Inaugural address of the mayor, with the annual report of the officers of the city of Quincy for the year 1932, Part 17

Author: Quincy (Mass.)
Publication date: 1932
Publisher:
Number of Pages: 446


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 1932 > Part 17


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14


$1,893 64


Balance in savings bank


Securities, Dec. 31, 1932


$3 64 1,890 00


$1,893 64


JAMES H. SANKEY, Treasurer. GEORGIANA CUSHING LANE, Auditing Committee.


263


REPORT OF TRUSTEES OF PUBLIC LIBRARY


REPORT OF THE LIBRARIAN


To the Trustees of the Thomas Crane Public Library :


The report of the Librarian for the year 1932 is herewith sub- mitted. It is unfortunately true that whenever there is a decrease in private business and a falling off of orders for goods, there is in- variably an increase in the needs and requests for governmental services. It is not only in demands for public welfare aid that this can be noticed. Unemployment breeds crime and it becomes impossible to cut down on police protection. Lack of opportunity for employment keeps many children in school beyond the normal age of leaving and as a result, the schools are overcrowded. The effect of unemployment on the public library is equally marked. One very noticeable feature is the unusual demand upon reading room facilities especially in the winter months. Perhaps some of this may be mere killing of time but those of us who have come in contact with the people who frequent our libraries doubt this. A good deal of it is unquestionably quiet, earnest study. Even when it is not, in what better or more stimulating surroundings than those afforded by the public library can one find some measure of distraction from the discouragements and spiritual depression re- sulting from unemployment. During the war there was much talk of "keeping up the morale." Perhaps it is even more necessary in the present economic low tide than during the war when we were to an extent buoyed up by a sort of nervous excitement. And the part of the public library in helping to keep up the morale is not slight if we can believe the evidence of crowded reading rooms and the statistics of increased use of all library facilities.


Use of the Library


What are some of the statistics for the use of our own library for the year 1932? Our file of borrowers' cards shows that at the end of the year the Thomas Crane Public Library had 26,610 bor- rowers registered, representing over one-third of the total popula- tion of the city of Quincy. These borrowers took out for home use a total of 877,525 volumes, this number being a gain of over 135,000 or 18 per cent over the figures for 1931, a gain of 50 per cent over the figures for 1929, and, I hope I may be pardoned for mentioning, a gain of 102 per cent since 1926, the year I became your librarian. The circulation per capita increased from 10 to 12.2 and the circu- lation per borrower from 30 to 33. A favorite method of attempt- ing to visualize 877,525 books is to state that if laid end to end they would make a path extending for 110 miles. Also, if the circula- tion of books for one average day were piled one book on another, it would make a pile extending a half mile into the air. Our read- ing rooms have been crowded many times in excess of seating capacity and our reference and readers' aid services have never been in such demand.


Costs of Quincy Library Service


It may be worth while to include in this report some data as to the costs of Quincy's library service as compared with the costs of similar service in other cities of Massachusetts. Leaving out Boston which, of course, is in a class by itself, there were nine cities in Massachusetts whose libraries in 1931 circulated more than 500,000 books. Miss Callahan, first assistant, recently compiled


264


CITY OF QUINCY


statistics for these libraries for that year. The tabulated result showed that in circulation the Quincy library was in fourth place, being exceeded by Springfield, Worcester and Newton; that with one exception, Fall River, the Quincy library had the smallest total income; that it spent the lowest percentage of that income for salaries and services and the highest percentage of that in- come for books and periodicals; that Quincy stood fourth in library maintenance per capita ($1.03 as against $2.05 for Springfield, $1.56 for Worcester and $1.35 for Newton); that it had the lowest cost per volume circulated, $.10 (the average is $.13) of all nine cities; that it stood third in per capita circulation and that it had with the sole exception of Fall River, the smallest number of library employees.


Figures are not yet available for 1932 comparisons but we do know that our library circulation has exceeded that of Newton library by over 36,000 volumes and is undoubtedly in third place. next to Springfield and Worcester, both double the population of Quincy; that the percentage for salaries and for books and periodi- cals and for maintenance per capita are all practically the same as for 1931; that the maintenance cost per volume circulated has dropped from $.10 to $.081/2, the circulation per capita increased to 12 and that we are still in eighth place for number of library employees.


I cannot but feel that the Thomas Crane Public Library is out- standing in this group of libraries as an example of low cost of service and economical administration.


