Lowell, MA City Directory 1950, Part 2

Author: R.L. Polk & Co
Publication date: 1950
Publisher:
Number of Pages:


USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Lowell > Lowell, MA City Directory 1950 > Part 2


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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Education: Lowell's excellent school system and other educational advantages com- pare very favorably with other cities of its size in the country.


The Lowell High School: A modern building, splendidly equipped, giving training for further study in college, and normal and scientific schools. It has a very extensive commercial course and an equally important household arts course. A very beautiful auditorium, with a seating capacity of 2,000; two gymnasiums, one for boys and one for girls, 'permits dramatic and physical development. The school promotes a very successful athletic program and has a prize-winning band of seventy-five pieces.


Lowell's Public School System includes: Five Junior high schools, fourteen grammar schools, twenty-four primary schools, two mixed grade schools, sixteen kindergartens, one continuation school, one vocational school.


The Catholic Archdiocese of Boston supervises in this city 19 parochial schools from kindergarten through college preparatory in Keith Academy for Boys and Keith Hall for Girls. There is also a well known private school for girls, Rogers Hall, which has also a junior department called the Belvidere School.


Lowell is fortunate in having a State Teachers' College. It is a very beautiful building occupying spacious grounds and giving training to teachers in elementary and secondary schools. It has an enrollment of 300. Lowell has also the distinction of having one of the first and finest textile schools in the country, the Lowell Textile Institute, which is the largest institution of its kind devoted to textile research and ranks well with all the higher collegiate institutions giving technical training.


Industry: Lowell's mills, monuments of industry, are known the world over. But not alone on a foundation of textile supremacy does Lowell base its claims to greatness. In recent years so many industries have settled here, and other classes of goods are so extensively made, that Lowell can be better described at present as the "City of Diversified Industries" and as such, is advancing steadily as a progressive municipality.


All of the products from Lowell's several hundred manufacturing establishments obviously cannot be named here. The following alphabetical list serves to indicate the great diversity of its products:


Acids, aluminum castings, appliance cords, aprons, art gum, ash sifters, automobile polish, automobile tops and curtains, automobile upholstering, artificial flowers, artificial limbs, awnings and tents.


Badges, bags (coal, grain and laundry), balers, banners, barrel heads, bathing suits, beds (spring), bedding, beverages, bindings (shoe), blankets, bleaching compounds, bleach- ing, blowers and fans, blueing, bobbins, boilers, book binders, box shooks, boxes (paper and wooden), braid, broadcloth, brooms, brushes, buffing wheels, bungs and plugs, bunting, buttons.


Cabinets, cables, candies, canvas, caps, card clothing, card grinders, carpets and rugs, carriages and wagons, cassimeres, ceiling, celluloid goods, chambrays, chemicals, cigars, cider, cleansing compounds, coated products, cologne, concrete blocks, cookies, coopers' specialties, coke, copper kettles, cord (tinsel), corduroys, corner bead, cornices and sky lights, corsets, cotton machinery, cotton goods, cotton waste, cotton yarn, crackers, crayons, curtains, cut glass, combs, cups (paper).


Dentrifice, dolls, doors, dress goods, dresses, dust collectors, and separators, duck, dyers and finishers.


Elastic goods, electric wire, elevator cars and enclosures, electrotypes, engraving, eye glasses.


Fences, fertilizers, filters, floor coverings, food products, foundries, (brass, bronze, iron), French flannels, furniture polish, furniture, furniture novelties.


Gabardine, gasoline pumps and storage tanks, grinding machines, glue and granite. Harnesses, hosiery, hat bands.


Ice cream, ice picks, ice creepers, ignition apparatus, insulated wire and cables, iron work.


Jewelry. Khakies.


Laces (shoe), ladders, safety ladder foot suction grips, lamp (auto, house, etc.), lamp frames, leather (upper and artificial), life rafts, loom harness, loom pick counters, loom supplies, lunch carts.


Machines (textile, transmission, vulcanizing, hydraulic, wood working, others), mag- netos, mailing cases, mechanical specialties, medicines, mirrors, mohair, monuments, mops.


