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 1937 > Part 15
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Leod)
1921
Barbara Hobbs
1925
Pauletta Kristofferson
1921
Etta
Linnehan
(Mrs.
Mi-
Pearl Buick
1921
chael Crowley)
.1925
Louise Cameron (Mrs. Earl
Falconer)
1921
Eleanor Lorette (Mrs. John
Murphy)
1925
Mary Murphy (Mrs. James
Kennedy)
1925
Charlotte Nash
1925
Eileen Garrity
1926
Catherine Murphy
1926
Blanche
Murphy
( Mrs.
James Merritt)
1926
Martha Decoster
1926
Verna
Tibbetts
( Mrs.
Mathew Kinneburg)
. 1926
Helen Casey
. 1926
Hazel Schools (Mrs. David
Usher)
1926
Edna
Elliot
(Mrs.
Allen
MacKay)
1926
Marion Connors
1927
Margaret Riley (Mrs. Carl-
isle Smith)
1927
Ruth Horrigan
1927
Ethel Fostello
1927
Ida
Giovannangeli
(Mrs.
Nicholas
Venuti)
1927
Philomena Campbell
(Mrs.
Ernest MacPhee)
1927
Grace Sears
(Mrs.
Edgar
Pinel)
1927
Alma
Girvan
(Mrs.
John
Mckenzie)
1928
Helena Reed
(Mrs. Russell
Harper)
1928
Irene Estabrook (Mrs. Fred
Oliver)
1924
Ida
Taylor
(Mrs.
Stanley
Irene
J.
Macleod
(Mrs.
Davies)
1924
Marie MacPherson (Mrs. C.
Martin)
1924
Margaret Miller (Mrs. How-
ard Morton)
1924
Eleanor Parsons
1924
Janet Setchell
1925
Name Year
Anne Billings (Mrs. Oatt) .. 1925
Esther Burns (Mrs. James
Beers)
1925
Marguerite Cookingham .... 1925
Lottie
Dahlberg
(Mrs.
A.
Bersani)
1925
Agnes Fraser (Mrs. Clifford
Stanhope)
1925
Elsie Hay (Mrs. John Wil-
son)
1925
Margaret F. Main Cowan
. . 1921
Ellen Duggan 1921
Gladys Irwin (Mrs. Walter
Imray)
1921
Bernice Hobson
1921
Frances Sampson
1921
Muriel Cameron (Mrs. Ken-
neth Falconer)
1922
Agnes Gustafson (Mrs. Chas.
Spinney)
1922
Agnes Johnson
1922
Lillian Coleman 1922
Jessie Nicholson 1922
Edna Tubman
(Mrs. Her-
bert Hodgkinson)
.1922
Madeline
Roberts
( Mrs.
John Shannon)
.1922
Katherine Krasinski (Mrs.
Arthur Newcomb) .....
.1923
Grace
Newcomb
( Mrs.
Bates)
1923
Ann Thompson (Mrs. Joseph
Paradise)
1923
Joanna MacHardy
1923
Mary Keeley (Mrs.
James
Cantfield)
1923
Lila Cairns
1924
Elizabeth
Durant
( Mrs.
Hall)
.1924
Sommers)
1928
Ceciline Nash
(Mrs.
Wm.
Collins)
.1928
Rebecca MacDonald
1928
Lillian Pratt (Mrs.
W. J.
Boutin)
.1928
Hazel Our (Mrs. Shuffleton) 1928
Edith Fostello (Mrs.
John
Goodhue)
1928
248
CITY OF QUINCY
Name Year
Anna Hagelburg (Mrs. Cecil
Murray)
1928
Constance Larkin
1928
Christina
Battista
1929
Freda Belville
(Mrs David
Macleod)
1929
Helen T. Cunniff 1929
Georgianna Francis 1929
Grace Cutter (Mrs. James
Daniels)
1929
Rebecca Gilmore (Mrs. Geo.
Philbrick)
1929
Helen Haldane
(Mrs. Clif-
ford Stetson)
1929
Minnie E. Harron
1929
Anne F. Leary
1929
Rose Levangie
(Mrs. Wil-
liam McCauliffe)
1929
Marion Leach (Mrs. Robert
Locke)
1929
Anne H. Leonard 1929
Gladys
Malia
(Mrs.
