City Officers and the Annual Reports to the City Council of Newburyport 1882, Part 15

Author: City of Newburyport
Publication date: 1882
Publisher:
Number of Pages: 318


USA > Massachusetts > Essex County > Newburyport > City Officers and the Annual Reports to the City Council of Newburyport 1882 > Part 15


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MATHEMATICS :- Wentworth's Arithmetical Problems.


COMPOSITION :- History of Newburyport in 2500 words.


JUNIOR YEAR.


LITERATURE :- Young People's History of France and Germany; Vicar of Wakefield. Harold; Longfollow's poems; Pilgrim's Progress.


MATHEMATICS :- Problems in Robinson's Higher Algebra.


COMPOSITION :- History of the Great Rebellion in 3000 words.


10


MIDDLE


YEAR.


LITERATURE :- Green's History of England; Henry Esmond; Bacon's Essays; Bryant's History of the United States ; Bryant's poems.


NATURAL SCIENCE :- Special work, under direction of the teacher, in Physics or Zoölogy.


COMPOSITION :- Essays on assigned topics.


SENIOR


YEAR.


LITERATURE :- Paradise Lost; five plays of Shakespeare; Adam Bede; Faerie Queene : Boswell's Life of Johnson.


NATURAL SCIENCE :- Collection of cabinets and other work, under direction of teacher.


COMPOSITION :- Essays on assigned topies.


The examinations for admission were fixed at a scale of 80 per centum, in order to raise the standard to that of other high schools of cities of the common- wealth, and, in consequence, the number of pupils of the preparatory class is greatly reduced, eight boys and four girls. The questions were prepared by the teachers in the high schools, and are as follows:


ARITHMETIC.


1. Find the least common multiple and the greatest common divisor of 144, 96, 72, 48.


2. Simplify 3ª 53+13


19-9} X ¿ of §


3. If two-thirds of a house are worth $3750%, what are seven-eighths of the same house worth ?


4. Divide fifty-three and six hundred twenty-one thousand three hundred sixteen mil- lionths by two and twelve thousand seven hundred eighty-three hundred-thousands, and ex_ press your answer in words.


5. How many cords, cord feet, and cubic feet in a pile of wood 25 feet long, 4 feet wide, and 7 feet 7 inches high?


6. Find the number of square feet in the walls, ceiling, and floor of a room 21 feet long, 13 feet 6 inches high, and 10 feet 8 inches wide. Also, find the number of gallons, of 231 cubić inches each, which the room will contain.


7. Find the simple and compound interest of $500 for 3 years, 7 months, 14 days, at 5 per cent.


8. How many yards of cloth at seven cents a yard can be bought with the proceeds of 900 bushels of potatatoes, sold for 62 cents a bushel, allowing a commission merchant one per


11.


rent. commission for selling the potatoes and one and one-half per cent. commission for buying the clotlı?


9. $500.00 Newburyport. Mass., June 30. 1882.


Three months after date I promise to pay to the order of John Smith, Five Hundred Dollars, value received. JOHN BROWN.


If this note is discounted at a bank July 1, 1882, at seven and three-tenths per cent. per annum, how much money will the holder receive from the bank?


10. Sold a horse for $320, losing twenty per cent. How much would I have gained by selling him for $408?


GEOGRAPHY.


1. Bound France.


2. Where are Calcutta, Cairo, Saint Louis, and Santiago situated?


3. Name the mountain systems of North America.


4. Name the states on the northern bank of the Olio river.


5. Name six rivers that flow south from the Appalachian mountain system.


6. Name ten cities of Massachusetts.


7. Name the most easterly, the most southerly, and the most westerly cape of South America.


8. Where is Greenwich, and for what is it noted?


9. Name the capitals of the largest state and the smallest state in the United States.


10. Where is the Japanese empire? Bound it.


11. What is the largest lake in the world? Where is it situated?


12. Of how many states and territories does the United States consist?


13. Which is the largest of the West India islands, and to what country does it belong?


14. Bound the gulf of Mexico.


15. Name the countries of South America.


16. Describe the course of the Amazon, Missouri, and Rhine rivers.


17. What and where is the highest mountain peak in the world?


18. For what is Switzerland noted?


19. Name the five largest rivers of New England.


20. Where are Moscow, Bangor, Geneva, Liverpool, and Stockholm?


GRAMMAR.


