Inaugural address of the mayor, with the annual report of the officers of the city of Quincy for the year 1930, Part 19

Author: Quincy (Mass.)
Publication date: 1930
Publisher:
Number of Pages: 498


USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Quincy > Inaugural address of the mayor, with the annual report of the officers of the city of Quincy for the year 1930 > Part 19


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ONE-THIRTY


Baseball, indoor baseball, volley ball, slug ball (league for girls), weaving for girls. Calisthenics daily when a large number of chil- dren are on the playground, tennis.


THREE-THIRTY


Playground games for boys and girls. Safety Campaign in- structions.


Pledge of Allegiance


Take down flag at sunset.


314


CITY OF QUINCY


REPORT OF SUPERVISOR OF PLAYGROUNDS TO THE BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS


GENTLEMEN :- The playground season opened on Monday, June 21st, and continued until Friday, August 23. This completed the usual nine weeks of supervised play. The entire season was influenced very little by inclement weather; in fact only three half days were lost.


The playgrounds were as popular as ever, as added attractions and a careful check-up on the attendance increased the interest in such a way as to show excellent results.


The following list is the average High and Low attendance per day for the various playgrounds:


Low


High


Low


High


Pollard


60


140


Ward 6


50


125


Elm


75


200


*Squantum


20


85


Adams


40


100


*Montclair


40


150


Ward 3


125


350


Parker


25


125


Ward 4


75


160


Mass. Field


25


100


Wollaston


35


125


Houghs Neck


25


125


*Increase over 1929.


On most days the numbers would be much greater than this list would indicate. This was determined largely by the tides, when hundreds of children would flock to the bathing beaches. The chil- dren from the Elm, Pollard, Adams and other playgrounds con- stantly used Avalon Beach, which was under the supervision of our swimming instructor.


This place was always congested during the tides. Mr. Reardon, the instructor there, gave regular lessons on life saving to mem- bers of the different playgrounds. An insignia denoting proficiency in this art was presented to 60 children of various ages who had to pass a strict course, similar to the official Red Cross tests, before they were given the award. A life saving corps was organized for service at the beach from among those who had passed these tests. They were stationed along the water front and were on duty at regular periods. This proved successful, as several accidents were prevented by these experts. As during the previous seasons we cooperated with the Massachusetts Safety Council, and a campaign was carried on throughout the season for safety. The supervisor met with the Park Board at its regular meetings on Monday night of each week. This Board called several meetings for all the in- structors. The supervisor was in contact with representatives of the National Playground Association of America and attended its convention, held in Salem, Massachusetts, during the last week in June.


A great abundance of materials for handcraft was furnished by the Board, consisting of reed, raffia, wool, cotton and silk for weav- ing, clay, wood and paint. The exhibition of articles finished by the children all over the city should be proof enough of the enor- mous interest shown. Parents should be pleased with these accom- plishments.


The usual interplayground competition program was followed out. Eleven playgrounds were represented in the Junior Baseball League for boys, 14 years or under, and six playgrounds for senior boys up to 16 years. In the Slug Ball League for girls, eleven playgrounds were represented. An indoor baseball schedule was carried out for very small boys. The Park Board offered appro-


315


REPORT OF PARK DEPARTMENT


priate prizes for the winners of these leagues. Hikes to the Blue Hills and to the beaches for picnics were common.


This year, instead of holding a massed field day for all the combined playgrounds, it was decided that each playground should be responsible for its own demonstration. This idea proved to be very successful. Every playground in the city carried on its pro- gram of folk dancing, games, races, and an exhibition of its hand- work at a time in the evening when most parents could attend. The manner in which they responded to this was most gratifying. Great interest was shown not only by the parents and friends of the children, but by the merchants of the city, who donated a sur- prising number of prizes for the various events. There was more interest displayed in these local demonstrations than was ever wit- nessed before in the history of playground activities in Quincy.


For example, at Montclair, one of the smallest playgrounds, there were 600 people who remained long after dark in order to witness the final exercises. At Ward 3, which had the highest daily at- tendance, it was estimated that there were 3,000 people present. These events were held on different evenings during the last week.