Carl
Erickson)
1929
Florence Meek (Mrs. John
Fletcher)
1929
*Mabel F. MacDonald
1929
Dorothy M. Macleod
1929
Dorothy
McCready
(Mrs.
Thomas Mccarthy) 1929 Anne McLean (Mrs. Rohan McDonald) 1929
Margaret S. Nickerson
1929
Edna C. Ripley 1929
Winifred M. Sharon 1929
Kathleen Stewart (Mrs. Kel-
ly ) 1929
Doris Thompson (Mrs.
Howard Tule)
1929
Ellen Young 1929
Acsenea Zelenk (Mrs. Ro-
manewsky)
1929
Elizabeth R. Allen
1930
Jessie Bliss
1930
F. Louise Brady 1930
Alice C. Daggett
1930
Ruth Donellan (Mrs. Wm.
Profit) 1930
Bertha Estes 1930
Bertha V. Ferron 1930
Madelyn Flaherty (Mrs. Jas. Kelliher) 1930
Ella Gillespie 1930
Marie Haley 1930
Marjorie L. Mabon
1930
Name
Year
Bertha Nelson (Mrs. Paul
Anderson)
1930
Irene Ostrander
(Mrs.
Charles Mains)
1930
*Harriet I. Salomon
1930
Adeline B. Smith
1930
Aili W. Aalto
1931
Ellen Anderson (Mrs. Ossi
Nishula)
1931
Margaret C. Bailey 1931
Elizabeth M. Brown
1931
Mary M. Burris
1931
Evelyn C. Desmond
1931
Margaret Dewey (Mrs. Geo. Parker) 1931
Alice O. Gray 1931
Ingrid E. Lindfors
1931
Catherine
Macleod
(Mrs.
Thomas McCall)
1931
Helen M. Mosher
1931
Gladys Oliver ( Mrs. William Adolphson) 1931
Beryl Sims
1931
Helen V. Wilander
(Mrs.
Charles Bird)
1931
Marguerite
Boynton
(Mrs.
Paul Davis)
1932
Anna B. Eckl
1932
Elizabeth F. Fitzgerald
1932
Anna Franks (Mrs. William Adams) 1932
Velma I. McBride
1932
Hazel A. Nelson
1932
*Ethel L. Sampson
1932
Mae E. Bamberg
1932
Lillian H. Hussey (Mrs.
LaFond)
1932
Enni E. Leppala
1932
Agnes R. Lonergan
1932
Anne M. Marin
1932
Jean B. McCullock
1932
Edith B. Paige
1932
Ruth I. Racz
1932
Katherine Walker (Mrs.
Harold Halleron 1932
Katherine B. Riley 1932
Marie Shannon Cox
1932
Gertrude B. Shea
1932
Beatrice A. Wilson (Mrs.
Stanley Polinski) 1932
Jean C. Mitchell 1933
Mildred H. Teirila
1933
Eileen
A.
Horgan
1933
Ruth
Wallin
(Mrs.
Wm.
Marshall)
1933
249
REPORT OF CITY HOSPITAL
Name Year
Mary A. Sullivan (Mrs.
Theo Canniff) 1933
Ruth Craig (Mrs. Kendal
Mills) 1933
Lillian Calhoun (Mrs.
Charles Martin 1933
Anna M. Gillis McKinnon .1933
Evelyn R. Mahoney .1933
Elizabeth R. Mattioli 1933
Edna C. Nicholson ( Mrs.
Forest Hayden) 1933
Grace G. Magura 1933
Roberta Meade 1933
Anne Marie Cullen (Mrs.
Howard Cheney) 1934
Rose D'Alessandro 1934
Grace W. Fitzpatrick
1934
Evelyn Leona Heath (Mrs.