1. Define Grammar. What is Language? What is a Sentence?


2. Define the the Parts of Speech, and give an example of each.


3. What is Number? Give the plural of Motto, Wolf, Sheep, Mouse, Child, Court- Martial.


4. How many Cases do nouns have, and what does each denote?


5. Decline Child, Man, Woman.


6. Decline the personal pronoun in the third person, masculine gender.


7. Name the Relative Pronouns, and give a sentence containing one.


8. How many Degrees of Comparison are there? How are adjectives compared?


9. Compare Good, Bad, Much, Excellent.


10. Define Transiative Verb, and write a sentence containing one.


11. Write a sentence of six words with Ocean for the subject and Land for the object.


12. What is the difference between This and That?


13. Write a sentence with Boy in the plural number and positive case.


14. Write a sentence having an Appositive Noun.


15. Write a sentence having a Predicate Noun.


16. Write a sentence with an Abstract Noun.


17. Inflect the verb To Rule in the present perfect tense, indicative mode.


18. How many Persons are there, and how is each used?


19. Correct and punctuate : " london which is Situated on the thames is the Capital of great britain "


20. Correct this sentence: "John and Charles has twenty apple; he give half of it to chinee boy."


12


Mr. N. D. Dodge gives weekly lessons in singing, gratuitously; and the lectures by citizens are a change from the usual course of study which is advantageous.


The changes of principal of the school were not the only disadvantages under which it has labored. There have also been changes in the corps of assistants. Mr. Luther Dame sent in a letter of resignation November 7th, 1881, and left the school in December. In November Mr. Gardner P. Balch was engaged as assistant teacher, and he is now one of the regular force, having been elected for the remainder of the year on February 6th, 1882. Mrs. Belle P. Winslow resigned April 10th, 1882, and her place was filled by a substitute until the last of September, when the number was reduced by one teacher and the substitute dropped from the rolls.


The graduates for the past year were as follows:


FEMALE HIGH SCHOOL.


BERTHA J. ATWATER, EDNAH E. GREATON, ABBIE P. JACKMAN,


BLANCHE O. LELEURCH, EMMA J. NOYES.


BROWN HIGH SCHOOL.


WILLIAM B. BLAKE, ALBERT K. CHENEY, JOHN W. EVANS,


EDWARD A HUSE, ARTHUR A. NOYES, WALTER G. PEARSON,


HERBERT N. WOODWELL. HORACE M. KILBORN.


PUTNAM FREE SCHOOL.


ELENA E. CHASE, North Hampton, HELEN O. FRAME, Boxford, MARY E. FOSTER, Rowley, ELIZABETH B. NORRIS, Hampton, ANNIE M. MANSON, Salisbury Point, BESSIE E. ROGERS, West Newbury. LOUISE M. GREEN, Newburyport, NELLIE K. PERKINS, Newburyport. EFFIE M. RICKER, Newburyport, DAISY M. THURLO, Newburyport. LEWIS H. GILES, Georgetown. CYRUS K. HALE, Newburyport.


13


THE KELLEY SCHOOL.


This is the only school in the city in which there are all grades under one principal from the alphabet class to the first class of grammar school pupils, ex- cept the schools at the Plains and at Moultonville, which are conducted on the plan of a country district school.


It is also the only school in which boys and girls are taught together in the grammar school grade, with the exceptions noted. This school lost about one hundred pupils by the establishment of the Parochial school, but as yet there has been no reduction of the corps of teachers. About twenty have been added since the beginning of the school year, and some have been transferred, so that at the latter part of Novem- ber the school had 273 pupils, distributed as follows:


Room A


40


B


33


C 32


D 34


E 31


F


29


G


31


H 43


Total


273


While there were no changes in the force of teachers during the year, Miss M. J. Bradley was absent from illness for twenty-four weeks and her place was filled during that time by Miss Fannie Pettingell. The average number of pupils to each teacher in this school is a fraction over 34, the smallest number in any room being 29, and the largest 43. This is about the average to a teacher throughout the city before the Parochial school was established.


14


GRAMMAR SCHOOLS.


The board has made a change in the course of study in the grammar schools, to correspond with the raising of the grade for admission to the high school, and there is a proposition for carrying the same into the primary school course. An additional year was given to the grammar school curriculum, by the adoption of the following report of a special committee appointed to consider the matter:]


" The committee to whom was referred the question of the advisability of adding another year to the grammar school course have given the matter their careful consideration and beg leave to submit the following report.