Book Additions


During the past year 11,159 books were added to the library by purchase, gift and the binding of magazines, while 4,153 were withdrawn, the net gain being 7,006. The volumes in the library now number 98,925. Of the books added 42 per cent were new titles, and 58 per cent duplicates and replacements of volumes worn out and discarded. Of the books withdrawn less than 10 per cent were lost, the others being worn out or obsolesant. A considerable part of our book appropriations went to duplicating much of the non-fiction on the high school reading lists and to the purchase of new books on business and technical books relating to trades and industry, books that found immediate use.


Branches


No changes were made in the location of branches during the past year. The circulation of books through the branches repre- sented over 60 per cent of the total books loaned. The Baxter, the General Palmer and the Atlantic branches all had gains of over 30 per cent above the figures for 1931. The Wollaston branch for the first time issued over 100,000 volumes, and while the percentage gain was not so large as some of the other branches, the total volume of books speaks for the amount of work handled by Miss Saville with a minimum of part time assistance. Many town libraries with full time staffs of from three to six persons circu- lated fewer books during the year. Through the purchase of ency- clopedias and other reference books during the last few years, the branches have been able to do more in the way of reference work than heretofore, and this seems to have been appreciated by patrons.


265


REPORT OF TRUSTEES OF PUBLIC LIBRARY


Children's Work


One of the most noteworthy features of the whole year's work was the moving of the children's department of the main library from the basement room occupied since 1908 to the house at 25 Spear Street adjoining the library property. This house was pur- chased by the Trustees of the Thomas Crane Public Library from Mrs. Abbie G. Dana in April. Within two months the necessary alterations and renovations had been accomplished and on June 15th the moving was completed and the Boys' and Girls' House, as it is now called, was opened to the children. It has been greatly enjoyed by the boys and girls, it has been visited by many adults and has attracted the attention of many librarians who have made special trips to visit it. Needless to say Miss Kingman and Miss Hodgkinson have been very happy in the accomplishment of what had long been a dream and have found in the new quarters an opportunity to do much more personal work with the children. The mere fact that no longer are the children of all ages obliged to mingle in one big room and that now there is a division between the older and the younger children helps to accomplish this end.


Through the generous offer of the Quincy Federation of Women's Clubs story hours conducted by members of these clubs have been held in the Boys' and Girls' House on Saturday mornings during the fall. We are deeply grateful for this evidence of interest and cooperation. The one thing needful which we have been obliged to forego from lack of funds is to adequately equip the room es- pecially reserved for the purpose to be used as an exhibit room for the Alice L. Campbell collection of dolls presented to the library last year by the Hon. Chester I. Campbell, whose recent death means a great loss not only to our city but to the Commonwealth.


The circulation of books for children both at the Boys' and Girls' House and at the branches showed a satisfactory gain, though the increase was not in proportion to the unusual increased use of our adult departments.


Work With Schools


As heretofore, the library has cooperated with the public school department in various ways. One hundred and thirty-two class- room libraries of from 40-50 books have been furnished to the elementary schools of Quincy from the third to the seventh grades, and we have also loaned books to the junior high school libraries to supplement their own collections. We have purchased duplicates for the main library and branches of many of the books on the outside reading lists of the English departments of the senior and junior high schools and have reserved books for special projects and assignments. We have added considerably to our stock of educational books and have also borrowed duplicates for use by teachers in their special study courses. Miss Kingman and Miss Hodgkinson have frequently visited the schools and discussed the use of the classroom libraries with the teachers and I have had several conferences with teachers in the senior high school as to ways of mutual helpfulness.


Staff


In the resignation of Miss Helen Egan, librarian of the Manet Branch, we lost one of our most popular and most efficient assist- ants. Miss Egan left us last summer to enter Mount St. Mary's Convent at Newburgh, N. Y., where she is now training for a teaching vocation. The position at Manet was filled by the transfer


266


CITY OF QUINCY


of Miss Carolyn Kittredge from the General Palmer Branch. Miss Dorothy Henrikson and Miss Mabel Coriati were new staff mem- bers added during the year, the latter taking Miss Kittredge's place at the Palmer Branch. Staff meetings have been held each month as usual except during the summer. Miss Aline Blake, Miss Mar- garet Hebert and Miss Helene Hodgkinson took, at their own ex- pense, the library course in the summer school of Columbia University. The library has greatly benefited in many ways as a direct result of this special training under inspiring teachers. Proof of the capacity and willingness of the members of our staff to assume increased work and responsibility may be indicated by the fact that while the branches have increased from nine to twelve and the circulation of books more than doubled during the seven years of my tenure as librarian, the number of assistants has in- creased less than fifty per cent.