Jos. Noone) 1934
Elizabeth F. Hollis 1934
Bernice F. Lewis 1934
Dorothy K. Maule (Mrs. Wil- liam Ferrazzi) 1934
Edith C. V. Serberg
1934
Name Year
Dorothy Anu Sharkey .1934
Esther Youngren 1934
Rosalie Yukna (Mrs. Wal- ter Tirrell) 1934
Claire Harcourt (Mrs. Wal- ter Lepponen) 1935
Helmi Heikkila
1935
Constance Lundy 1935
Edna McGarry
1935
Anna Murphy
1935
Dorothy Smith
1935
Margaret Young
1935
Ruth M. Champeau 1937
Anna V. Danielson 1937
Emma G. DeCaro 1937
Mary J. Dorn 1937
Priscilla E. Dunham 1937
Evelyn E. Joy
1937
Mary E. Lavers 1937
Eleanor M. Mclaughlin 1937
Margaret A. Speed
1937
Irene Stickney
1937
* deceased
250
CITY OF QUINCY
QUINCY CITY HOSPITAL GENERAL INFORMATION
The Quincy City Hospital is a city institution supported by the city of Quincy and the receipts from patients.
Private patients, as well as part-pay and free patients, are admitted to the hospital upon recommendation of any physician.
Only those unable to pay a doctor's fee will be admitted to the ward service.
Application for admission should be made at the Admitting Office on Whitwell Street between the hours of 9 A.M. and 4 P.M. Maternity cases are admitted at any time. Accident or emergency cases are received in the Accident Room at any time.
Patients suffering from mental or chronic diseases are not ad- mitted to the hospital.
RATES
1. General
Service-$3.00
Ward Private-$3.50 Semi-private-$4.00
Private rooms-$5.00, $6.00, $7.00 a day.
2. Maternity
Service-$24.50 per week.
Ward Private-$4.00 a day. Semi-private-$5.00 a day.
Private rooms-$6.00, $7.00 a day.
These charges include board, general nursing care, and ordinary medicines. An operating room fee of $5.00 for minors and $10.00 for majors is made. A laboratory fee of $5.00 is made on all specimens obtained from operations in the operating room. This examination is required by the American College of Surgeons. Extra charges will be made for X-ray examinations, special medi- cines, Physio-therapy treatments, special laboratory examinations, apparatus, board of special nurses, oxygen, professional blood donors, and ambulance service.
Private patients are required to pay one week's board and the operating room fee or delivery room fee on admission. Patients coming from outside of the city are expected to have a private physician, a member of the Quincy City Hospital Staff. Patients must arrange with their private physicians regarding their fees. The physicians on service receive no remuneration for their serv- ices to the ward patients.
The hospital reserves the right to move to the open ward a patient occupying a private or semi-private room who fails to pay his bill for hospital service within 72 hours of presentation.
251
REPORT OF CITY HOSPITAL
VISITING HOURS
1. Adults
Service: 2-3 P.M., daily, 2 visitors only. 7-7:30 P.M., daily, 1 visitor.
Semi-private: 2-3:30 P.M., daily, 2 visitors. 7-8 P.M., daily, 2 visitors.
Private Rooms: 11 A.M .- 8 P.M., daily, 2 visitors at a time. 2. Children
2-3 P.M., Wednesdays and Sundays, 2 visitors on each of these days.
Patients who are dangerously ill may have two visitors at any time. Children under 14 years should not be brought to visit patients.
Visitors may bring only fruit, flowers, and reading matter to adults. These gifts must be left at the Information Desk or with the nurse on the ward, and must not be given to the patients. Only toys may be brought to the children's ward, and must be given to the nurse in charge.
At 3 P.M., on inquiry at the Information Desk, the relatives of patients may talk with the physician in charge.
Patients may be visited by clergymen of their selection, and, so far as possible, the hospital will grant the performance of any desired religious rites.
PRIVATE NURSE
Arrangements for special nurses should be made through the Admitting Office upon consultation and advice of the attending physician. The salary of the special nurse is paid direct to her by the patient or relatives. The hospital makes a charge of $.50 a day for her board. Quincy City Hospital graduates, when available, are given preference.
Miscellaneous Information TELEPHONES
There are telephone connections in all private rooms. Instru- ments may be installed with the permission of the attending physician. There is an extra charge for this service.
RADIOS
In order to promote quietness for the patients in the hospital, only ear phones and magic ears are allowed for use in the hospital. These can be obtained at a nominal fee from the Admitting Office.
WHAT TO BRING
Private patients entering the hospital should bring with them nightgowns, bathrobe, slippers, comb, tooth brush, and tooth paste. Maternity patients are requested not to bring clothing for the baby to wear in the hospital.