" This board has for some time felt there were good grounds for the general complaint that scholars are not as well fitted for the practical duties of life as they should be after completing a grammar school course, but it is much easier to discover a fault than to cor- rect it, and just what will remedy the difficulty in this case is not easily determined. In view of the fact that the majority of the pupils never enter the high school, but are obliged at an early age to earn their living, and cannot afford the time necessary for a high school course, it follows that most of the education they receive to fit them for the duties of active life must be obtained while in the grammar school. Hence any arrangement which will tend to raise the grade of these schools, to make them more practical, and thus increase their usefulness, must commend itself to all those who have the best interests of our youths at heart. The grade of our High school is necessarily lower and its usefulness impaired, by the large number who enter with no idea of graduating, but who wish to avail themselves of some of the branches taught during the first year, which branches in the opinion of your committee, could just as well be taught in the grammar schools, without the disadvantages of a change of teachers or very large classes. For these reasons your committee are unanimously in favor of adding another year to the course, and would recommend that the following studies be pur- sued :


4


15


" The Arithmetic to be more thoroughly and carefully studied.


" The Grammar to be finished and reviewed.


" A more complete knowledge of Book-Keeping to be acquired, and the study to be made as practical as possible.


" Physical Geography in place of Political Geography, Composition and Declamation as often as once a fortnight.


" United States History to be read daily.


" Spelling and Defining.


" Should the history be finished before the close of the year, some interesting historical or biographical sketches might be read by the teacher, and the class required to write a synopsis from memory, or this might occasionally take the place of the history reading.


" In order to bring about the new arrangement with the least possible disturbance, the committe would recommend that the stan- dard of admission to the High school be not less than 80 per cent. This will have the effect of keeping back a large proportion of those who apply, while enough of the best scholars will be admitted to form a preparatory class which will be increased to some extent by those who fall below from the present class, while those who remain behind will form a nucleus for an advanced class in the grammar school. By repeating this process for two or three years we shall send better fitted, though perhaps smaller classes, into the High school, and by transferring some of the studies, which are now pur- sued during the first year. Shall allow the teachers more time for their work, and hence have a right to look for higher scholarship and better results from a High school course."


This report was adopted by the committee and is now the rule for the grammar schools in their course of instruction.


In the Bromfield street boys' grammar school there was a change of the assistant, Miss Frances J. Pear- son having resigned August 28th, and Miss Rhoda Tilton being elected to fill the vacancy. There were two pupils left the school to attend the Parochial school.


In the School street boys' grammar school there has been no change of teachers, and there were sixteen pupils left for the Parochial school.


16


There has been no change of teachers in the For- rester street boys' grammar school, where twelve left for the Parochial school.


No change of teachers has taken place in the Han- cock street girls' grammar school, from which five were taken by the Parochial school.


In the Purchase street girls' grammar school the changes in teachers have been by the resignation of Miss Sarah Shackford, principal, at the end of the spring term, and the election of Miss Priscilla G. Craig, formerly assistant to fill the vacancy, and Miss Susie B. Lowell to the position formerly held by Miss Craig. From this school eighteen left for the Paro- chial school.


No change has occurred in the teachers of the Forrester street girls' grammar school, from which ten pupils left to attend the Parochial school.


Examinations :- The following method of exami- nation of pupils of the highest classes in the gram- mar school was accepted by the board by a resolution that hereafter there shall be a written examination of all pupils of the first class in the grammar schools at the close of each term, in arithmetic, grammar and geography, the first and second examinations to be in the several grammar school rooms, and the final ex- amination to be held in the high school building; that the three examinations shall count in such proportions as the board may determine, and that the daily ranks in all other branches shall be taken from the record of the teachers, and shall be considered in the general estimate for admission to the High school.


17


The admissions to the High school from the gram- mar schools at the examination were as follows: Kel- ley school, 2; School street boys', 7 to the High and 1 to the Putnam free school; Forrester street boys', 1; Hancock street girls', 2; Purchase street girls', 1; Forrester street girls', 5; Plains mixed school, 1.


PRIMARY SCHOOLS.


