Turning back the pages

100 years ago — October 1914

SALISBURY — Chas. Spurr is building a new garage near the freight depot.

LIME ROCK — Miss Jennie Brasie has been making repairs on her house.

SALISBURY — Fred Seeley is having a furnace put in his house.

LIME ROCK — Everybody is glad to hear that little Buddie Barnum is much better.

Come to the motion picture show Election night and get election returns as well as seeing a good show.

The first snow flurry of the season came Monday night. Some hail accompanied the slight storm.

CANAAN — Spencer T. Wolcott, while standing near the New York, New Haven and Hartford tracks south of the station, was struck by the milk train Saturday afternoon and knocked down. He was taken home and Dr. C.W. Camp called. He received a cut in the head, but was not seriously injured.

50 years ago — October 1964

Mrs. Flora K. Holmes, a teacher in the North Canaan Elementary School, attended the 15th Annual Connecticut Reading Conference at the Hartford Public High School last Saturday.

Three descendants of the “Canaan Gillettes” attended the meeting of the Falls Village- Canaan Historical Society last Monday evening in the Falls Village Congregational Church and heard Allyn Fuller of Canaan read a brief sketch of the family from a manuscript written and deposited in the Canaan Library by the Rev. E.C. Gillette, former pastor of Pilgrim Church in Canaan.

CANAAN — Major Elizabeth Goodwin has been staying at her home in East Canaan. She has been stationed in Germany and is en route to a new assignment in Georgia.

Carl Richardson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Richardson of Church Street, Canaan, is attending the Watkinson School, Hartford, an independent college preparatory school for boys from seventh through twelfth grades.

25 years ago — October 1989

FALLS VILLAGE — Glass is now being recycled at the Falls Village landfill. Residents must separate glass by color, either white, green or brown, and place it into marked bins at the landfill on Route 63. To be accepted, each glass container must be clean and contain no metal.

These items are taken from decades-old Lakeville Journals and contain original spellings and phrases.

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