252
CITY OF QUINCY
VALUABLES
Money and other valuables must be deposited with the Admitting Office upon admission; otherwise no responsibility will be assumed by the hospital.
LIBRARY
The Thomas Crane Public Library maintains a branch at the Quincy City Hospital. Books are obtainable from the librarian, who visits each floor between 2:30 and 5 P.M. daily except Saturday.
SUGGESTIONS
It is requested that any suggestions for improvements of serv- ice be made at the Superintendent's Office before the patient leaves the hospital.
253
REPORT OF CITY HOSPITAL
WITH SERVICE FOR ALL
The Quincy City Hospital is a health Institution; its duty is to care for the sick in our community, in order that they may live and enjoy their life, their work and their home.
Can anyone imagine our community without a hospital? We defy the mind to conceive such a nightmare.
We ask your support and in return we give you our solemn assurance that you may be confident that every dollar given us will be carefully expended in order that life and happiness may be prolonged.
254
CITY OF QUINCY
REPORT OF THE PUBLIC WELFARE DEPARTMENT
FEBRUARY 24, 1938.
To HIS HONOR, the Mayor of the City of Quincy,
and the Members of the City Council :-
The Department of Public Welfare respectfully submits the fol- lowing report for the year ending December 31, 1937.
During the first half of 1937 there was every assurance that the Welfare costs for the current year would be materially lower than the preceding year. However, two situations developed during the third quarter which contributed, to a large extent, in the reversal of the trend which had been maintained up to mid-year; namely, closing down of several sewing projects and the dismissal of non- citizens employed on W.P.A. Some of our large industries con- tributed somewhat to our rise in Outside Aid along toward the end of the year. At the present time there are encouraging signs which point to a downward trend during 1938. We feel sure that the two unforeseen situations which confronted this department last year will not have to be anticipated during the ensuing year.
The Mothers' Aid law was changed over to Aid to Dependent Children on January 1, 1937, by the passage of the Federal Social Security Act. Due to the change in the scope of this law there was a marked increase in the number of cases during 1937, as the law now includes dependent children living with any of eleven blood relations other than the mother. The change also brings the local Aid to Dependent Children work directly under the super- vision of both the State and Federal governments, and all indica- tions point to a further increase in the number of cases during 1938.
Old Age Assistance has increased materially during the year bringing our case load up to 858. Much of this increase is the re- sult of W. P. A. regulations barring employment to those whose age requirements are satisfied under the Old Age Assistance Act. Private business, too, has adopted this age limit, thus augmenting our already heavy load. Business recession has also played an important part since children, ordinarily able to contribute to the care of their aged parents, find it impossible to adequately care for their own immediate family under existing conditions. We feel that if the present conditions continue, we shall have a thousand cases by the close of 1938.
We have made many renovations at our City Infirmary and the Home has benefited greatly by these improvements. At present we are unable to accommodate any more inmates as it is filled to capacity.
We wish to express our thanks and appreciation to the many charitable organizations of the City for their kind cooperation shown during the year.
For details of expenditures reference is made to report of the Auditor of Accounts.
Respectfully submitted, ANTHONY J. VENNA, Commissioner of Public Welfare.
