was the last of her generation of six Scoville children and had been a resident of Salisbury for over 80 years, 50 of them in her present home, Southaway.

 

Items on sale at the Lakeville Food Center this week include 13 oz. pkg. Eggo waffles, 3 for $1.00; Florida Stalk Celery, 29 cents; Fancy U.S. No. 1 MacIntosh Apples, 1/2 bushel for $2.25; and Howard Johnson 12 oz. pkg. Macaroni and Cheese, 2 for 79 cents.

 

The Ragamont Inn, a Salisbury landmark for many years, has been sold by Eda Hammond to Barbara and Rolf Schenkel of Fairfield. Mr. Schenkel was trained as a chef in his native Zurich, Switzerland.

 

25 years ago — April 1995

Housatonic Valley Regional High School Principal John Mahoney said this week he will take early retirement at the end of the school year. HVRHS Vice Principal Eugene Brooks earlier this year announced he will also retire and Mr. Mahoney’s departure will leave both top administrative positions at the high school open. Seven other Region 1 staff members have also opted for early retirement.

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