Other Items


The hospital library service at the Quincy City Hospital has been continued on the same schedule as in 1931, three afternoons of ward service each week. As to its value, in addition to many spoken expressions of praise from patients, several persons have even taken the trouble to write the librarian of their appreciation of the work and especially commending the personal service of Mrs. Connolly, our hospital librarian.


A beginning has been made by Mrs. Wilford, assisted by Miss Blake, on an index to local newspaper articles. The value of such an index in providing ready accessibility to the source material for local history to be found in newspapers can hardly be over- estimated. It has been possible so far to only keep up with current issues, but we hope later to be able to go back through the files of our bound volumes of newspapers. In addition, Mrs. Wilford has started a clipping file of the more important articles.


It is planned early in 1933 to move the books on art, business and technical subjects to the room in the basement vacated by the removal of the children's department to the Boys' and Girls' House. This move will be a start toward a more efficient reference service to citizens interested in these subjects and it will also give relief to the overcrowded main stacks.


Altogether our library has had a very busy year, and we are confident, has been of increased usefulness to more quincy people than ever before. If this is so, it is in very large measure due to the loyal, interested and effective work of the members of the staff. To them and to the Board of Trustees for continued confidence, support and guidance I am deeply grateful.


Respectfully submitted,


GALEN W. HILL, Librarian. Jan. 31, 1933.


267


REPORT OF TRUSTEES OF PUBLIC LIBRARY


Statistical Summary


Population served, 71,965 (1930 census).


Free for lending and reference.


Total number of agencies, consisting of:


Central Library Branches


12


Stations:


Hospital service


1


Deposits


4


Schools (buildings)


25


Number of days open during year:


For lending


304


For reading


330


Hours open each week for lending


72


Hours open each week for reading


76


Total number of staff


24


Sotal valuation of library property


$318,000


Adult


Juvenile


Total


Number of volumes at beginning of year 60,713


31,198


91,911


Number of volumes added by purchase ....


5,649


5,195


10,844


Number of volumes added by gift.


262


3


265


Number of volumes added by binding and number of volumes reaccessioned. 51


7


58


Number of volumes lost or withdrawn


1,887


2,266


4,153


Total number at end of year.


64,788


34,137


98,925


Volumes of fiction lent for home use


431,479


223,798


655,277


Number of volumes lent for home use ..


529,699


347,826


877,525


Number of registered borrowers


26,610


Number of publications issued.


7


Number of publications received: 140 titles, 319 copies.


Library Expenditures


City App.


Endow- ment Funds $48 78


Books


$17,998 81


Periodicals


885 69


Binding


2,105 28


55 20


Library service


32,076 28


Janitor service


6,965 63


Rent


4,422 69


Light


1,299 60


Heat


1,515 35


Printing


267 00


Librarian's petty cash


215 00


Main building, repairs, etc.


1,025 41


287 95


Other maintenance


2,014 30


207 77


Insurance


528 00


68 36


Branch equipment and repair


386 39


Interest


580 91


Boys and Girls House, renovation and equipment


1,544 65


$71,705 43


$2,793 62


268


. CITY OF QUINCY


Books in the Library January 1, 1933


General


Adult 920


Juvenile 296


1,216


Periodicals


3,654


26


3,680


Philosophy


1,165


27


1,192


Religion


1,331


271


1,602


Sociology


4,833


2,422


7,255


Language


438


19


457


Science


1,587


1,177


2,764


Useful Arts


3,143


1,156


4,299


Fine Arts


3,153


1,129


4,282


Literature


6,349


3,677


10,026


History


6,720


4,450


11,170


Biography


4,549


1,659


6,208


Fiction


26,946


17,828


44,774


Total


64,788


34,137


98,925


Total


Circulation by Classes 1932


BRANCHES


Juvenile Department


CENTRAL LIBRARY


Wollaston


Norfolk Downs


Atlantic


Parkway


Temple


Baxter


Manet


Montclair


General Palmer


Lakin Square


Merrymount


Squantum


Hospital


Boys' and


Girls' House


Schools


General


7,323


3,288


1,725


1,134


1,573


1,204


658


1,297


973


1,438


734


1,598


594


826


811


25,176


Philosophy


2,685


480


101


104


134


47


15


49


26


38


85


32


36


11


6


....