Every effort has been made to have the playgrounds as inviting as possible to the children. The instructors are chosen from a civil service list as far as possible. We believe that our corps of workers are well qualified in every way. Following is a list of playground instructors for 1930:


Messrs. S. White


Misses E. McConarty


J. O'Brien


E. Bruton


C. Grocott


R. Savage


W. Halloran


16


M. Mularky


*B. Carrera


66


E. Likander


W. O'Byrne


E. Hourula


G. Tocci


I. Burke


G. Brett


K. McCoy


D. Lubarsky


L. Elko


F. Connors


D. Shea


H. Call


66


H. Rintamaki


16


C. Connolly


A. Gustavson


E. Ford


*Deceased.


Respectfully submitted,


FRANKLIN B. MITCHELL.


Sports-Baseball


No city in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts outside of the City of Boston has better facilities for the playing of baseball than the City of Quincy, with eight first-class regulation baseball fields, all of them under constant care of department workers, lined off before games and furnished with bases, home plates and pitchers' rubbers. Every ward in the city has its own field and representa- tive teams. Six hundred and fourteen permits were issued by the Board during the season, beside the blanket permits given to the Junior High Schools and the Playground Leagues. Every effort was made to have the fields in good playing shape, and the favor- able comments by the teams using them more than repaid for the work accomplished.


316


CITY OF QUINCY


Football


This great American game of the rugged youth was encouraged in every way possible by the Board. Floodlights for night prac- tice were erected on seven playfields, six gridirons laid out and goal posts erected.


The five team Football League sponsored by the Park Board was a success far beyond all expectations. Interest ran high and the competition was keen. The West Quincy Pirates were the winners of the Park Board Trophy. Teams entered were the Atlantic A. C., Penn A. C., Manet A. C., and West Quincy Pirates. Weekly meetings were held with the Park Board, where open discussion of all matters pertaining to the league came up.


Percy Lane of the Quincy Ledger sports staff served as president. Franklin B. Mitchell, Supervisor of Playgrounds, City Councillor Charles P. Hedges were of great assistance to the Board, acting as referees and umpires on numerous occasions.


The good sportsmanship shown by the players, the bringing to- gether of young men from all parts of the city well repaid the efforts expended.


William Fritz donated a cup that was awarded to the team win- ning the game on Thanksgiving Day.


Soccer


Provisions were made for soccer during the early spring on Pfaffman's Oval, where games were played every Sunday up until June. In the fall soccer fields were laid out at Faxon Field and the second field at Merrymount Park. The goal posts were equipped with goal nets.


Quincy boasts of several good soccer teams, which are members of various leagues in Greater Boston.


Swimming


One of the most enjoyable and healthful recreations for all is bathing as conducted at our bathing beaches at Mound Street Bath .. house and Avalon Beach. Everything possible to insure safety to beginners with an experienced male instructor, who is assisted by those more advanced acting as life guards. Swimming answers a two-fold purpose. Of the hygienic value little need be said, and as a protection every man, woman and child should be able to swim.


Hockey


For the first time in the history of the City of Quincy a Hockey League was organized and sponsored by the Park Board. The in- terest was so great that three rinks were built to satisfy the demand of the ten teams represented. The rink at St. Moritz in the Blue Hills was used holidays and Sundays, and Sailors' Home and Houghs Neck were both illuminated by a special act of His Honor, the Mayor, making it possible to play night games. Trophies were offered by the Kay Jewelry Co. and William Westland Co., with individual medals by the Park Board. The teams were evenly matched and stimulated interest in a game that is fast becoming a leading sport in the United States.


Each team played each other once, making a series of nine games apiece. At this writing the games are in the final week with all teams bunched, so that six have a chance to compete in the playoffs which will take in the first three teams.


317


REPORT OF PARK DEPARTMENT


The cooperation of City Councillor Charles Hedges of Ward 5 and the City Fire Department in flooding the Sailors' Home pond when necessary was greatly appreciated by the Board.


Tennis


Quincy is indeed fortunate in having tennis courts located at Faxon Field, Bradford Street, Merrymount Park and Squantum. There are demands from Houghs Neck, South Quincy, West Quincy and Atlantic for courts. While we realize this is an expensive proposition, these demands should be considered at once.


