Official reports of the town of Wayland 1933-1935, Part 10

Author: Wayland (Mass.)
Publication date: 1933
Publisher: Printed at the Middlesex Freeman Office
Number of Pages: 658


USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Wayland > Official reports of the town of Wayland 1933-1935 > Part 10


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).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28


(d) Schools, public libraries, fire stations, art museums, churches, parish houses, and Sunday school buildings, the build- ings of membership clubs devoted to outdoor sports and social and recreational buildings and premises, except those a chief activity of which is one customarily carried on as a gainful business ; telephone buildings, parks, water supply reservations, soldiers' or sailors' memorial buildings.


(e) Real estate signs, referring only to the premises or tract on which they are located, and having an area not exceed- ing six square feet.


(f) Nurseries, truck gardens, farms, and greenhouses ; provided that any greenhouse heating plant, and any building in which farm or pleasure animals are kept shall be distant not less than twenty feet from any lot line.


(g) Hospitals, not for the insane or feeble-minded, pro- vided that no building be within thirty feet of any street or lot line.


(h) Public or charitable institutional buildings not of a correctional nature, provided that no building thereon be within thirty feet of any street or lot line.


(i) Accessory uses customary with or incident to any aforesaid permitted use and located on the same lot therewith, including garages, and stables under conditions specified.


(j) The term accessory use shall not include any activity conducted for gain or any walk or driveway giving access thereto, or any billboard advertising sign or poster, except for small bulletin boards; provided, however, that a builder, car- penter, mason, plumber, painter, roofer, tinsmith, upholsterer,


213


or machinist, who lives and maintains a home on the premises, may use an accessory building in connection with his trade under a yearly permit from the Board of Appeal on condition that no manufacturing or other business requiring substantially con- tinuous employment be carried on therein, and that the other conditions of section (r) be complied with.


(k) No accessory building shall be occupied for residence purposes, except that an upper floor of a garage or stable may be occupied by an employee of the owner or tenant of the premises.


(1) Railroad passenger stations or rights of way includ- ing customary accessory services therein ; not including switch- ing, storage or freight yards or sidings.


(m) Cemeteries, including any crematory therein.


The Board of Appeal may under restrictions which will carry out the provisions of this by-law and tend to protect and improve the neighborhood issue the following permits :


(n) Boat or canoe livery, subject to provisions of section (r).


(o) For yearly terms only a roadside stand for the sale of the produce of the land of the owner and of other land within the Town, provided that the front yard regulations and all other conditions imposed by the Board of Appeal are complied with.


(p) Private garages for more than three cars, and stables having horses for hire.


(q) The removal of sod, loam, sand, gravel, or quarried stone for sale except when incidental to and in connection with the construction of a building for which a permit has been issued shall be permitted only if permission of the Board of Appeal be obtained in accordance with the procedure provided in para- graph (r) and only under such conditions as the Board may impose, but nothing contained in this section shall prevent the continued use of any land for the purpose for which it is used at the time this section takes effect or prevent the use of any land for farms, gardens, nurseries, cemeteries, parks, play- grounds, and such purposes as are incidental to or usual in con- nection with any of said purposes.


(r) Permits by Board of Appeals Required


Where special permits by the Board of Appeals are required


214


under this and other sections, the building inspector or other person designated by the Selectmen to issue permits as herein- after provided shall issue no permit until so directed in writing by the Board of Appeals. Upon application for such a permit the Board shall give not less than seven (7) days' public notice by publication in a newspaper and by mail to the applicant and to the owners of all property deemed by the Board as affected by such a permit, and shall hold a hearing and render a decision. The applicant shall show to the satisfaction of the Board that the use of the premises for which application is made shall not constitute a nuisance because of noise, vibration, smoke, gas, fumes, odor, dust or other objectionable features, and that such use shall not otherwise be injurious to the inhabitants or their property, or dangerous to the public health or safety. When not so satisfied the Board shall refuse a permit. When, in the opinion of the Board, such a permit may be granted if accom- panied by conditions specially designed to safeguard the district and the Town, it shall impose such conditions and make them a part of the decision, and they shall be made a part of the permit issued by the building inspector.


