Turning Back The Pages 2-4-10

75 years ago — 1935
SALISBURY — Paul Cleaveland reports seeing a woodchuck at his place one day last week.

Reflections of the Season (editorial): Lots of people go to the Bronx Zoo to see the animals. Why not try Washington, D.C., where there are many new and unclassified species.

Federal agents are investigating the theft of $170 in cash and stamps from the Sharon post office recently. The thief gained entrance to the office by a side door and forced open the door of the safe. Postmaster T.B. McDonald was recovering from an appendix operation at the time of the burglary, and some one evidently took advantage of his absence to commit the theft.

50 years ago — 1960
West Cornwall has had an unusual visitor from the Old World since the day before Thanksgiving, and on January 30 a sizable delegation from the Hartford Bird Club, the Connecticut Federation of Nature Clubs, the Litchfield Bird Sanctuary, and other interested groups, coming to see it, clogged the village streets. The Hartford, Litchfield, and other callers confirmed the local identification of the unusual visitor  as a European robin, never before reported, so far as is known, in the United States. It seems improbable that so small a bird could make the transatlantic crossing on its own, and it has been suggested that it may be an escaped cage-bird.

SALISBURY — Ned Norton had the misfortune to fall recently while skiing and dislocate his shoulder. He is now home and doing well after receiving treatment at the Sharon Hospital.

25 years ago — 1985
KENT — The seven-member Town Hall Committee recently wrapped up its year-long study of What to Do About Town Hall, a project spurred by general agreement that the building is no longer large enough to serve the town’s needs.
Nobody can remember exactly when it happened, but somewhere in the 1950s, during the legendary reign of Ted Woodin, the roof of Town Hall was ceremoniously sawed off and dangled from a crane while workers sawed off the building’s second story. That done, the roof was replaced, giving us the one-story building we see today.

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

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