Tennis championships were held at the Faxon courts. The High School and City teams, open for male and female, were run off for cups donated by Henry M. Faxon. Tennis tournaments were held at the Squantum courts as part of the Supervised Playground Program.


Winter Sports


The Board encouraged winter sports this year on a larger scale than ever before. Natural ponds, such as Manet Lake, Butlers Pond, Sailors Home Pond, two ponds at St. Moritz, were kept cleared of snow and flooded when necessary. Toboggan slides built for the children at St. Moritz, hockey rinks cared for and cleared of snow. The winter was ideal for skating, and thousands of our citizens enjoyed the sport on the places available. At some future time when money is available a toboggan slide at Merry- mount Park will be a popular move.


Band Concerts


This popular feature of the parks' program was grouped this year in one week as part of the Quincy Tercentenary Week. Con- certs were held in all parts of the city.


The Merrymount band stand was in constant use all through the season by the various bands sponsored by different organizations.


To facilitate the work of the Park Board in the Ward Band Con- certs a portable band stand on wheels is a necessity; it will save money and eliminate a lot of unnecessary labor.


To Veteran Organizations


The Park Board has noted that several parks in this city are unnamed, at the present time listed as Ward Playgrounds. Such playgrounds should be named and dedicated to some leading de- ceased citizen or veteran as a memorial. The playgrounds are in use by the coming generation, and the Board knows of no better way to perpetuate the names of our veterans and leading citizens. With the coming of Memorial Day, 1931, it is the recommendation of the Quincy Park Board that action be so taken and all fields dedicated this coming year.


The playgrounds listed are as follows: Ward 6, Ward 4, Ward 2, Hollis Avenue, Houghs Neck and Montclair.


Recommendations


Purchase power lawn mower. Purchase larger truck. Construct more tennis courts.


318


CITY OF QUINCY


Provide playground apparatus at Faxon Field. Provide comfort stations at playgrounds where necessary. Field house and lock rooms at Merrymount Park. Complete Hollis Avenue and Montclair playgrounds. Chain link fences at Ward 2 and Montclair playgrounds. Purchase portable bandstand.


Fill oval.


Provide bowling greens.


Encourage all-year-round activities on all playgrounds.


Provide facilities for mass recreation for women and young women along lines laid out by the Playground and Recreation Association of America.


Permits


During the year the following number of permits were issued for the various activities, viz .:


Hockey


120


Picnics 28


Baseball


614


Boy Scout outings.


6


Soccer


34


Girl Scout outings. 5


Football


52 Exhibition drills 4


Band concerts


42


Concessions 15


Expenditures


The expenditures of this Department may be found in the Auditor's Report.


Conclusion


The Park Board is deeply grateful to His Honor the Mayor, the Engineering Department, the City Council. Fire Department, fore- man of parks, park workers, Supervisor of Playgrounds, play- ground instructors, the young men who composed the Football and Hockey Leagues, the two newspapers of the city and the Play- ground and Recreation Association of America for services ren- dered during the past year.


Respectfully submitted,


LORETTO D. TOCCI, Chairman WILLIAM M. TRUSSELLE, Secretary THOMAS . J. LARKIN.


319


REPORT OF CITY CLERK


REPORT OF CITY CLERK


MAYOR THOMAS J. MCGRATH :


I have the honor to submit the forty-second annual report of this department, being for the year ending December 31, 1930.


RECEIPTS


Junk licenses


$300 00


Amusement licenses


3,274 00


Common victuallers' licenses


660 00


Express and carriage licenses.


27 00


Pool and billiard licenses


905 00


ยท Auctioneers' licenses 20 00


Druggist licenses


18 00


All other licenses


3,487 00


Marriage permits


659 00


Recording and special


1,458 75


$10,808 75


The above sum has been paid to the City Treasurer.


Number of marriage intentions issued in 1930 670


Number of marriages recorded in 1930. 702


Number of births recorded in 1930. 1,512


Number of deaths recorded in 1930.