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Napkins, narrow fabrics, neckwear, needles (textile and phonograph). Parachutes, paper tubes, peanut butter, pen stocks, perfumes, piano parts, pile fabrics, polishing wheels, potato chips, poplins, pillows, pumps.


Refrigerator units, reps, rayon, roll covering, rolls, rugs.


Sateens, saw mill machinery, scales, screens, screen machine products, screws, sewing thread, scrim, shafting and hangers, sheetings, sheet metal products, shirtings, men's shirts, shoes, shooks, shuttles, silks, silk thread, signs (advertising), skewers, skylights, soap, spools, stair treads, steel wire, stove polish, structural steel and iron work, sweaters.


Tape (adhesive), tanks and vats, taps, telephone cords, textile supplies, tickets (pari- mutual), tire re-treads, timers, tinsel, tire chains, toilet articles, toilet paper, tools, towels, toys.


Underwear.


Velveteens, ventilators, vinegar, viscol, vises.


Weather strips, wire cloth, women's wear, wood products, wooden patterns, woc! scouring and carbonizing, woolen goods, worsted goods.


Yeast, yarns.


The city of Lowell is well served by these public utility corporations. The Locks and Canals Corporation; the Lowell Electric Light Corp; and the Lowell Gas Light Company, furnishing water, light and power, and light and heat respectively in good measure and at reasonable rates. The Boston & Maine and the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroads furnish transportation in freight and passenger service and many inter-state bus lines use the city as a terminal.


Lowell is an ideal location for industries of every type. The city's transportation needs are furnished by the Eastern Mass. Street Railway Company and an up-to-date bus service transports workers from their homes to the down-town shopping area and indus- trial plants. Telephone and Telegraph service is furnished by the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company and the Western Union.


One daily newspaper with national and international news service, two Sunday news- papers, and a Tri-weekly published French newspaper, give the city its news. Lowell's trading population is estimated at 250,000 persons and the city is an ideal shopping center for a number of cities and towns north of Boston.


Lowell is a tourist center. It receives many visitors on their way to the celebrated White Mountains.


Industrially, the city has tremendous advantages for any manufacturing business. Its close proximity to the large markets in the East; its excellent transportation facilities; its contented and non-migratory labor, all serve as an inducement to the manufacturer seeking a location with such attributes. Its supply of good water for power and process is not only excellent but plentiful and practically unlimited. Soft water is becoming more and more important in the industrial world today and Lowell has, in the Merrimack and Concord Rivers, an almost endless supply of such water.


"The trend of the city as a whole is definitely upward" says a report of the Depart- ment of Labor and Industries of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Division of Statistics in its Census of Manufacturers for the City of Lowell.


The Lowell Chamber of Commerce is now, and has always been playing a prominent part in the raising of the industrial status of the community. The organization's willing- ness to aid the city's industries and all classes of its citizens has established for it in the community a confidence among employers, employees, municipal authorities and business men that is a notable phase of the municipality.


The Chamber of Commerce will welcome inquiries and is desirous of contacting manu- facturers interested in knowing about the city's possibilities for the successful and profit- able operation of their businesses. A manufacturer seeking a New England location should place the city of Lowell foremost on his list and write to the Lowell Chamber of Commerce. at 45 Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass., for full particulars.


11


POLK'S LOWELL CITY DIRECTORY 1950


Copyright, 1950, by R. L. Polk & Co.


Miscellaneous Information


For information not found in this department see regular Alphabetical Section or under proper headings in the Classified Business Directory


Y'RT .IS


City Charter approved April 1, 1936; Revised Charters accepted July 1, 1875, November 3, 1876, November 7, 1911, October 18, 1920 and November 7, 1922. Plan E adopted Novem- ber 3, 1943 to go in effect January 1, 1944 after 1943 election


City Election biennially on the Tuesday following the first Monday of November in the odd numbered years. City Government organized first Monday of January


CITY GOVERNMENT


MAYOR WM C GEARY Salary, $5,000


CITY MANAGER JOHN J FLANNERY Salary $15,000


NINE COUNCILORS


Salary, $4000 each Terms Two Years 1950-1951


George A Ayotte Bartholomew J Callery jr George C Eliades William C Geary Vincent Hockmeyer John J Janas Leo A Roy Edward F Ryan Henry J Sullivan