There has been a reduction of five in the number of primary school teachers since the beginning of the school year, which with one dropped from the High school makes a total of six teachers less than for the previous year. Three schools have also been discon- tinued, the Charles street boys' primary, the School street boys' sub-primary, and the fifth division of the Kent street mixed primary. In the Temple street girls' primary, the assistant's department has been consolidated with that of the principal. The drop- ping of teachers and consolidation of primary schools has led to the abandonment of four school rooms and the expense of heating and care of them. These rooms are the Charles street boys', the ward room in ward two, the lower room of the Temple street school house, and the ward room in ward five on Buck street.


In the Bromfield street boys' primary, Miss Carrie M. Clement was elected August 31st, principal, in place of Miss Rhoda Tilton, elected assistant in the grammar school above, and Miss Cora B. Lougee was appointed assistant under Miss Clement, having been transferred from the Davenport school on Congress


18


street. Two pupils left the Bromfield street school to attend the Parochial school.


In the Hancock street girls' primary there has been no change of teachers. From this school two pupils left to attend the Parochial school.


The Charles street boys' primary had nine leave for the Parochial school, and has been discontinued. The boys remaining being placed in the School street pri- mary, and Miss E. A. Dodge was dropped as a teacher.


In the Purchase street girls' primary Miss Mary E. Estes was promoted from assistant to principal to suc- ceed Miss Susie B. Lowell, promoted, and Jennie C. Teel was chosen assistant to succeed Miss Estes. From this school thirty-three pupils left to attend the Parochial school.


There has been no change of teachers in the School street boys' primary. From this school twenty-nine pupils left to attend the Parochial school, and twenty- two from the sub-primary in the ward room below, and the remaining boys were placed with those in the rooms above. Thus Miss Hannah H. Page was dropped from the roll of teachers.


In the Temple street girls' primary, the loss of forty- one pupils to the Parochial school left so few pupils, that the assistant, Miss S. F. Badger was dropped, and the whole school put in one room under charge of the prinicpal, Mrs. W. S. Gray.


The Davenport boys' primary lost thirty-four pu- pils to the Parochial school, and the assistant was transferred to the Bromfield street, and Miss Nellie M. Stanton with the boys of her sub-primary school were transferred to this school.


19


The Davenport girls' school had thirty pupils leave for the Parochial school, and the assistant Miss M. E. Cogswell has been dropped.


The first division of the Kent street mixed sub- primary lost twenty-nine pupils who went to the Pa- rochial school, and the teacher, Miss Nellie M. Stan- ton, was transferred as assistant in the Congress street boys' primary, and her pupils distributed in the two schools in that building. In the second division ten were lost by the establishment of the Parochial school and no change has been made of teachers.


The Buck street boys' sub-primary kept in the ward room of ward five had eight pupils leave for the Pa- rochial school, and it has been transferred to the room vacated by Miss Stanton on Kent street with the same teacher, thus saving the expense of one room.


In the Ashland street mixed primary there has been no change of teachers. The first and second divis- ions lost two pupils each to the Parochial school.


THE UNGRADED MIXED SCHOOLS.


In ward six where the population is scattered there are two schools conducted on the plan of the country district schools, having boys and girls from the alpha- bet to those fitting for the High school, the Plains school under Miss Lizzie H. Cheever and the newly established school under Miss Alice M. Leach. These schools have been little affected by the Parochial school, and there has been no change of teachers.


In February a mixed grammar and primary school was established at Moultonville, and Miss Alice M


20


Leach was appointed teacher, and she is now in charge of the school.


EVENING SCHOOLS.


The evening school for men has been discontinued now for several years, and of the evening school for women the principal gives the following report:


" REPORT OF THE EVENING SCHOOL FOR WOMEN, 1881-82.


" The sessions of this school came within the dates Nov. 11, 1881, and March 14, 1882. Number of different pupils during the winter, 70. Average number attending, 42.


" The pupils were studious, and most of them manifested a great desire to learn.


" One of the adult pupils, who on entering the school knew nothing about writing, was able before the close of the session to write a legible letter to a friend abroad.


" Another, when inviting a friend to join her class, said : ' When I came to the school I was very ignorant ; but now I can read, wute, and cipher.'


" So, it is to be hoped, that some good has resulted from the kindness of the school committee in providing the means of evening instruction to a class of persons who are otherwise engaged during the day.


"The school was visited by C. A. Currier, Esq., Dr. A. B. Dearborn, D. T. Woodwell, J. W. Winder, and C. L. Davis, of the school board.


" Respectfully submitted, "Nov., 1882."


"E. A. W. PEARSON.