772


The number of dogs licensed in 1930 was 1,995 males; 441 fe- males; 453 spayed and one breeder's license ($50), for which the sum of $7,528.00 was collected. The sum of $6,934.20 was paid to the County Treasurer and $593.80 to the City Treasurer. The sum of $3,099.25 was collected for hunters' licenses. The fees amount- ing to $331.00 were paid to the City Treasurer and the balance to the Commonwealth.


Annexed are the births, marriages and deaths recorded in Quincy in 1930 and the election returns.


EMERY L. CRANE, City Clerk.


320


CITY OF QUINCY


BIRTHS RECORDED IN QUINCY IN 1930


Date


Child


Parents


Jan. 1 Frederick Heulett Trott, Jr ....


Jan. 1


Carl Eric Hokanson


Jan. 1 Kathleen Anne Kerr


Jan. 1 Peter Reginald Mackinnon.


Jan. 1 Barbara Arline Lane


Jan. 1 James Joseph Rago


Jan. 1 Illegitimate


Jan.


1 Illegitimate


Jan. 1 Anna Dorothea Campbell.


Jan.


1 Dolores Helen Petitti.


Jan.


1 Charles Arthur Robbins, Jr.


Jan. 1 Marilyn Marie Bree.


Jan. 1 Roberta West Evans


Jan.


2 Albert Louis Costa


Jan. 2 Doris Elaine Aubert.


Jan. 2 Patricia Frances Sheerick


Jan.


3 Bernard Gerard Mattie.


Jan. Jan. 3 Cynthia Isabella Souther


Jan. 3


Gilman Weeks Sylvester


Jan. 3 John Anthony Russo


3 Robert Roland Desjardins


Jan. Jan. Jan.


3 Sipontina Vitulano.


Jan.


4 Karin Henrietta Thornberg. .. Henning and Ruth


Jan.


4 Doris Elizabeth Trumper


Wallace and Marjorie


George and Rose


Harold and Ethel


6 Donald Franklin Wishart.


Donald and Mildred


6 Frank William Sartori, Jr.


Frank and Edna Frank and Mary Thomas and Marion


William and Annie Sidney and Edna Harry and Helen


7 Donald Richard Davies


7 Thurlow Stanley Widger, Jr ....


Thurlow and Beatrice


7 Peter Anthony McCabe, Jr.


7 Carmela Antonia DiBona


8 Richard Comerford Welch


Arthur and Dorothy Peter and Mary Domenic and Donata Malcolm and Mabel Andrew and Helen Willard and Eugenia Frederico and Vincenza Chester and Dorothy Roger and Helen


Jan. 9 Gerard Edward Comeau.


Jan. 9 Jessimine Elizabeth Shepherd.


Jan.


9 Irene May Flagg.


Jan.


10 Edith Madaline Jolly.


Jan 11 Mary Elizabeth Coyne


Frederick and Edna Ernest and Irene Thomas and Kathleen Peter and Mary John and Helen James and Grace


William and Anna Anthony and Nina Charles and Annie Sydney and Marie Alfred and Laura Liberato and Rosa Joseph and Helen Frederick and Julia Joseph and Bertha Antonio and Hilda Everett and Evelyn George and Maud Ignazio and Rose Alfred and Lila Salvatore and Annie Lester and Elizabeth


Joseph and Lillian


6 James Edward Gregory.


6 Richard Wallace McCormack .. Carolyn Maxwell.


Jan. 5 William Axel Johnson. Jan. 5 Robert Edward Spink. Jan. 6 Richard Cain Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. 6 Marilyn Ann Pierson. Jan. Jan. 7 Jan. Jan. Jan. 7 James Paige Winslow. Jan. Jan. Jan. 7 Janet Marie Hadden. Jan. Jan. 8 Marjorie Ethel Lemon. Jan. Jan. 8 Chester Dane Nelson. Jan. 8 Barbara Ann Noyes. Jan. 9 Stillborn Jan. 9 John Dillon Shortridge.


8 Frederico Berto DiMeo


Ward and Elizabeth Edward and Eva David and Margaret George and Doris John and Mary Patrick and Catherine


3 Anthony DiNardo


4 Mary Elizabeth Murdock


321


REPORT OF CITY CLERK


Date


Child


Jan. 11


Salvatore Paolucci, Jr


Jan. 11 Francis O'Shea.