CITY OFFICERS


City Clerk-Wm H Sullivan Asst City Clerk-Susan A Pyne City Messenger-John E Hart


City Treasurer and Collector of Taxes- J Russell Harrington Asst City Treasurer-Chas A Gallagher City Auditor-Danl E Martin Purchasing Agt-Martin D Sullivan Supt of Streets-Geo P LeGrand. Chief Clerk, Clinton P Tuttle City Engineer-Stephen Kearney City Solicitor-P Harold Ready Asst City Solicitor-Jas D O'Hearn City Physician-Dr Charles L Brennan Building Commissioner-Frank P McNeil;


Deputy Commissioner-Francis P Cogger


Real Estate Department-Ernest P Par- sons, agent


City Auctioneer-Ernest P Parsons


City Elevator Inspector-Geo H Coulombe Chief Engineer of Fire Dept - Chas F Stackpole


Forest Warden- Chas F Stackpole


Assessors of Taxes-John H Dwyer (Chair- man), John H Bruin, Raymond E Desche- neaux


Board of Public Welfare - 140 Cabot. Dr Harry R Coburn, chairman; Pierre La- Blanc, Eug A Fitzgerald, supt; Thomas P Ahearn, Arthur G Delorme. Division of Aid to Dependent Children-Mrs Sadie McMani- mon, supvr. Division of Aid and Relief- Patk F Flannery, supvr. Bureau of Old Age Assistance-Wm R Maloney, M Josephine Molloy, supvrs


Francis Farris Memorial Hospital-Arthur G Delorme


City Dispensary, 140 Cabot, Pharmacist- Geo A Bordeleau. Asst-Herbert T White Health Department-Clinic Building 63 Kirk Street.


Board of Health-Dr Joseph D Sweeney chairman, Hector N Desmarais, Robt R Thomas


Director of Health and Hygiene Dr Geo L Duggan. Principal Clerk-Eva M Lan- tagne. Chief Health Inspector, Augustus W Mckeon. Inspectors-Health, J Jos Kilmar- tin, John M Murphy, Plumbing, Chas N Midwood, Wm I Ryan, Meat, Leo J Daley. Milk-Melvin F Master, Animals, Winslow E Merrill. Health Physicians-Vaccinating, Augustine E Conroy, MD. Bacteriologist, Dr James Y Rodger. Bacteriologist Technician and Inspector-J Joseph Kilmartin. Venereal Disease, Harold L Leland, Max H Hymen.


12


School Physicians, Fred J Loughran, N Rich- ard Namay, Louis A Sicard, C Stoyle Baker, Philip E Mullane, Harry R Coburn, Manfred E Simmons, Leonard J Hall, Geo J Grant. School Dentists, Jas C Coughlin, Thos P Don- nelly. Dental Hygienists, Mrs Lillian Walsh Murphy, Mrs Gertrude S Handley. Senior Clerks, Lillian M Mullaney, Josephine H Juan. Senior Clerk-Telephone Operator, Lucy M Plunkett. Junior Clerk-Stenogra- pher, Esther R Hurley.


Isolation Hospital-David Glickman, Supt


Election Commissioners-Neil J Moynihan, chairman; Lucien A Desmarais, Robt J Des- mond, Harold W Hartwell jr


Housing Authority, 562 Market-Francis H McGurn, chairman; Geo W Normandin, vice- chairman; Jas L Cooney, John H Dwyer, Leo F McCarthy, exec board; John J McPad- den, exec dir and mgr


Retirement Board-Danl E Martin, chair- man; Alice J Sullivan, Executive sec; Chas A Gallagher, Thos F Joyce


Park Commissioners-Bernard J Kirk, chairman; Geo P LeGrand, John V McMan- mon, Chas D Slattery, Danl D O'Dea, John F LeCam, Sec


Lowell Stadium Commission - Clement C Costello, chairman; Thos J Saunders sec and Leander J Marion


1


Board of Cemetery Commissioners-Office at Edson Cemetery, Wm D Whittet, chairman, Jas E Mountford, Harry I Willard, Sam As- quith, Archibald Campbell. Clerk of Board, Orrin S Mckenzie