255
REPORT OF WELFARE DEPARTMENT
Appropriations and Transfers
Salaries
$24,460 00
Expense
4,715 31
Auto Maintenance
3,500 00
City Home
9,556 00
Aid to Dependent Children
67,234 72
Outside Aid
246,721 02
$356,187 05
Expended
Salaries
$24,280 66
Expense
4,647 66
Auto Maintenance*1
3,497 43
City Home*2
9,330 14
Aid to Dependent Children
66,421 64
Outside Aid*3
246,571 40
$354,748 93
*1-$ 500.00 transferred from General Interest
*2-$ 750.00 transferred from Salaries
*3-$6600.00 transferred from Aid to Dependent Chil- dren, Health Department, Salaries
Receipts for 1937
Dept. of Public Welfare (Aid to Dependent Children)
$21,265 92
Dept. of Public Welfare (Outside Aid) 59,805 48
Other Cities and Towns (Aid to Dependent Children) 1,159 67
Other Cities and Towns (Outside Aid) 10,027 63
Federal Grant (Aid to Dependent Children) . . 18,191 91
Individuals 299 08
City Infirmary
135 09
$110,884 78
OLD AGE ASSISTANCE REPORT
Receipts
Balance January 1, 1937 $ 3,360 25
Appropriations from Council 1937
141,000 00
Federal Grants during 1937 117,533 55
$261,893 80
Expenditures
Cash (Payrolls)
$248,533 14
Gifts (Thanksgiving-Xmas) 3,400 00
Quincy settled cases elsewhere
3,394 36
Burials . 2,400 00
Graves purchased
160 00
Special Medical Treatment
514 95
Special Food Treatment
47 77
256
CITY OF QUINCY
Special Dental Treatment
147 00
Special Cancer Treatment 115 00
Special Surgical Appliances 24 00
Special Hospitalization
249 97
Special Nursing. Service at home
337 00
Special Medicine and Drugs supplied
143 19
Glasses purchased
424 75
Fuel purchased (coal and oil)
1,342 50
$261,233 63
Balance
$ 660 17
Administrative Expenses
Balance as of January 1, 1937
$ 836 09
Appropriated by City Council
2,000 00
Federal Grants for maintaining office
3,917 74
$ 6,753 83
Expenditures
Salaries $ 4,040 00
Auto Maintenance
550 47
Recording Mortgages-Legal Service
441 77
Office Expense
583 21
Rent and Light
368 82
Printing
126 56
Miscellaneous Office Expense
81 75 $ 6,192 58
Balance
$ 561 25
City Home
Number of inmates January 1, 1937
23
Number of inmates admitted during the year 1937
64
Total number during the year 1937
87
Number discharged during the year 1937
60
Number of inmates in City Home January 1, 1938
27
Aid to Dependent Children
Number of families aided under Chap. 118-Jan. 1, 1937 . 78
Number of individuals aided under Chap. 118-Jan. 1, 1937 328
Cases closed during the year 1937 10
Cases added during the year 1937 41
Number of families aided under Chap. 118-Jan. 1, 1938 109
Number of individuals aided under Chap. 118-Jan. 1, 1938
427
Outside Aid
Number of families' aided under Chap. 117-Jan. 1, 1937 701
Number of individuals aided under Chap. 117-Jan. 1, 1937 . . 2394
Number of families having no settlement 367
Number of families having settlement other cities and towns 82
REPORT OF WELFARE DEPARTMENT
257
Number of families added during the year 1937
861
Number of individuals added during the year 1937 2741
Number of families discharged during the year 1937 798
Number of families aided under Chap. 117-Jan. 1, 1938 764
Number of cases cared for in Mass. Hosp. School - Canton
4
Number of cases cared for by Div. of Child Guardianship 18
Number of cases cared for in private families-minors
16
Number of cases cared for in private families-adults
13
Number of cases cared for at Tewksbury Infirmary
3
Number of cases cared for at Pondville Hospital
7
Number of cases cared for in Private Hospitals 38
Number of cases cared for in Massachusetts Eye & Ear and
Massachusetts General Hospital (Out-Patient)
12
SUMMARY REPORT Old Age Assistance
Number of cases aided under Chap. 118 G.L. as of Jan. 1, 1937
709
Number of cases aided under Chap. 118 G.L. as of Jan. 1, 1938
858
Number of cases added during 1937 (new 280; reinstated 50)
330
Number of cases closed during 1937 (deaths 73; transfers 29; discontinued 73; admitted to institutions 5; ineligible for grant 1)
181
Number of cases where burial expenses were partly defrayed
24
Number of cases where graves had to be purchased
4
Number of cases hospitalized at Quincy City Hospital
61 6
Number of cases hospitalized at Mass. General Hospital . .. Number of cases hospitalized at Mass. Eye & Ear Infirmary Number of cases hospitalized at Huntington Memorial Hosp. Number of cases requiring convalescent care at Wellington Number of cases boarded at the Wellington Annex
37
7
Number of cases boarded at McAuley Home in Boston
1
Number of cases boarded at McAuley Home in Quincy
2
Number of cases requiring special treatment for cancer
7
Number of cases requiring special emergency medical treat- ment
57
Number of cases requiring dental treatment
20
Number of cases requiring foot treatment
8
Number of cases requiring nursing service in the home
34
Number of cases requiring special medicine not at dispen- sary
35
Number of cases requiring surgical appliances
3
Number of cases requiring glasses
46
Number of cases requiring fuel
47
Analysis of cases on aid Jan. 1, 1938
858
Quincy settled 687
Settled other cities and towns 109
Unsettled cases 62
Applications denied Old Age Assistance during 1937 30
Children able to provide 5 Excess Insurance 4
Transfers of property 5 Excess Carrying Charges 2
Citizenship lacking 2 Not in need 5
Information refused 3 Not deserving 1
No five year residence 3
5
4
258
CITY OF QUINCY
REPORT OF CITY PHYSICIAN
FEBRUARY 24, 1938.
