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THE WAY WE WERE
FEBRUARY 16, 1973
Fire gutted the lovely old former Gilbert homestead on Meadowbrook Road
Tuesday morning and firefighters worked almost all day at the scene. A
neighbor, Mrs John D'Addario, noticed the fire and called in the alarm. The
home, owned by the Peter Chapdelaine family, was vacant at the time. Heavy
smoke and intense heat hampered firefighters in their efforts. They used the
aerial truck to make a water curtain between the house and the barns to
protect the barns, a maneuver which was successful. By the time the fire was
under control, the roof had collapsed into the second floor.
The Newtown Democratic Party, meeting at a caucus in the Alexandria Room of
Edmond Town Hall this week, endorsed Gerald J. Frawley of Taunton Lake Road as
their candidate for first selectman. A Newtown resident for six years, Mr
Frawley is district sales manager for Investors Diversified Services of
Waterbury. Other candidates endorsed at the caucus include incumbent Diana
Schwerdtle for selectman; Joy Martin, town clerk; Herbert Cutler, Republican
incumbent, for treasurer; Ingrid McCauley, tax collector; incumbent Gary
McMahon, Board of Finance; incumbent Ted Schwerdtle, Board of Education; Alan
Martin, Board of Tax Review.
On Wednesday evening, the Republicans caucused in the Alexandria Room and
approved incumbent Frank R. DeLucia for first selectman; incumbent Thomas
Goosman, selectman; Mrs Donald Smith, tax collector; Mrs Robert Schmidle, town
clerk; incumbent Herbert Cutler, town treasurer. With the announcements
recently that Town Clerk Barbara Parker and Tax Collector Beatrice Pittelkow
would not run for reelection, these two offices are open to new candidates for
the first time in many years.
The request by the Hawley Manor Inn for a zoning variance for two oversized
lighted signs met strong objections at the Board of Burgesses meeting on
February 12. Warden Willard Christensen said that if a variance was granted to
the inn, other businesses on Main Street would seek the same thing, turning it
into what Burgess Donald Leavitt terms a "great white way."
The Newtown League of Women Voters announced this week that it supports
certain changes in Newtown's charter to provide for a more efficient and
responsive form of government. The league supports local elections to be held
in November; voting districts to be flexible to reflect changes in population;
two elected registrars of voters instead of four; limiting terms of office to
two consecutive terms, except Board of Selectmen; an elected Board of Police
Commissioners; four-year terms of office for all boards and commissions
including Park & Rec; a full-time town attorney; lifting the restrictions on
political activity by town employees (but inclusion of a conflict-of-interest
clause); appointment of a director of finance; a moving up of dates regarding
the budget-making process; inclusion of a capital improvement plan for
long-range planning of the town's fiscal needs, including methods of
financing; tax collector to be appointment; allowing for monies less than
$50,000 received through insurance claims to be made accessible for
replacement of those items.
Recreation Director Lee Davenson moved into a new office this week on the
lower floor of Edmond Town Hall, in the former bowling alley in the southeast
corner next to the meeting room. Previously, residents who wished to sign up
for recreation programs had to find their way through the Board of Selectmen's
anteroom to the corner office which Mr Davenson used to share with Mae
Schmidle. Space problems at the town hall continue to be a problem. The
dialogue about the future of the town hall is scheduled to be resumed at the
Board of Managers' next public meeting. According to financial records made
available to The Bee, the original endowment of the building by Mary Hawley 40
years ago has not been enough to meet costs. Income from the endowment wasn't
enough in the last fiscal year to pay the salaries of the building manager and
custodial staff, while the movie theater lost money, and some long overdue
maintenance work was made possible only because of a new bequest from the late
Otto Heise.
FEBRUARY 13, 1948
In view of the fact that one-half of the children who have been born on the
European continent since World War II are already dead from malnutrition, it
seems fitting that Newtown should be part of the campaign to raise $60 million
in the United States to feed some of those who are still alive. At least, so
it seemed to the group of residents who met at the home of Col C. Sidney
Haight on Main Street Tuesday afternoon to form a local chapter to assist in
the nationwide campaign which began on February 2. The goal of the local
campaign is one day's pay, profit or income from each individual.
"The most successful March of Dimes to date" was Judge Paul V. Cavanaugh's
description of the 1948 Infantile Paralysis drive in Newtown with figures
Tuesday night showing a total of $1,183.94 received at that time and further
contributions expected to be received in the mail. On a national level,
general hospitals are admitting polio cases at a rate of 150 percent higher
than ten years ago. This represents a marked step forward in the treatment of
polio because the general hospital, with its larger staff and resources, is
the ideal place for such patients.
Nearly 200 people attended last Friday night's special town meeting and
approved, with just one dissenting vote, a resolution to appropriate $17,000
for road work. Nearly all of the town's original $20,000 was spent on the cost
of snow removal this winter.
George Wheeler has completed the erection of a modern fireproof building on
Glen Road in Sandy Hook to house the Wheeler Garage and Service Station. The
building contains a large showroom, a lubrication room, a repair shop, and
office. The interior is complete in every detail and the latest type electric
gas pumps have been installed. Mr Wheeler has secured the services of Ernest
Kuhne and Albert O'Dell as mechanics in charge.
Because it is approximately a year since he had a vacation, Dr W.F. Desmond
feels the need of rest, and he and Mrs Desmond will leave by plane this
weekend to seek recuperative benefits of rest and southern sunshine at Boca
Grande, Florida, which is on the island of Gasparilla in the Gulf of Mexico.
After a two-week vacation, they will return, and the doctor plans to resume
his practice on Monday, March 1.
A lively game of basketball was played Saturday morning at Hawley School when
a lively group of Newtown fifth graders (and below) met and defeated an
invading team of Bethel fifth graders by the startling score of 6-5. Included
in the Newtown lineup were Stephen Smith, captain; Teddy Smith, Jimmy
Hellauer, Paul Kovacs, Bobby Fish, Jimmy Kearns and Peter Underhill.
A special town meeting was held Wednesday night at Edmond Town Hall to vote in
full legal form on the $300,000 in bonding needed to pay for an addition to
Hawley School. About 30 people attended the meeting and voted unanimously to
approve the funding. The proposal to construct the addition was approved at a
town meeting last December 22.