Supt Cemeteries Dept, Orrin S Mckenzie


Fish and Game Warden-Jos P Kenefick


Sealer of Weights and Measures-John L Sullivan; Deputy Sealers, Harold J Brunelle, Jas J Lahiff, Maurice B Racicot


Supt Soldiers' Benefit-Edw J Early


Inspector of Animals-Dr Winslow E Mer- rill


Supt of Wires-Francis H McGurn


Registrar of Labor Clerk-Alphee J Achin


Water Dept-Supt, Peter F Riopelle (act- ing; Asst Supt,


Commissioners to Qualify Civil Officers- District Court of Lowell, 41 Hurd. Raymond P Bourgeois, Clerk of District Court; Jos A Donohoe, Asst Clerk of District Court; Julian B Keyes, Edw W Trull


Commissioners to take Bail in Criminal Cases-Raymond P Bourgeois and Joseph A Donohoe at District Court House, 41 Hurd; Frank J Garvey, Louis A Desmarais, masters in chancery; Geo E Burns, bail comnr


License Commissioners-Office, Police bldg, 40 Market st. Robt J Lewis, Chairman, Wm F Barrett, Willis J Peltier, John J Flaherty, exec sec


Trustees of Lowell Memorial Auditorium- The City Manager, ex-officio; Lucien R Bru- nelle, chairman; Wm Brady, Jas W Flood


Board of Appeals-Harrison E Byam, John S O'Connor, Harry S Drury, Francis M Shea. acting clk


Planning Board-The Inspector of Build- ings and the Chairman of Park Commission, ex-officio, Geo Walsh, Jas A Lowrey, Edw J Flynn, Edw J Saunders, Maurice H Powers


Veterans Service Center - Edw J Early, supt


FIRE DEPARTMENT


Headquarters, Central Fire Sta 45 Palmer


Chief Engineer, Chas F Stackpole. Asst Chiefs, Thos J Burke, Walter J Kane, Fran- cis J Kelleher, John F Thomas, Fredk V Fa- hey. Jas F Grantz, Geo W Nickerson. Supt Fire Alarm, Raymond F Larkham. Fire Pre- vention, Capt Lieut Inspectors, Thomas J Gillick, John J Mulligan


Engine No 1, 795 Gorham-Capt Danl F O'Connor, Lieut Edw V Fuller


Engine No 2, 45 Branch-Captain, Henry A Doyle. Lieut, Thos M Comer


Engine No 3, 45 Palmer cor Middle-Capt, Jos H Lemire. Lieut, Cornelius T Finnegan


Engine No 4, 198 High-Capt, John J Wholey. Lieut, Cornelius P Nelligan


Engine No 5, 29 Fourth-Capt Jos M Gal- lego. Lieut, Jas T Keefe


Engine No 6, 284 W Sixth-Capt, Francis P Kelly. Lieut, John B Caron


Engine No 7, 273 Stevens-Capt, Bernard F Connors. Lieut, Michl J Gildea


Engine No 8, Merrimack cor Race-Capt, Geo A Crawford. Lieut, Frank J Broadbent


Engine No 9, 500 Rogers-Capt, John H Quinn. Lieut, John Austin Carey


Engine No 10, 97 Mammoth rd-Capt, Wal- ter E McNally. Lieut, Paul V Beauregard -Engine No 11, 743 Lawrence Capt, Patk E Linnehan. Lieut, Geo T Underwood


Truck No 1, 741 Lawrence Capt, Michl H Creegan. Lieut, John J Miskell


Ladder No 2, 45 Branch-Capt, Joseph A Ready. Lieut, Robt P Connaughton


Truck No 3, 47 Palmer-Capt, Chas J Lori- gan. Lieut, Clinton E Howe


Truck No 4, 284 W Sixth-Capt Wm J Corbett; Lieut, Wm C Baldwin


Rescue Co No 1, 45 Palmer-Capt, Francis J O'Loughlin. Lieut, Leighton E Gendron


Firemen's Fund Association


Pres, Eug A LaFerriere. Clerk John E Slavin. Treas, John F Thomas. This associ- ation is composed of the whole fire depart- ment and managed by a board of trustees, one from the board of engineers and two from each company, who meet first Friday evening of each month in the engineer's rooms, 45 Palmer st at 8 o'clock


Fire Alarm Telegraph


Raymond F Larkham, Superintendent. Middle corner Pal- mer.