To HIS HONOR, Mayor Thomas S. Burgin
Quincy, Mass.
DEAR SIR:
I beg to submit the following report beginning. February 1, 1937 and ending December 31, 1937:
Number of clinic patients 1218
Number of house visits 975
Number referred to hospital for X-ray, operation and treat- ment 121
Number of patients referred to Dentist
Number referred to eye, ear, nose and throat specialists for treatment and glasses 106
51
Number of vaccinations 69
Number of Police calls
15
Yours truly,
ASTRO A. DiBONA, City Physician.
259
REPORT OF POLICE DEPARTMENT
REPORT OF POLICE DEPARTMENT
JANUARY 1, 1938.
HON. THOMAS S. BURGIN, Mayor of the City of Quincy
DEAR SIR:
I respectfully submit the Annual Report of the Police Depart- ment for the year ending December 31st, 1937.
Personnel of Force
Chief, John J. Avery Captain, Daniel H. Doran
George A. Cahill John M. Casey
George W. Fallon David L. Farrell
Anthony Caperci
Henry F. Corbett
John P. Duffy
Charles O. Hinchon
James W. H. Kemp William F. McIntyre
William Ferrazzi Thomas A. Malone James H. Whelan
Sergeants
James J. Mullin
Edward G. Riley
Henry F. Riley
John J. Sullivan
Fred E. Young
Patrolmen
Walter A. Adams Albert J. Ames
Joseph Belanger
Joseph W. Benn
Thomas J. Brennan
Laurence J. Broderick
Walter R. Buckley John E. Buell
George P. Denneen
George M. Cahill
William F. Dillon
Harold A. Cain
Alfred J. Cappellini
Frank C. Carullo
Walter W. Cobe
Thomas J. Fallon
Jeremiah J. Connelly
Jerome P. Connelly
Michael P. Connolly
Tilden Crooker William E. Crooker
Edward R. Cruise
Stephen J. Cullen
Edmund K. Cunniff
Arthur M. Curry David E. Curtin
Patrick A. Byron
William J. Devine
Thomas J. Duffy John J. Erwin Joseph H. Erwin
George W. Fay
Joseph L. Ferguson Charles L. Ferrazzi
Lieutenants
260
CITY OF QUINCY
Patrolmen
Daniel J. Fitzgerald
John J. Fitzgerald
Walter F. McKenna
Thomas F. McNally
Francis J. Mullen
John J. Flaherty
John O'Brien
Joseph P. Flaherty James E. Ford
Dennis L. Ford
Lawrence J. Galvin
Leonard Palmisano
Angelo P. Gaudiano
Joseph C. Pangraze
James J. Gilmartin
Joseph L. Paradise
Philip J. Grady
Harry P. Pitts
Joseph P. Griffin Leo J. Hannon
Everett J. Reid
Richard W. Hart
Frank C. Hebert
George L. Ross
John R. Saville
Ernest W. Hodge
William N. Schaetzl
Frank L. Schaller
Joseph F. Hughes
Chester N. Inman
John J. Sheehan
James J. Sullivan
Gaudias J. Joubert
Thomas U. Kantola
Robert E. Kelliher
Andrew J. Thompson
Philip F. Kelly
Thomas J. Thompson
Thomas F. Kerwin
Henry W. Thorne
Ralph H. Lewis
Frank W. Vallier
Jeremiah J. Walsh
William C. Wright
John E. Wuerth
Timothy F. McAuliffe
George L. Wyman
John B. Zanotti
Reserves
John J. Bryan James C. Byrne
William Carullo
William H. Corcoran
William McAuliffe
John S. Cryan
Norborth W. McKearney
Ralph T. Moreau
Morgan J. O'Regan
Kenneth S. Poulin
Daniel H. Ford
Leighton P. Rogers
Thomas J. Scanlon
John J. Seller
Harold L. Tobin
Pensioned
Michael F. Donovan Jeremiah Hinchon George F. Phillips
Ernest H. Bishop Daniel J. Collins Edward J. Curtin Jeremiah D. Dhooge
Ralph H. Hatfield
Joseph W. Lind
Daniel McAuliffe
John F. Cunningham John F. Denneen Guido R. DiBona
Walter G. Frye
Edmund F. Genero
Bruno Giudici
