Turning Back the Pages

100 years ago — March 1923

Louis Goderis is remodeling the cottage he recently purchased next to Best Theater and will move his meat market business there later on.

 

The community was greatly saddened and shocked when two of our most beloved citizens, Mr. and Mrs. James Winterbottom, passed away. Mr. Winterbottom died Sunday morning March 11th, and Mrs. Winterbottom died on Friday, March 16th. The floral tributes for both at their funeral services were numerous and beautiful, showing the high esteem in which they were held.

 

Daniel Hanlon of Twin Lakes has purchased a farm near Falls Village and will move there soon. He is going to sell his live stock and farm machinery at public auction April 2nd.

 

50 years ago — March 1973

A good-sized black bear made an appearance on Beaver Dam Road in Salisbury on Sunday morning, providing a bit of excitement for a family out for a drive. Bill and Jeanne Walsh and their small son Billy spotted the animal in the middle of the road between the Ralph Schwaikert and Alfred E. Brewer homes.

 

Neil Smith of Canaan found an antique coin last week while searching for arrow heads in Ashley Falls. The coin has been identified as a 1783 Spanish coin. It bears the image of Charles III and the inscription of Carolus III, 1783.

 

Parents should be aware that their offspring may unknowingly be running up huge telephone bills, calling in music requests to a Hartford radio station. Richard Shanley, local manager for the Southern New England Telephone Co., said that when a teenager dials the station’s number to request a song, and all the lines are busy, calls are answered by machines, with recordings telling the callers to redial. Not realizing that each call is a long-distance call completed, the young people keep dialing until they can make their requests. In one known case, a teenager ran up his parents’ normal $9 monthly bill to $303.

 

A report from John DeCesare indicates that as of Feb. 19 the Housatonic River was running clearer than it has in 20 years.

 

25 years ago — March 1998

A national effort to restore a Gettysburgh, Pa. statue of Civil War leader and Cornwall native Major General John Sedgwick has called attention to the renowned work of local sculptor Neil Estern, who was instrumental in restoring Cornwall’s own Sedgwick monument. The latest showcase for Mr. Estern’s work, the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial, lies near the edge of the Potomac River’s tidal basin amid an idyllic setting of cherry trees in the nation’s capitol. The Cornwall sculptor was recently awarded a National Academy medal for his efforts.

 

Lt. Sarah Kasacek has returned to Troop B for the third time in her 18-year career with the state police. This time she’s in charge. Lieutenant Kasacek replaced Lt. Benjamin Pagom who commanded the troop since last September. Lt. Pagom is now the commander of the office of Projects and Research in Middletown.

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Photo submitted

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Young native pachysandra from Lindera Nursery shows a variety of color and delicate flowers.

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Passover, marked by the traditional seder meal, holds profound significance within Jewish culture and for many carries extra meaning this year at a time of great conflict. The word seder, meaning “order” in Hebrew, unfolds in a 15-step progression intertwining prayers, blessings, stories, and songs that narrate the ancient saga of the liberation of the Israelites from slavery. It’s a narrative that has endured for over two millennia, evolving with time yet retaining its essence, a theme echoed beautifully in “The Cook and the Rabbi.”

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