BUSINESS DISTRICTS


Section VI.


(a) Any use permitted in a residence district.


(b) Dwelling, including apartment house or tenement house and hotel.


(c) Bank or office.


(d) Place of amusement or assembly.


(e) Public building.


(f) Gasoline filling stations and oil stations, salesrooms for motor vehicles, garage repair shops and stables. Every gaso- line filling station shall hereafter be located so that no filling shall be done except into cars standing on the property of the filling station.


Any other retail business or service not involving manufacture on the premises, except of products the major por- tion of which are to be sold at retail by the manufacturer to the consumer, and provided further that not more than five opera- tives shall be employed in such manufacture, but this section shall not be interpreted to include an airplane landing field.


215


LIGHT INDUSTRIAL DISTRICTS


Section VII.


(a) Any purpose permitted under Sections V and VI.


(b) Lumber, fuel, feed and ice establishments, contrac- tors' yards.


(c) Light manufacturing, employing electricity and/or other unobjectionable motive power, utilizing hand labor and/or unobjectionable machinery and/or processes and free from neighborhood disturbing odors and/or other agencies.


(d) No permit shall be granted under (b) and (c) of this section except with the written approval of the Board of Ap- peals and subject to the provisions of Section V (r).


HEIGHT REGULATIONS


Section VIII.


a-Residence districts


(1) The limit of height of all buildings in residence dis- tricts shall be two and one half stories, not to exceed thirty- five feet, except that schools and on lots of five acres and over dwellings may be three stories high.


(2) The limitations of height in feet shall not apply to chimneys, ventilators, skylights, tanks, bulkheads, pent-houses and other necessary features usually carried 'above roofs, not to towers or spires of churches and other buildings, if such features are in no way used for living purposes.


b-Business and Light Industrial districts


(1) The limit of height in business and light industrial districts shall be three stories, not to exceed forty feet.


AREA AND YARD REGULATIONS


Section IX.


(a) No building or structure in any district shall extend within thirty feet of any street line, except that ground story porches or projections may extend within twenty feet of any street line and a two story porch, unenclosed at least half of the year, may project six feet into the front yard.


(b) And further, no building or structure in any district


216


shall extend within fifty feet of centre line of said street, whether accepted or not except as herein before provided.


(c) In residence districts where there are two or more then existing buildings between two intersecting streets and within two hundred feet of the lot in question, any building or structure on the lot may extend as near the street line as the average alignment of such then existing buildings except that when such existing buildings are more than thirty feet from street line, a new building shall extend only as near the street line as the average setback of the existing buildings.


(d) On a corner lot no planting, structure, or part of a building shall extend within twenty feet of any corner street line intersection so as to interfere with the traffic visibility around the corner.


(e) Any building lot hereafter laid out in a residence dis- trict shall contain a minimum of ten thousand square feet, and shall have a frontage of not less than eighty feet on any street line.


(f) Dwellings hereafter erected on land not fronting on a street shall have not less than the minimum lot area as pro- vided.


Back Yards


(g) Behind every dwelling there shall be provided a back yard between the rear line of the house and the rear lot line, not less than thirty feet in depth. A back yard may contain acces- sory buildings not over one and one-half stories high and cover- ing not over thirty per cent of its area.


Side Yards


(h) At each side of every dwelling there shall be a side yard not less than fifteen feet in clear width, between the side of the house and the side lot line, except in specific cases when existing lots are less than the minimum width prescribed in this by-law. In such cases a side yard not less than ten feet in width may be permitted by the Board of Appeals.


Yards for Non-Residential Buildings


(i) Any use, not residential or accessory, shall observe all provisions of this by-law in regard to depth and width of yards as applied to dwellings.