3,849


Religion


1,366


353


156


93


108


156


65


50


40


80


78


44


34


18


187


680


3,508


Sociology


5,678


2,287


1,189


1,190


1,465


1,277


1,214


957


715


736


503


352


380


124


2,815


7,303


28,185


Language


552


68


53


25


18


68


15


11


11


7


6


3


1


....


19


10


867


Science


3,071


894


347


316


283


236


232


169


316


111


223


149


155


15


975


1,938


9,430


Useful Arts.


6,863


1,315


502


572


583


469


317


356


355


314


200


192


227


29


1,255


954


14,503


Fine Arts


7,022


1,150


557


496


416


411


179


331


309


272


368


169


241


11


1,232


569


13,733


Literature


8,020


4,392


3,819


3,507


5,768


3,928


3,781


3,132


2,544


2,431


1,945


1,577


1,753


332


6,028


5,960


58,917


History


4,073


1,348


805


611


802


590


409


512


464


324


345


274


162


47


1,166


3,943


15,875


Travel


5,079


3,542


1,538


1,694


1,445


1,574


1,377


1,127


892


784


777


665


462


100


2,579


6,438


30,073


Biography


5,351


2,002


1,018


1,298


1,017


793


773


447


534


398


504


431


300


40


1,272


1,954


18,132


Fiction


106,101


84,791


46,458


45,478


41,654


41,822


37,012


36,604


32,697


28,897


26,786


18,576 19,362


9,418 35,145


44,476


655,277


Total


163,184


105,910


58,268


56,518


55,266 52,575


46,047


45,042


39,876


35,830


32,554 24,062 23,707


10,971


53,490 74,225 877,525


Circulation per capita


12.2


Circulation per registered borrower 33


Maintenance expenditure per volume circulated. $.085


Maintenance expenditure per capita


$1.035


TOTAL


...


....


..


...


270


CITY OF QUINCY


REPORT OF CITY CLERK


MAYOR CHARLES A. ROSS:


I have the honor to submit the forty-fourth annual report of this department, being for the year ending December 31, 1932.


RECEIPTS


Licenses:


Pool and billiards


$650 00


Victuallers


600 00


Junk


120 00


Job Wagon


2 00


Auctioneer


30 00


Hackney


7 00


Public halls


245 00


Theater-annual


260 00


Theatre-Sunday


2,236 00


Motor Sales


1,515 00


Lord's Day


1,070 00


Gasolene and renewals


183 00


All others


45 00


Permits


Marriage


498 00


All others


31 00


Miscellaneous


Recording


1,937 10


All others


184 25


$9,613 35


The above sum has been paid to the City Treasurer.


Number of marriage intentions issued in 1932 499


Number of marriages recorded in 1932 549


Number of births recorded in 1932 1,539


Number of deaths recorded in 1932.


808


The number of dogs licensed in 1932 was 1,529 males; 218 fe- males; 411 spayed and one breeders' license ($25), for which the sum of $4,995.00 was collected. The sum of $3,262.40 was paid to the County Treasurer; the sum of $1,300.80 was paid to the City Treasurer for the use of the County and the sum of $431.80 was paid to the City Treasurer for the use of the city. The sum of $3,293.75 was collected for hunter's licenses. The fees amounting to $296.60 were paid to the City Treasurer and the balance to the Commonwealth.


Annexed are the births, marriages and deaths recorded in Quincy in 1932 and the election returns.


EMERY L. CRANE,


City Clerk.


271


REPORT OF CITY CLERK


BIRTHS RECORDED IN QUINCY IN 1932


Date


Child


Parents


Jan. 1


Thomas Charles Bersani


Jan. 1 Jean Bernice Luciano.


Jan. 1 Joan Patricia Langley.


Jan. 2 Theodore Robert Mitchell.


Jan.


2 James Alfred Tangherlini.


Jan. 2 Paul David Lubarksy ..


Jan. 2 Louise Marie Prezioso


Jan. 3


George Jeffrey Bailey.


Jan. 3 George Ronald Howie.


Jan. 3 Stillborn


Jan.


3 Claire Marie Golden


Jan. 4 Constance Ruth Roberts


Frank and Alice Louis and Ruth


Jan.


5 Stillborn


Jan.


5 Dorothy Irene Green.


Jan.


6 Ermanno Pellegrini.


Jan.


6 Stillborn


Jan. 6 Beverley Gay


Jan.


6 Sheila Dolores Seigal.


Reginald and Ruth Charles and Edythe Thomas and Grace


Jan.


6


Harvey Joseph Hunt.