EXAMINATION OF CANDIDATES FOR TEACHERS.


There has been no examination by the sub-com- mittee during the year.


21


SALARIES.


The salaries of the teachers have been unchanged, but by the reduction of the corps of teachers there has been a diminution of the annual expense on this account of $1775.


CHANGES OF BOOKS.


The only changes made have been the introduction of Swinton series of grammar lessons and the new encyclopædia instead of the old.


NON-RESIDENT PUPILS.


In the high school the non-resident pupils of the Putnam Free School who study Latin and Greek are required to pay tuition, for Latin $8 and for Latin and and Greek $12 a year. There are two who take both and eleven who take Latin only. In the grammar schools there are three girls from Newbury in the Hancock street school and three boys in the School street school. These are all the non-resident pupils.


22


BOOKS USED IN THE GRAMMAR SCHOOLS.


Warren's Class-Word Speller.


Franklin's Third Reader, reviewed the first and second terms.


Franklin's Fifth Reader.


Guyot's Grammar School Geography, completed.


Ellsworth's Writing Books, and Single-entry Book-keeping,


Harpers' Language Series.


Colburn's Mental Arithmetic.


Greenleaf's Common School Arithmetic.


Quackenbos' History of the United States, to be employed as a reading book.


Our World, No. 2, as a reference book (on the desk of the teacher).


BOOKS USED IN THE PRIMARY SCHOOLS.


Franklin's Primer, the First, Second and Third readers.


Warren's Class-Word Speller. Mac Vicker's Elementary Arithmetic. Guyot's Elementary Geography, completed.


Penmanship-Ellsworth's Writing Books.


Respectfully submitted,


BENJAMIN HALE, (Mayor), Chairman, JAMES A. MERRILL, Vice-Chairman, JOHN F. YOUNG, Secretary, A. B. DEARBORN, Agent, JOHN WINDER,


SCHOOL


STEPHEN COLLINS, GEORGE E. POOR,


JOSEPH E. MOODY,


DAVID T. WOODWELL,


COMMITTEE.


NATHAN N. WITHINGTON,


HARRISON G. JOHNSON,


CHARLES L. DAVIS, CHARLES A. CURRIER, -


Newburyport, Dec. 1882.


23


SCHOOLS, TEACHERS AND SALARIES.


HIGH SCHOOL.


George E. Gay, A.M., Principal, $1700


(). B. Merrill, A. M., Assistant, 1200


Brown High and Female High.


Gardner Balch, A. B. 700


Miss A. A. Senter, 600


KELLEY SCHOOL.


N. A. Moulton, Principal, 1000


Miss Abbie Short, 66


350


Miss M. J. Bradley, 350


Miss H. C. Piper, 325


Miss Eva J. Smith,


350


Miss M. L. Bartlett, 350


Miss M. E. Jaques, 60


325


I. Miss Alice A. Olmstead 325


GRAMMAR SCHOOLS.


Bromfield Male Grammar, Bromfield st. [ Geo. W. Brown, Principal, 1000


Miss Rhoda Tilton, Ass't, 350


Jackman Male Grammar, School street.


W. P. Lunt, Principal, 1000 Miss Addie K. Hale, Assistant, 350


Currier Male Grammar, Forrester street.


Miss Sarah B. Chute, Principal, 750


Miss E. Frothingham, Assistant, 350


Miss A. L, Coffin, Principal, 425


Miss E. M. Lander, Assissant, - 350


425


South Female Grammar, Purchase street.


Miss S. D. Toppan, Principal. 425


Currier Female Grammar, Forrester st.


Miss Agnes A. Sumerby, Assiss't, 350


PRIMARY SCHOOLS. WARD ONE.


Bromfield Primary, Bromfield street. - Miss Cora B. Lougee, Assistant, - 325


Johnson Female Primary, Hancock st.


Miss Jennie P. Haskell, Assistant, 325


WARD TWO.


Girls' Primary, Purchase street. 5 Miss Mary Estes, Principal, 350


Miss Jennie C. Teel, Assistant, 325


Jackman Male Primary, School street.


Miss H. M. Currier, Principal, - 350


Miss B. B. Emerton, Assistant, - 325


WARD THREE.


Girls' Primary, Temple street. - Mrs W. S. Gray, Principal, 350


WARD FIVE.


