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Turning Back The Pages

100 years ago — March 1918

Benjamin Baldwin of  Taconic has purchased the Salisbury Market. David Hatmaker is in charge there at present.

 

SALISBURY — George Barton and Walter Hardisty left on Monday afternoon for Fort Slocum to enter service in the Coast Artillery. The best wishes of many friends go with them.

 

Lost — An Airedale Dog with the name “Bob” on his collar. $5.00 reward. H.N. Willard, Salisbury, Conn.

 

LAKEVILLE — Leslie Dufour is acting as rural free delivery carrier.

 

The highways are in an exceedingly muddy condition, the warm days of the past week having started the frost. Traveling has been burdensome and many of the milk teams have been using three horses to pull their loads, Autos, too, are having their troubles, the bottom seemingly having dropped out of the roads in many places. 

 

LAKEVILLE — James Ellis is limping around owing to the fact that he neglected to remove his left knee from under a set of auto cylinders which fell to the floor from the blocks upon which they were being overhauled at Smith’s Garage on Tuesday.

 

50 years ago — March 1968

The Housatonic Valley Regional High School Board at its meeting Tuesday evening appointed Clarke B. Wood as head of the vocational agriculture department at the school.

 

Lawrence T. Hoage, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hoage of Wells Hill Road, Lakeville, has been graduated from international Academy of Connecticut in Hartford, where he completed an intensive training course in computer sciences and received his diploma at recent Academy ceremonies. He graduated from Oliver Wolcott Technical School in 1967.

 

CORNWALL —Kathy Choiniere, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Choiniere, has had her leg enclosed in a cast as a result of an accident in her home on Friday afternoon, when she fell and fractured three toes on her foot. Kathy was practicing ballet leaps which had been demonstrated at the Project Create assembly at Cornwall Consolidated School on Wednesday, and although she fell on a soft, thick rug, her toes were fractured. She will be on crutches for the next few weeks.

 

25 years ago — March 1993

The Northwest Corner and the Tri-State area rode out “Storm Josh” in relative comfort and safety last weekend. Described as the biggest late season storm in recent memory, Josh laid down 20 inches of snow in just over 24 hours, accompanied by howling winds with gusts that qualified it as a full-scale blizzard.

 

FALLS VILLAGE — D.M. Hunt librarian June “Cookie” Kubarek was asked to represent the small libraries of Region 1 at a legislative brunch held at Oliver Wolcott Library in Litchfield.

 

News items were culled from old issues of The Lakeville Journal.

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