Alarms are sounded by striking four rounds of the box num- ber. In cases where two alarms may have been given from different boxes, the second box baving struck before the re- call from the first box, the re-call signal from the first box will be two blows, the re-call from the second box will be one.


The all-out or re-call signal will be given by striking two single blows with an interval of ten seconds between the blows.


Second alarms will be given by striking two blows, followed immediately by box number.


Third alarm or general alarm will be given by striking three blows, followed immediately by box number, giving tbe fre alarm, when all companies will respond immediately.


No fourth alarm. Outside bells are disconnected doing away with this signal.


The bells will be struck once at 8 a m, 1 p m and 6 p m.


Location of Fire Alarm Signal Stations


12 Moody, cor Worthen


. 13 Market, cor Dutton 119 Salem nr Common av 14 Merrimack, cor Tremont 121 Western av near RR crossing


15 Cushing, cor Fletcher 16 MtVernon, cor Broadway


17 Rock, cor Willie


18 Dutton & Fletcher


19 Fletcher, cor Broadway


112 Dutton, opp Parker Of- fice 113 Lewis, cor Bway 114 Moody, cor Race 115 Moody, cor Aiken 116 Adams, cor Cross 117 School, cor Rock


118 Aiken, cor Hall


123 Merrimack, cor Spalding 124 Pawtucket, cor Fletcher 125 Market, cor Hanover 126 MtWashington, cor Var- ney 127 School, cor Oliver 128 Tremont and Suffolk Mills 129 Salem, cor Bowers 131 School, cor Pawtucket 132 Pawtucket, cor Moody 134 Merrimack Mfg Co


13


135 StJoseph's Hospital 137 N E Southern Warehouse, Tremont st 138 Cheever, cor Tucker 148 Ward, cor Pawtucket 151 Tremont cor Suffolk 158 Suffolk, cor Perkins st


159 Sunoco Co, Perkins 21 Merrimack, cor Kirk 23 Middle, cor Palmer 24 Middlesex, cor South 25 Police Station 40 Market 26 Kearney Square 27 Central, cor Warren 28 Central, cor Green 29 Dutton, nr Bway


213 Boott Cotton Mills 214 Gorham, cor Union 215 Highland, cor South 216 Lawrence, cor Wamesit


217 John, cor Paige 218 Appleton, cor Favor 219 Middlesex, cor Thorndike


221 Kinsman, cor Whipple


223 Gorham, cor Thorndike


224 Newhall, cor Croshy 225 Central, cor Mill 226 Central, cor Chapel 227 Lawrence, cor North 228 Warren, cor George


229 Central, cor Tyler


231 Central, cor Middle


232 Gorham, cor Appleton 234 Appleton Mfg Co


235 Mass Mills


238 General Electric Co, Jackson st


31 Chelmsford, cor Westford


32 Chelmsford, cor Grand


33 Broadway, cor Walker 34 Howard, cor Hale 35 Middlesex, cor Grand 36 Westford, cor Gates 37 Middlesex, cor Saunders


38 Branch, cor School 39 Thorndike, cor Highland 312 Westford, cor School 313 School, cor Liherty 314 Dover, cor Grove 315 Branch, cor Walker 316 Walker, cor Pawtucket 317 Westford, cor Hastings 318 Wilder, cor Middlesex 321 Bellevue, cor Sheldon 323 U S Ruhher Co- Marginal st 324 U S Ruhher Co- Bway cor Parker


325 Merrimack Shoe Co- Thorndike 41 Chelmsford, cor Lincoln


42 Lincoln, cor Tanner


43 Tanner, nr Scannell's Boiler Works 45 Moore, cor Bleachery 46 Moore, cor Agawam 47 Gorham, cor Ellsworth


48 Gorham, cor Manchester 49 Gorham, cor Lundberg 412 Main, cor Plain 413 Harvard Brewing Co 414 Boston rd, cor Fruit 415 Gorham, cor Bowden 416 London, cor Autumn 417 Chelmsford, cor Powell 418 City Hospital