Jan. 11 John Kenneth Donnellan.


Jan. 11 Catherine Louise Cleveland.


Jan. 12 Donald Karl Joseph Lundin.


Jan.


12 Christine Josephine Giglio.


Jan. 12 John Judson Beaton.


Jan. 12 Richard George Haines Harris Jan. 12 Rachel Mae Goetchius


Jan


13 Elliot Berman.


Jan. 14 Bruce Clarke Armstrong


Jan. 14 Lois Clark Dunn


Jan. 14 Rosalia Negrelli


Jan. 14 Illegitimate


Jan 14 John Andrew Gallian


Jan.


15 Catherine Joan Flanagan.


Jan.


15 Saleemy Hassan.


Jan.


15


Stillborn


Jan. 15 Robert Herbert Morris


Jan. 16 Sydney Maynard Hammond


Jan. 17 Paul Philip Gaudet


Jan. 17 Paul Reviere Rogers


Jan. 18 Gerard Joseph Mahoney


Jan.


19 Lorraine Loretta Quintiliani


Jan.


19 Phyllis Ethel Dreyer


Jan. 19 Campbell Jan. 19 Barbara Ann Thorpe


Jan. 20


James David Arthur


Jan.


20 Margaret Mary Finnegan.


Jan. 20 David Alexander Reynolds


Jan. 21 Joseph Francois Ouillette


Jan. 21 Donald Richard Parsons.


Jan. 21 Clement Henry Kerans, Jr ..


Jan.


21 Dorothy Elizabeth Sanford ..


Jan. 22 Beatrice Lillian Johnson (Twin)


Jan.


22 Robert Enoch Johnson (Twin)


Jan. 23 James Francis Smith.


Jan. 23 Giovanni Papia.


Jan. 23 Carl Sidney Anderson.


Jan. 23 Stanley Bourdieu Watt


Jan. 23 Stillborn Jan. Jan. Jan. 24 Fiorenzo Erna.


24 Elaine Ruth Johnson


24 John Joseph Hayes


Jan. 24 Phyllis Miriam Lang


Jan. 24 Robert Malcolm Webster


Jan. 25 Therese Marie Fostello


Jan. 25 Robert Raymond Whittum


Jan. 25 Constance Eleanor Currier.


Jan. 25 Ian Warren Thompson


Jan. 25 James Patrick McDermott.


Jan. 25 Marjorie Eunice Saunders.


Jan. 25 Patricia Riley.


Jan. 25 Eileen Patricia Manning


Parents


Salvatore and Adelina John and Sarah Thomas and Winifred George and Catherine Bernt and Julia


Peter and Mary Norman and Katheryn


William and Elizabeth Kenneth and Pauline


Benjamin and Sophia George and Edna


Edward and Amy Alfonso and Beatrice


John and Hilda William and Catherine Selmen and Meery


Edward and Lillian Sydney and Mildred Henry and Irene Albert and Irma Francis and Mary Avanti and Phyllis Philip and Ethel Bernard and Pearl Cleon and Gertrude Albert and Mildred Edward and Mary Clyde and Mildred Joseph and Marion Theodore and Alma Clement and Dorothy Melvin and Dorothy Carl and Lillian Carl and Lillian Thomas and Sophia Guiseppi and Grazia Sidney and Barbara Stanley and Amelie


Carl and Dorothy John and Dorothea Gerolamo and Laura Francis and Sadie Richard and Laura Joseph and Anna Raymond and Phyllis Bradford and Margaret Christopher and Alice James and Olive George and Betty John and Mildred James and Veronica


322


CITY OF QUINCY


Date


Child


Jan. 25


Joseph Francis Burns


Jan. 25


Valasis.


Jan. 25 Claire Elaine Ferruccio


Jan. 26 Elisa Cantida Moscardelli


Jan. 26 Beverly Ann MacRae


Jan. 27 Barbara Elizabeth Conway.


Jan. 27 Robert Fenton Kelly


Jan. 27 Nancy Millar Lawson.