Davenport (Girls') Primary, Congress st. Miss Clara J. Edgerly, - Principal, 350


Miss Sarah Whitmore, Assistant, - 325


Kent street Sub Primary, Miss S. I. Adams, 1st. Div. 325


Miss C. M. Bailey, 2d Div. 325


Davenport (Boys') Primary, Congress st. Miss Nellie M. Stanton, 325


WARD SIX.


Ashland street Mixed Primary, 1st Div. Miss Frances J. Pettigrew, 350


.. 2d " Miss Flora Pettigrew, 325


Mixed Grammar and Primary, Plains, Miss L. H. Cheever, 425


Mixed Grammar and Primary, Moultonville Miss Alice M. Leach 325


-


Miss Carrie M. Clement, Principal, 350


Miss Anna A. Currier, Principal, 350


Johnson Female Grammar, Hancock st.


Miss Priscilla G. Craig, Principal, - Miss Susie B. Lowell, Assiss't, - 350


Kelley School.


24


SCHOOLS.


ars during the year.


Number of different schol-


the year.


Number at the beginning of


year.


Number at the close of the


Average number of schol-


ars in Summer.


Average number of schol-


Winter.


Average attendance in the


Average attendance in the


Number of desks in each


Number of seats in each


Yr. Mo.


Brown High.


74


74


58


70


62


63


51


90


90 15. 1


Female High ..


76


76


60


75


68


68


59


140


140 14.10


Kelley Grammar and Pri- mary (mixed). ..


419


378


328


376


350


329


319


420


420 10. 5


Bromfield (Boys') Grammar.


71


70


62


66


62


54


54


80


80|12. 5


Jackman


"


90


80


76


78


80


69


73


100


100 12.10


Currier


66


84


68


62


74


65


65


60


72


97


97 11. 8


South


89


86


69


72


62


64


55


97


72


70 11. 5


Bromfield (Boys') Primary ..


Số


69


80


59


70


52


62


78


86


8.


Charles St. "


43


27


37


29


32


25


29


70


96


8. 9


Jackman "


6.


....


. .


. .


...


....


....


79


72


55


67


57


55


49


54


54


9. 7


Jackman SubPrimary(Girls)


64


37


50


33


43


27


38


35


35


6. 2


Mixed School, Plains ..


51


30


36


35


32


30


26


42


42 11.


1 div. Ashland Street-mixed 2 4 .6


76


59


55


53


62


38


50


54


54


7.2


Kent St. Sub-Primary 1 div.


55


46


52


48


50


42


44


60


63


8. 3


84


47


72


50


68


41


56


6.


Moultonville Primary . .


39


15


27


27


30


20


22


8. 8


2216 1808 1841 1761 1778 1521 1565 2157 2236


Number of scholars during the year.


2216


at the beginning of the year


1803


66


close of the year


1841


Average number in Winter


1761


Summer.


1778


attendance in Winter


1521


Summer.


1565


Average attendance 69 per cent.


The number of children in the city in May last between the ages of 5 and'15 years was 2611.


Ward One. 440 | Ward Three.


.355 | Ward Five 538


Ward Two .443 Ward Four


399 | Ward Six. 436


105


8. 8


75


68|


61


70


61


53


50


80


90 10.


Buck St. Sub.


60


78


39


71


45


60


38


50


96


120


6. 8


Johnson


(Girls)“


90


65


84


52


73


43


46


80


80


7.


Purchase St. «


92


55


80


70


71


58


58


96


91


8. 3


Temple St


. .


108


82


100


67


77


72


80


90


100


7.11


Davenport


50


47


44


42


42


35


36


54


54


9. 4


Johnson (Girls')


82


78


75


66


65


60


61


Currier


71


65


68


63


61


56


53


66


...


91


75


79


74


75


64


66


100


Davenport


...


Average Age.


Summer


school.


school.


ars in Winter.


2


2 12. :


97 11. 7


25


FINANCIAL STATEMENT.


Appropriation.


$24,000 00


CREDITS.


State School Fund $ 252 83


One year's interest on Brown Fund to March 4, 1882. 675 00


J. F. Young, secretary, fees non-resident school children two terms 98 38


Cash from L. C. Ireland for overpay. 50


$25,026 71


Expenditures 26,407 40


Amount overdrawn transferred from Incidentals to balance ac't .... $1,380 69


FOR REFEREN


NOT TO BE TAKEN FROM THIS ROOM


K


.


5




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