Churches
Final Touches at Sacred Heart
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With a brush in one hand and a roller in the other, a careful painter touches up the end of a pew in the center aisle of Sacred Heart Church.
The Suffield Observer (https://thesuffieldobserver.com/2019/10/page/4/)
With a brush in one hand and a roller in the other, a careful painter touches up the end of a pew in the center aisle of Sacred Heart Church.
Come meet the author Wanda Couch on Saturday November 2, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Second Baptist Church Fair.
Site preparation is under way for a subdivision at 414 East Street South, three-quarters of a mile south of Bridge Street. The 40-acre parcel is on the east side of the highway, and about half of the land will be left undeveloped.
Rev. George D. Reid, aged 70 years, a native of this place, died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Denton S. Rhodes, in Hartford.
Two New York buyers examine Sullivan farm tobacco in about 1920, with grower John L. Sullivan at the left.
With the holiday season right around the corner, the next three meetings of the Polish Heritage Society (PHS) will highlight Christmas and New Year traditions. The gatherings are open to anyone interested in learning about, preserving, and perpetuating the culture that was passed on from our Polish ancestors.
Remember that sand pit story about citizens’ action out by South Pond? Troubled residents got together in 2014 to stop a dormant sand pit operation on Lake Road from reopening.
By State regulation, Connecticut towns that have sanitary sewer systems must get their pipes cleaned and checked every five years. So the Suffield Water Pollution Control Authority contracts with Green Mountain Pipeline Services, a Bethel, Vt. company that specializes in servicing pipes of all kinds.
Local author Jamie L. B. Deenihan has released her second children’s book, a festive story just in time for the holidays.