217


Percentage of Lot Covered


(j) The percentage of lot which may be covered by any building shall in no instance exceed the following :


1. In residence districts 20%.


2. In business districts 70% of a corner lot and 75% of an interior lot, providing that no rear yard of a building hereafter erected shall be less than fifteen feet in depth. The open space required in this paragraph shall be located in such a way as, in the opinion of the building inspector or other permit issuing officer as hereafter provided to properly light and ven- tilate the building, and to provide access in case of fire.


BOARD OF APPEAL


Section X.


a-A Board of Appeal of three members to be appointed by the Selectmen is hereby created under provisions of Chapter 40 and amendments thereto to assume the duties and powers given to such Board hereinbefore stated and further powers as follows :


1. To adapt the requirements of this by-law to irregular, narrow, or shallow lots or those unusual either in shape or topography, provided that the spirit and intent of this by-law with regard to open spaces is preserved.


2. To permit a substitution for or an extension or alter- ation to an existing building whether conforming or non-con- forming in accordance with provisions on use.


3. To grant temporary and conditional permits of lim- ited duration for non-conforming uses and buildings incidental to development operations.


4. Permit conversion of a one-family house existing at the time this by-law is adopted into a two-family house.


5. Permit enlarging an old or locating a new ice house as needs may require, with such conditions as will protect the community.


ENFORCEMENT


Section XI.


Until such time as the Town may adopt by-laws providing


218 .


for a building inspector, upon the adoption of which the duties of issuing permits under this by-law shall automatically devolve upon him, the Board of Selectmen may designate a suitable per- son to issue permits under this by-law, and to administer its provisions.


He shall approve no application of any kind, plans and specifications and intended use for which are not in all respects in conformity with this by-law.


Applications for permits shall be accompanied by an ade- quate description of lot, present buildings thereon, and location of proposed building on the lot, together with plans for pro- posed buildings, and shall in all cases comply with the provisions of this by-law.


219


INDEX


Assessors' Report 144


Board of Commissioners of Trust Funds, Report of 98


Board of Health, Report of 151


Board of Public Welfare, Report of the 156 Old Age Assistance 156


Cemetery Commissioners, Report of the 205


Chief of Police, Report of the


147


Civil Works Administration 155


District Nurse, Report of


153


District Vote for Representative


62


Highway Department, Report of 154


Inspector of Animals, Report of 152


Inventory of Town Property 207


Jury List 71


Middlesex County Extension Service


158


Milk Inspector, Report of 152


Moth Superintendent, Report of


149


Officers of the Town of Wayland 3


Park Commissioners, Report of 157


Planning Board, Report of the 146


19


Finance Committee, Report of Budget for 1934 21


Fire Engineers, Report of the 148


Public Library


Librarian's Report 190


List of New Books 193


Treasurer's Report 188


Trustees, Report of the 187


Results of Special Election, June 13, 1933 63


Results of Special Election, March 21, 1933 61


Results of Special Primary, March 7, 1933 61


Results of Town Election, March 6, 1933 58


School Department


Census Returns 179


Current Registration 181


Elementary Class Roll, 1933 184


Financial Statement 165


High School Class Roll, 1933


184


High School Principal, Report of the 174


Membership by Age and Grade, October 1, 1933 182


Organization of Teaching Staff, January 3, 1934 185


Roll of Students Perfect in Attendance 183


School Committee, Report of the 163


School Directory 162


School Nurse, Report of the 177


School Physician, Report of 175


Superintendent of Schools, Report of 171


178


Supervisor of Attendance, Report of the


Sealer of Weights and Measures 150


Selectmen's Report 97


State Audit 73


Tax Collector, Report of 109


Town Accountant, Report of the 114


Balance Sheet, December 31, 1933 142


Expenditures Itemized 118


Receipts Itemized 114


Receipts 1933. Classified 133


Payments 1933. Classified 134


Tax Balances, December 31, 1933 135


Town Clerk's Report Births 64


Deaths 68


Dogs Licensed 1933 70


Marriages


66


Town Treasurer, Report of 101


Votes Enacted at the Annual Town Meeting, March 8, 1933 33


Votes Enacted at the Special Town Meeting,


January 11, 1933 28


Votes Enacted at the Special Town Meeting, July 17, 1933 49 ...