419 Meadowcroft, cor Bolt 421 Lawrence, cor Moore


422 US Cartridge Co 423 Faulkner opp Engine House


425 Stromquist av, cor Weed 426 Hill & Cutler Co-Gor- ham 436 Maple, cor Gorham 5 Smith, cor Powell 51 Shaw, cor South Loring 52 Pine, cor Wilder 53 Westford, cor Stevens 54 Princeton, cor Windsor 55 Marlborough, cor Pine 56 Westford, cor Sayles 57 Chelmsford, cor Jenness 58 StPeter's Orphanage 59 B street, cor Puffer 512 Marginal, cor Stevens 513 Middlesex, cor Pawtucket 515 Middlesex, cor Baldwin 516 Middlesex, cor Wood


517 Shaw Machine Co 518 Princeton, cor Cashin 519 Middlesex, cor Brouillette


521 Westford, cor Pine 522 Midland, cor Lang 524 Stevens, cor Victoria 525 StMargaret's Church, Stevens st 526 Parker, sor Ruth


527 Middlesex st at EM St Ry garage 528 Mckinley av cor Royls- ton av 6 Bridge, cor First 61 Bridge, cor West Sixth


62 Lake View av, cor Co- hurn 63 W 6th st Pumping Sta- tion


64 Third, cor Myrtle 65 Lake View av, cor En- nell 67 Hildreth, cor Lilley av 68 Sixth, cor Fremont


69 Bridge, cor Tenth


612 Lake View av, cor Fred 613 Aiken av, cor Cumher- land rd


614 Tenth, cor Myrtle 615 Methuen, cor Beacon 616 Thirteenth, cor May 617 Tenth, cor Christian


618 Bridge, cor Eighteenth 619 Eighteenth, cor Beacon 621 Third, cor Vernon 622 Aiken, cor Lilley av 623 Beaulieu, cor Victor


624 West cor W Sixth 625 Myrtle cor Sixth


631 Richards cor Beacon Housing Project, First


7 Mammoth rd cor Varnum av


71 Mammoth rd, cor Wood- ward av


72 Moody, cor Fourth av


73 Mammoth rd, cor Eighth av 74 Varnum av, cor W Mea- dow rd


75 Moody, cor Riverside


76 MtHope, cor Sixth av


77 Riverside, cor New York 78 Varnum av, cor Fowler rd 712 Malden, cor Townsend


714 Varnum av cor Boulevard


715 Sparks cor Martin


718 Isolation Hospital, West Meadow rd 721 Lowell General Hosp


8 Howe, cor East Merri- mack 81 Andover, cor Fayette


82 High cor East Merrimack


83 Perry, Electric Light Station 84 Andover, cor Nesmith


85 East Merrimack, cor Nesmith 86 Nesmith, cor Wyman


87 Fairmount, cor Talhot


88 East Merrimack cor Stackpole 89 High, cor Porter


811 StJohn's Hospital


812 opp 292 Andover, B F Butler's Driveway 813 Wentworth av, cor Glen- wood


814 Parkview av, cor Hovey 815 Andover, cor Clark rd


816 Rogers, cor Phoenix


817 Rogers, cor Fairmount 818 Warrenville


819 American Leather Co 821 Lawrence, cor Morton 822 Rogers, cor Perry


823 Lawrence, cor Boylston


824 Woburn, cor Circuit av 825 Nesmith, cor Rogers


826 Moody School


827 Fairmount, cor Whitman 832 Auditorium 50 East Mer- rimack 834 Wohurn, cor Billerica 835 Commonwealth av cor Woburn


836 Luce


1


LIBRARY AND READING ROOM, CITY


Memorial Bldg, 401 Merrimack St


Trustees, City Manager, ex-officio, and the following persons appointed by the City Manager; John H McNabb, John C Leggat, Rabbi Joseph Warren, Dr Leonard J Hall, Geo C Eliades. Librarian, Hugh F Downey. This library contains 140,000 volumes, and is open every day (Sundays and holidays excepted) from 9 a m to 9 p m. Summer


schedule in effect from June 15 to Sept 15. Young Peoples Dept open daily from 9 a m to 5:30 p m. Sub-stations at William H Noonan's Drug Store, 305 Bridge and Rouine's Drug Store, 938 Gorham, Washing- ton School, Oakland School, Pawtucket School, Greenhalge School, Lincoln School, Morey School, Riverside School and Varnum School