Jan. 6 Ralph Paul Schneider, Jr


7 Robert Herman Woolf


Ralph and Helen William and Elsie Curtis and Alice John and Sarah Robert and Muriel John and Elsa


Jan. Jan.


8 Robert Edward Baker


Roger and Gertrude


Jan. Jan. Jan. 8


John Edward Erwin.


Henry and Mary


Jan. Jan.


9


Mary Elizabeth Kelly


George and Mary


Jan.


9 Malcolm Frederick Cameron ... Pitt Frank Eaton.


Donald and Margaret


Jan. Jan. Jan. 10 Joan Jensen


Neil and Sadie Nicholas and Marguerite James and Josephine


Jan.


11 Mary Florence Perkins


John and Mary


Jan.


Jan. 11


11 Don Augustus Simpson (Twin) Harold Thomas Simpson (Twin)


Elmer and Mary


Jan. 12


Marilyn Louise McConville.


Jan. 12


Lois Virginia Grover ...


Jan. 13 Frances Miriam Allsopp


Alfred and Henrietta


Jan. 13 Marie Jean Lemire.


Jan. 13 Patricia Joan Kaulbeck


Jan. 13


Stillborn


Jan. 13 Patricia Ann Faherty


Jan. 14 Robert Perry


Jan. 14 Giovanni Tirone


Jan. 14 Carole Regina DiSalvo


Patrick and Julia Robert and Mary Michael and Caterina Paul and Doris


Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.


Curtis Guild Hookway


7 7 Edwin Andrew Monahan


7 Richard Wilson Beals


Dorothy Elsa Nelson.


7 7


John Michael Venna


Michael and Olga


8 Mary Patricia McQuade


8 Eleanor Frances Scanlon


Harry and Alice Joseph and Ellen


9 Gayl Geline Gardner


Robert and Carrie


10 10 Nicholas Pilales


Theodore and Tyyne Elmer and Mary


Jan. 11


Janet Beverly Matson


Joseph and Margaret Arthur and Phyllis


Louis and Blanche Wendell and Muriel


Thomas and Ruth Anthony and Gladys Vernon and Gertrude Theodore and Florence Armando and Doris Abraham and Doris Louis and Asunda Robert and Georgina George and Mary


Daniel and Lydia Loreto and Geraldina


272


CITY OF QUINCY


Date


Child


Parents


Jan. 14


David Allen Christiansen


Alfred and Alma


Jan. 14


Alfred James Wood.


Jan. 14 Mary Annette Akins


Jan. 15 Caryl Jean Emery.


Jan.


15


Daniel Patterson Warwick


Stronach and Joan


Jan. 15


Natalie Rodgers Cumming


Jan.


16


Joseph Cataldo


Jan. 16


Copland.


Jan. 16


Robert Kenneth MacDonald.


Jan. 16


Patricia Jane Boyden.


Jan.


16 Gaton Francis Lightbody


Chester and Marion George and Edna


Jan.


17


Robert Hooper Goodale.


William and Anna


Jan. Jan.


18 18


Robert Mattson


Leland and Katharine William and Edna Homer and Ethel


Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.


18


Jean Marilyn Hunter


Frederick and Theresa


18


Brian Terrence Callahan


Daniel and Helen


18


Mary Louise LoCicero.


Joseph and Ida Leo and Maggie


Jan.


19


Diane Marie Doherty


Henry and Dorothy


Jan.


19


Lena Marie Salvucci.


Carmine and Georgiana


Jan.


19


Anthony James Tantillo


Anthony and Delia


Jan. Jan. Jan.


20 20


James Roger Lyons


Joseph and Lena John and Esther William and Catherine


Jan. Jan.


21 21


Marie Ann DiBona


Augusto and Antoinetta


Jan.


21 21


Roger Shoals Jewett.


Henry and Marjorie


Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.


21 22


Robert Jeremiah Murphy


Jeremiah and Winifred


22


Joan Marie Donovan


Cornelius and Ethel


22


Eva Arlene Lincoln.


Donald and Gretchen


Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.


22 22 22 23 23


Joan Mary Hutcheon -McDonnell


John and Evelyn John and Margaret


Jan. 23


Barbara Ann Jenkins.


James and Margaret


Vincent Comoletti, Jr.


Vincent and Philomena


Constance Ritchie Hobson


Thomas and Helen


Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. 24


23 23 23 Mary Kathleen Behan 24 Elma Matilda Lehtinen. 24 Sophie Lorraine McHoul


Philip and Margaret Albin and Lempi Mansour and Weda


Phoebe Alice Forsythe


George and Phoebe


Jan. 24 Carmela Baldassini.