Jan. 27 Dorothy Evelyn Ross


Jan. 28 Edith MacIver


Jan. 29 Lois Marie Harding


Jan. 30 Roger Ernest Easter.


Jan. 30 Virginia Marie Cavicchi.


Jan. 31 Stillborn


Jan. 31 Juanita Elinor Lucia Petrillo ..


Jan. 31 Joseph Mingirulli.


Jan. 31 Betty Claire Brennan


Jan. 31 Sheila Frances Woodhouse


Feb. 1 Lois Irene Rivard


Feb.


2 Stillborn


Feb. 2 Robert Allan Bishop


Feb. 2 Donald Reno MacNary


Feb. 2 Kenneth Alan Kurtzman.


Feb. Feb. 3 Jacquelyn Wallace Kerr


Feb. 3 Richard Whitney Blagbrough ..


Feb. 3 Carolyn Mae Schumb


Feb. 3 Michael Gaudiano


Feb. 4 Martha Lewis.


Feb. Feb. 4


Marie Erminie Sansone


Feb. 4 Robert Roy Elstrom.


Feb. 5 Edward Smith


Feb. 5 Illegitimate


Feb. 5 Martha Eulalie Meadows


(Twin)


Feb. 5 Myrna Elaine Meadows


(Twin)


Feb. 5 Philip Edward LaPlume


Feb. 5 Mary Lorraine Perry


Feb. 6 Donald Burns Kiley


Feb. 7 Jeanne Bernier.


Feb. 7 Betty Bates


Feb. 7 Annie Helena Smith


Feb. 8 Walter Herbert Green


Feb. 8 Carleton Norman Rippel


Feb. 8 Paul O'Brien.


Feb. 9 Giovani Santosuosso


Feb. 9 William Louis Deiss


Feb. 9 Stanley Clinton Trask, Jr


Feb. 9 John Paul Solander


Feb. 10 Stillborn


Feb. 11


Catherine Monahan.


Parents


Joseph and Viola George and Bessie Emil and Violet


Vincenzo and Laura


Ernest and Eva


Stanley and Blanche


Edward and Marion Albert and Ivy


Wendell and Bernadine Roger and Bertha


Henry and Lillian


George and Dorothy Charles and Lena


Anthony and Anna Joseph and Emeli Vincent and Rose


Charles and Florence


Oscar and Sybil


Raymond and Aurelia Burton and Hazel


Isaac and Stella


Wallace and Elizabeth


Gustav and Marion


Bernon and Audrey Martin and Mae


Michael and Mary


Robert and Catherine


4 Walter Butterworth


Walter and Helen


Michael and Erminie Howard and Arlene John and Dora


Isaac and Martha


Isaac and Martha Henry and Catherine Francis and Octavia Frederick and Florence Arthur and Florence Russell and Gretchen Roy and Annie Daniel and Lydia Norman and Sadie Arthur and Margaret Joseph and Philomena Louis and Margaret Stanley and Ruth Oscar and Louise


William and Catherine


3 Jean Lois Anderson.


323


REPORT OF CITY CLERK


Date


Child


Feb. 11 Mary Louise White.


Feb. 11 Charles Francis Adams


Feb. 11 Rita Ann Connelly


Feb. 12 Barbara Babin


Feb. 12 Zelde Epstein (Twin)


Feb. 12 Geraldine Epstein (Twin)


Feb 12 Margaret Louise Macleod.


Feb. 12 Eugene Wesley Brundage.


Feb. 12 Robert David Cunniff


Feb.


12 Raymond Eugene Duval.


Feb. 13 Paul Leonard Reddington.


Feb. 13 John William Wilson.


Feb. 13 Margaret Elizabeth Gorman


Feb. 13 Arthur Lincoln Kirts.


Feb. 13 Stillborn


Feb. 13 Brophy (Twin)


Feb. 14 William Russell MacArthur


Feb. 14 Norma Teresa DeNicola


Feb. 14 Pearl Hia Grossman.


Feb. 14 Joseph Louis Ceriani


Feb. 14 Marion Ann Patriarca.


Feb. 15 Edward Michael Schlager


Feb.


15 Dorothy Louise White


Feb. 15 Edwina Ruth Lamb


Feb. 15 William Henry Hayes, Jr.