Patrick J. Quinn
Joseph A. Rogers
William J. Hebert
John J. Hughes
Carl I. Seppala
Fred L. Jones
Clarence B. Tarr
Alexander D. Thompson
Wilfred Lewis John Looby
James A. D. MacKay
Alexander McDonald
Francis X. McDonald
James O'Connell John O'Connell George E. Ogle
Joseph E. Fitzgerald James A. Flaherty
261
REPORT OF POLICE DEPARTMENT
Arrests by months for year of 1937
Month
Arrests
Males
Females
January
309
294
15
February
245
232
13
March
299
280
19
April
280
256
24
May
293
272
21
June
320
299
21
July
352
315
37
August
358
331
27
September
290
265
25
October
284
257
27
November
177
172
5
....
.....
160
149
11
3,367
3,122
245
Nativity of persons arrested
United States
2,540
Foreign Born
827
Number of arrests for 1933
Total number of arrests
2,848
Number of arrests (males)
2,712
Number of arrests (females)
126
Arrests for drunkenness
861
Arrests for operating under the influence
78
Arrests for violation of liquor laws
77
Number of arrests for 1934
Total number of arrests
3,025
Number of arrests (males)
2,844
Number of arrests (females)
181
Arrests for drunkenness
1,168
Arrests for operating under the influence
111
Arrests for violation of liquor laws
14
Number of arrests for 1935
Total number of arrests
3,063
Number of arrests (males)
2,902
Number of arrests (females)
161
Arrests for drunkenness
1,367
Arrests for operating under the influence ....
125
Arrests for violation of liquor laws
. .
5
Number of arrests for 1936
Total number of arrests
3,480
Number of arrests (males)
3,247
Number of arrests (females)
233
Arrests for drunkenness
1,486
Arrests for operating under the influence
135
Arrests for violation of liquor laws
.
4
.
December
.
262
CITY OF QUINCY
Number of arrests for 1937
Total number of arrests
3,367
Number of arrests (males)
3,122
Number of arrests (females)
245
Arrests for drunkenness
1,367
Arrests for operating under the influence
.... 130
Arrests for violation of liquor laws
. . . .
4
Offences
Assault
2
Assault and battery
88
Assault on Police Officer
2
Assault, felonious
1
Auto, using without authority
14
Breaking and entering
5
Breaking and entering, attempt
4
Breaking and entering and larceny
15
Breaking glass in building
1
Breaking street lights
10
Capias, Superior Court
6
Carnal abuse, female child
9
Causing false alarm of fire
3
City ordinance, violating
74
Concealing leased property
2
Conspiracy
2
Contributing to delinquency
1
Cruelty to animals
1
Default warrant
19
Delinquent children
1
Disorderly conduct, street
25
Disorderly conduct, public place
1
Dogs, keeping unlicensed
53
Drunkenness
1,367
Evading Fare
3
Failure to send child to school
2
Forgery and uttering
1
Fugitive from justice
2
Gaming nuisance
2
Gaming and present at
15
Gaming and keeping implements
17
Gaming on Lord's Day
15
Gaming, present at
11
Habitual absentee
12
Idle and disorderly
4
Illegitimate child act, violating
10
Indecent exposure
2
Injury to real estate
13
Injury to property
21
Larceny
128
Larceny, attempt
7
Larceny of automobile
8
Larceny from building
11
Larceny from person
11
Lewd cohabitation
4
Lewd person
12
Liquor laws, violating
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