Turning Back The Pages - September 2

75 years ago — 1935

Reflections of the Season (editorial): All kinds of advice is being issued to the drivers of cars in the effort to promote safety on the highways and cut down the growing weekend death list. Perhaps if it were possible to regulate old John Barleycorn it might result in lessening the horrible grist of the automobile death mill. The efforts to promote safety are praiseworthy but they will be futile as long as John Barleycorn sits behind the steering wheel.

LAKEVILLE — Mrs. Lila Nash is enjoying a vacation from her duties at the local office of the Connecticut Power Company and is spending the time in Maine.

ORE HILL — Corporal Samuel C. Wilhoite has reenlisted in the regular army at Camp Ethan Allen at Burlington, Vermont.

50 years ago — 1960

Telephone users calling Torrington may actually be speaking “on the air� from now on, as calls will be riding radio waves instead of wires.

The Southern New England Telephone Company made this announcement Monday as it began to use a new microwave radio transmission network spanning western Connecticut from Long Island Sound to the Massachusetts border.

SALISBURY — Mr. and Mrs. William G. Raynsford took Eddie Tompkins, Timmy and Johnny Whalen, and Georgie Bird to Rhinebeck Fair last Friday night to see the Lucky Hell Drivers. The boys were much impressed when a driver in a Falcon was shot from a cannon and landed on a ramp some distance away.

25 years ago — 1985

The Lakeville Market is reopening and will stock convenience items for villagers and transients unable to get to nearby supermarkets. Produce from area farms also will be for sale.

CORNWALL — Arlington Yutzler’s painting “The Foreign Mission School in Cornwall,� was lost for many years. It turned up when the summer art school in West Cornwall, which Mr. Yutzler had attended in the 1930s, closed. The painting now hangs in the original room of the two-room schoolhouse built in 1845 where “Dutch� himself attended school, graduating in 1924.

Taken from decades-old Lake-ville Journals, these items contain original spellings and phrases.

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