POLICE DEPARTMENT 40 Market


Supt of Police, John T Sayers, Deputy Supt, Francis M O'Loughlin (acting). Cap- tains, Wm F Murphy, John P Clancy, Owen S Conway, Robt C Crowley, John H Graham, John J Murray. Lieut, Walter L Kivlan. Sergeants, Robt T Mulvey, Frank H Murphy


Constables To Serve Civil Processes (See Classified Business Directory)


District Court of Lowell Formerly Police Court


Court House, 41 Hurd. Presiding Justice, Arthur L Eno. Special Justice, John H Val- entine. Clerk, Raymond P Bourgeois. Asst Clerk, Jos A Donohoe. Sessions are held for the trial of criminal cases every week day at 9 a m. Entry day for civil cases every Sat at 9 a m. Civil Trial days Tues and Thurs at 9 a m.


Court Officer, John T McDermott


Chief Probation Officer, Jos L Cronin


Probation Officer for Women and Girls, Mrs Grace M Blazon


Probation Officer for Juveniles, Wm J Craig


SCHOOL DEPARTMENT School Committee


Mayor, ex-officio, Chairman; Wm C Geary, Albert E Brunelle, Richd E Burns, Arthur Lewis Eno jr, Roger S Hoar, Xenophon D Michopoulos, Paul A Sullivan


Supt of Schools, Vincent M McCartin. Of- fice, City Hall. Hours 11:30 a m to 12:30 p m; at other times including Saturdays by appointment. Asst Supt of Schools, Patk J Hetherman. Office, City Hall


High School


30 Kirk. Headmaster, Raymond A Sulli- van. Master, Jos G Pyne. Submasters, Wm J Brown, Jas F Conway, Wm A Donovan, J Emile Lemire, Francis P McHugh


Junior High Schools


Bartlett, 30 Kirk-Prin, Thos F McSorley Butler, 840 Gorham-Master, Chas E De- Lorme


Charles W Morey, 114 Pine-Master, Wm J O'Brien


Moody, 158 Rogers - Master, D Murray Cummings


Pawtucket, 117 Mammoth rd-Master, Jos A McAvinnue .


Varnum, 115 Sixth-Master, Leo A King


Grammar Schools


Abraham Lincoln, 300 Chelmsford-Master, John J Gardner jr


Butler, 840 Gorham-Master, Chas E De Lorme


Charles W Morey, 114 Pine-Master, Wm J O'Brien


Colburn, 122 Lawrence-Master, Edwin S Markham


Green, 408 Merrimack-Master, Martin E Connors


Greenhalge, 149 Ennell-Master, John G Wolcott


Hugh J Molloy, 125 Smith-Master, Thos A Ginty


14


Moody, 158 Rogers - Master D Murray Cummings


Oakland, 54 Sycamore-Master, Kenneth N Goward Pawtucket, 117 Mammoth rd-Master, Jos A McAvinnue


Riverside, 73 Woburn-Master, Francis P McGee


Varnum, 115 Sixth-Master, Leo A King


Washington, 25 Lang-Master, Henry E McGowan


Primary Schools


Abraham Lincoln, 300 Chelmsford-Master, John J Gardner jr


Ames-Street, 30 Ames st-Acting Principal, Julia C O'Sullivan


Cardinal O'Connell, 21 Carter-Prin, Helen R Kelleher


Central-Street, 739 Central-Prin, Mary A Kelleher


Cross-Street, 170 Cross-Prin,


Dover-Street, 36 Dover-Prin, Anna J Mas- terson


Eliot, 10 Favor-Prin, M Grace McCue


Greenhalge, 149 Ennell-Master, John G Wolcott


Hugh J Molloy, 125 Smith-Master, Thos A Ginty


Laura E Lee, 235 Powell-Prin, Mary E Richardson


Lexington-Avenue, 145 Lexington av- Prin, Marion E McMaster




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