Votes Enacted at the Special Town Meeting,


November 20, 1933 52


Votes Enacted at the Special Town Meeting, December 27, 1933


55


Warrant for Annual Town Meeting 9


Water Board, Report of the 203


Superintendent of Water Works, Report of 204


Zoning Committee, Report of the


208


Proposed Zoning By-Laws 211


OFFICIAL REPORTS


OF THE


TOWN OF WAYLAND


FOR ITS


ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY-FIFTH MUNICIPAL YEAR


ED


ND


1635.


FOUNDED


EAST SUDBURY 178


183


FOR THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1934


Printed for the Town of Wayland by THE SUBURBAN PRESS Natick, Massachusetts 1935


OFFICIAL REPORTS OF THE


TOWN OF WAYLAND


FOR ITS ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY-FIFTH MUNICIPAL YEAR


TED


LA


1635.


FOUNDED


EAST SUDBURY


no


178


F


1835


FOR THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31. 1934


Printed for the Town of Wayland by THE SUBURBAN PRESS Natick, Massachusetts 1935


OFFICERS OF THE TOWN OF WAYLAND


Term Expires


MODERATOR


Warren L. Bishop 1935


TOWN CLERK


M. Alice Neale C 1935


SELECTMEN


1935


Willard C. Hunting John W. Leavitt J. Fred Wheeler


1935


1935


TREASURER


Frank G. Mackenna 1935


TAX COLLECTOR


Theodore H. Harrington


1935


TOWN ACCOUNTANT


Mabel T. S. Small


1935


BOARD OF PUBLIC WELFARE


Harry Moyse


1935


Ronald S. Campbell (Resigned)


1936


James C. McKay ( Appointed to fill vacancy )


1935


Martin A. Holmes C


1937


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


Llewellyn Mills


1935


Cornelius J. Maguire


1936


Dorothy C. Stone


1937


3


Moth Exterior


Term Expires


ASSESSORS


Clarence S. Williams Sidney Loker Daniel Brackett


1935


1936


1937


WATER COMMISSIONERS


Walter S. Bigwood


1935


Alfred C. Damon C


1936


George G. Bogren


1937


TRUSTEES OF THE PUBLIC LIBRARY


Alfred W. Cutting


1935


J. Sidney Stone


1935


Nellie R. Fiske 1936


Amos I. Hadley


1936


John H. Knapp


1937


James R. Martin


1937


CEMETERY COMMISSIONERS


William Read


1935


James M. Bent


1936


Paul B. Davis


1937


TREE WARDEN


Charles L. Fullick


1935


HIGHWAY SURVEYOR


Arthur Heard Dudley


1935


BOARD OF HEALTH


Ernest H. Damon


1935


John J. Linnehan


1936


Waldo L. Lawrence


1937


PARK COMMISSIONERS


Francis R. Gladu 1935


John E. Linnehan


1936


Camile L. Perodeau (Resigned )


1937


John B. Wight ( Appointed to fill vacancy)


1935


4


Term Expires


PLANNING BOARD


1935


1935


1936


1936


Otto H. Kohler


1937


Howard S. Russell


1937


CONSTABLES


George A. Celorier


1935


Wilfred L. Celorier


1935


Harry W. Craig


1935


Ernest H. Damon


1935


Charles F. Dusseault


1935


John E. Linnehan


1935


Frank C. Moore


1935


COMMISSIONERS OF TRUST FUNDS


Albert F. Flint


1935


John H. Knapp


1936


J. Sidney Stone


1937


TRUSTEES OF THE ALLEN FUND


Arthur B. Bullard


1935


John Connelly


1935


Isaac Damon


1935


FENCE VIEWERS


Selectmen


1935


FIELD DRIVERS


Constables


1935


SURVEYORS OF LUMBER


Howard Haynes


1935


Melville Loker


1935


William S. Lovell


1935


Israel A. Lupien (Resigned)


