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FROM PAGES PAST: 1921: PY & LS Railway runs 28 trolleys a day Yates County History Center The Yates County History Center’s volunteers have gleaned these entries for your enjoyment from their digitized newspapers. You can access them at the free site www.nyshistoricnewspapers.com. For more information about the YCHC, visit www.yatespast.org. 150 Years Ago July 13, 1871 An Effective Liquor Law A provision of the Excise Law gives to the wives of men addicted to drink the right to warn liquor dealers not to sell to their husbands, after which warning damages of $50 can be collected from those who disregard it. Thursday the first notice of this kind was served in Queens county on sixteen saloon keepers, by Justice Lawrence, on complaint of Mrs. Jones, of Flushing. ....
Cocke, John Hartwell (1780–1866) – Encyclopedia Virginia encyclopediavirginia.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from encyclopediavirginia.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
As It Were: Early streets in Columbus didn’t provide smooth passage Ed Lentz Today, the streets of downtown Columbus tend to be taken for granted. The success of asphalt paving in the past century has meant most streets are reasonably straight and clean. Such was not always the case. The story of the streets of Columbus – especially in the old city within two miles of the Statehouse – is a complicated one. And it is a story made more complicated for a variety of reasons. Columbus is a planned city. There was no town here until the Ohio General Assembly brought it into being in 1812. Elaborate plans were made for wide streets and handsome boulevards. As the town came into being with government buildings on Statehouse Square and a variety of cabins, stores and taverns nearby, the major streets slowly developed. ....