Feb. 15 Irene Sinclair Robb.


Feb. 15 Helen Lorraine Minihan.


Feb. 16 Merrie Lucile Vinal


Feb. 16 Caral Jean Andre


Feb. 16 Arthur Martel


Feb. 16 Stillborn


Feb. 17 Robert Halligan


Feb. 17 Edward Gideon Goodoak


Feb. 17 Anita Mineo


Feb. 18 William Logan Alexander, Jr.


Feb. 18 Grace Lucia Giuchiglia.


Feb.


18 Barbara Ann Dorley


Feb. 18 Joan Capen.


Feb. 18 Paul Martin Hennessey


Feb. 18 Grace Isabel Feener.


Feb. 19 Elizabeth Mary Fitzgerald.


Feb. 19 Remo Moreano.


Feb. 19 Rose Marie Mercurio.


Feb. 19 Doris Margaret Mills.


Feb. 20 Shirley May Parry


Feb. 20 Margaret Helen Dalton


Feb. Feb. 20


20 Mary Ann Ferguson. Delorey.


Feb. 20 Hugh Phillips Brown.


Feb. 20 David Allan Cobb.


Feb. 20 Lois Faye Richardson


Feb. 20 Ethel Maud Creswell


Feb. 20 William Frederic Babbitt


Feb. 21 George Foynes.


Parents


Edward and Laura Alexander and Bertha John and Margaret Alexander and Helen Louis and Etta


Louis and Etta Beecher and Louise Alexander and Pearl Edmund and Margaret Raymond and Marie John and Olive Claude and Ellen


Joseph and Margaret Charles and Edna


Joseph and Lucy Robert and Marion Louis and Mary Joseph and Esther Guiseppi and Latizia Clement and Mary Sylvester and Rose Safford and Rose Ray and Caroline William and Mary Victor and Roberta John and Helen Raymond and Cora George and Margaret Alfred and Caroline


Peter and Henrietta Edward and Helen Vincent and Jennie William and Beth Orazio and Mary George and Anna Bernard and Lesta Harold and Elizabeth Carleton and Isabel William and Elizabeth Arthur and Annie Anthony and Anna James and Agnes Percy and Charlotte Richard and Lillian Thomas and Elizabeth Walter and Clara Harold and Ann Alfred and Miriam Richard and Hazel Alpheus and Marion Theodore and Alice Edward and Agnes


324


CITY OF QUINCY


Date


Child


Feb. 21


Mildred Nona Natalie Mori- arty


Feb. 22


Carl Leone, Jr


Feb. 22


Arlene Evelyn Brown


Feb. 22 John Melton Steed.


Feb. 22 Anne Elizabeth Jenkins


Feb. 23 Arthur Paul Barrett.


Feb. 23


Janet Pauline Stoddard


Feb. 23 Catherine Arline Lagerquist ... Feb. 23 Barbara Ann Piepke.


Feb. 23 Maurine Jane McFague.


Feb. 24 Carolyn Elizabeth Gately.


Feb. 25 Roger Alfred Chambers, Jr


Feb. 25 Robert Francis Cameron.


Feb. 25 John Buckley


Feb. 26


Fredrick Herman Mattson.


Feb. 26 Rose Marie Nichols


Feb. 26


William Clinton Austin


Feb. 26


Joseph Albert Lemieux.


Feb. 26


Barbara Marie Cataldo


Feb. 26 Louis Russell Bronstein


Feb. 26 Carmella Santa Cipriano.


Feb. 26 Judith Leila Stewart


Feb. 27


Robert William Beckett.


Feb. 27 Beverly Jane Summers


Feb. 27 Barbara Ann Bowlan


Feb. 27 Joan Corbett.


Feb. 27 Kenneth Edward Robertson.


Feb.


28 Francis Timothy McAuliffe.


Feb. 28 Anthony Patsy Priscilla


Mar. 1


Ida Dintino


Mar.


1 Mary Virginia Murphy


Mar. 1 Barbara Ann Hines


Mar. 1 Anthony Nicosia


Mar. 2 Richard Charles Webber


Mar. 2 Marilyn Rita Lee.




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