Joseph and Angelina


Jan. 24 Ethel Marie Riley.


William and Jean


Jan. 25


Lilly Christine Tinglof


Henry and Violet


20


Joseph Seymore.


Jan. 20


James Joseph Buchanan


Samuel and Isabella


Ann Maureen Ponch


Francis and Rose


Jan.


21


Helen Eila Pitkanen.


Mikko and Aune Edmund and Kathleen James and Alice


21


Edmund James McLelland Morrison.


John and Julia


George Hammon Torrey


Barbara Ann Kiley


William and Dorothy Timothy and Ann


Jan.


18


George Louis Brodeur


George and Alice Cosmo and Anna William and Hazel Mitchell and Genevieve Reagh and Esther


Jan.


16 Richard Albert Tomkins.


Frederick and Sonia


17


Barry Stoddard Williams


Ruth Deering Anderson


Jan. 18


Grace Marie Quinn.


Augustine Purpura.


Louis and Barbara


Richard Phillip White


John Salvatore DiTullio


Vernon and Margaret Alfred and Sarah Maurice and Ruth


ยท


273


REPORT OF CITY CLERK


Date


Child


Parents


Jan. 25


Donald Gordon Lints.


Willis and Annie


Jan. 25 Robert Francis Downey


James and Hazel


Jan. 26 Alice Willie Broom.


Martin and Mary


Jan.


26 Albert Edward Fruzzetti.


Albert and Catherine


Jan.


26 Roland Robertson MacLean


Roland and Evelyn


Jan. 26 Anne Leone Frazier.


Jan. 27 Janet Humphreys.


Ernest and Mary Cecil and Grace William and Marion


Jan. 28 William Adam Currie, Jr


Jan. 28 Arthur Lysarght McNulty


Arthur and Elizabeth


Jan. 28 Claire Virginia Melong


Joseph and Mildred


Jan. 29 Robert May Johnson


Alfred and Margaret


Jan. 29 William John Ambrose


Jan. 29 Cosmo Joseph Sansone.


Jan. 30 Roy Otis Looke.


Jan. 30 Barbara Helen Morrison


Herbert and Gertrude


Jan. 30 Mary Jane Bergeron.


Arthur and Helen


Jan. 30 Rodney Cushing Wilde


Raymond and Ruth


Jan.


30 Audrey Ann Hindon


Reginald and Beulah


Jan. 30 Anna Maria Kelly


John and Nora George and Nora


Jan. 30 George Carle Newcombe, Jr


Jan. 31 Edward Louis Sopp, Jr


Edward and Katherine Bradford and Brenda


Jan.


31 Anna McWhirter.


Jan. 31 James Joseph Sullivan


Robert and Agnes John and Mary


Feb.


1 Barbara Jean Porter


Lester and Marion


Feb.


1 Dominic Palmer.


Feb.


1 Barbara Marie Hall.


Dominic and Margaret William and Mabel


Feb.


2 Christian


Fred and Theresa


Feb. 2 Margaret Mary Caperci.


Anthony and Margaret


Feb.


2 Mary Ann Wiley.


Feb. 3 Mary Theresa Donlin.


Feb. 3 Francis Joseph Sartori.


Feb. 3 John Charles Walker


Feb. Feb.


4


Noreen Margaret McDonald.


Feb. 4 Francis Xavier Reilley.


George and Marguerite


Feb. 4 Thomas Charles Mills


Feb.


4 Diane Mildred Nelson


Thomas and Agnes Robert and Corrine


Feb. 5 Stillborn Feb. 5 Francis John Pineau.


Feb. 5 Owen Henry Dugan.


Feb. 5 Thomas Armstrong Heaney


Feb. 5 Barbara Anne Weidman.


5 Herbert Eugene Kendall


Feb. Feb. 6 Robert Leo Foley .. Feb. 6 Feb. 6 Verna Ann Maloney


Alexander Kirkwood Mckinlay


Feb. 7 Sylvia Ripley.


Feb. 7 Marjorie Ruth Toye


Feb. 7 Barbara Anne St. John.


Feb. 7 Everett Hugh MacPhee


Ernest and Virginia Henry and Mary John and Ruth Arthur and Edna Herbert and Dorothy George and Kathleen Donald and Margaret Henry and Luida Samuel and Ruth


Sumner and Gertrude Arthur and Florence Byron and Abbie


Feb.


1 Stillborn


Malcolm and Mary Edward and Mary John and Irene




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