1935


Arthur F. Marston


1935


5


Arthur D. Dooley James C. Mckay James Bolton Gilbert Small


Term Expires


MEASURERS OF WOOD AND BARK


Arthur W. Atwood


1935


Joseph Decatur 1935


William S. Lovell 1935


Israel A. Lupien (Resigned )


1935


Arthur F. Marston


1935


MEMORIAL DAY COMMITTEE


CIVIL WAR VETERAN 1935


George B. Howe


SPANISH WAR VETERANS


William Hardy, Sr.


1935


Frank C. Moore 1935


WORLD WAR VETERANS


George Earl Barry


1935


Frank A. Burke


1935


Ernest H. Damon


1935


August Dath


1935


Arthur H. Dudley


1935


John W. Leavitt


1935


Parker H. Groton


1935


Cornelius J. Maguire


1935


Joe Perodeau


1935


Percy H. Steele


1935


DOG OFFICER


Harry W. Craig 1935


INSPECTOR OF ANIMALS


Frank J. Bigwood


1935


DISTRICT NURSE


Mary E. McNeil 1935


SUPERINTENDENT OF GYPSY AND BROWN-TAIL MOTHS


Daniel J. Graham 1935


6


Term Expires


SEALER OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES


- Albert Marchand 1935


FOREST FIRE WARDEN


Theodore H. Harrington


1935


CHIEF OF POLICE


Harry W. Craig


1935


PUBLIC WEIGHERS


Arthur W. Atwood


1935


Donald Collins


1935


Henry Vear


1935


FINANCE COMMITTEE


John B. Holt


1935


William J. Scotland


1935


William S. Lovell


1936


Elmer Matthews


1936


Thomas W. Bowles


1937


INSPECTOR OF SLAUGHTERING


Warren Lawrence


1935


BURIAL AGENT


John W. Leavitt 1935


REGISTRARS OF VOTERS


Edward F. Lee, Rep.


1935


M. Alice Neale, Rep.


1935


Meddie H. Rasciot, Dem.


1936


Joseph Zimmerman, Dem.


1937


ENGINEERS OF FIRE DEPARTMENT


Theodore H. Harrington, Chief


1935


Ernest H. Damon, Clerk


1935


Albert J. Keach, Engineer


1935


7


Term Expires


ELECTION OFFICERS


PRECINCT 1


George F. Dickey, Warden


1935


Myrta L. Wight, Clerk


1935


Thomas F. Maynard, Inspector


1935


Charles R. Harrington, Inspector


1935


James J. Bolton, Deputy Warden


1935


Mary E. Tulis, Deputy Clerk


1935


Thomas E. Maynard, Deputy Inspector


1935


Gregory Cooper, Deputy Inspector


1935


PRECINCT 2


Albert Marchand, Warden


1935


Mary Derrick, Clerk


1935


Alvin B. Neale, Inspector


1935


Joe Perodeau, Inspector


1935


Parker H. Groton, Deputy Warden


1935


Arthur C. Wallace, Deputy Clerk


1935


Alfred LaCroix, Deputy Inspector


1935


Arthur E. Peck, Deputy Inspector


1935


8


WARRANT FOR ANNUAL TOWN MEETING


COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS


MIDDLESEX, SS.


To any of the Constables of the Town of Wayland, in said County:


GREETINGS :


In the name of the Commonwealth you are required to notify and warn the inhabitants of said Town qualified to vote in town elections to meet at their respective polling places on


MONDAY, MARCH 4, 1935


at six o'clock in the forenoon, there and then to bring in their ballots for a Moderator, Town Clerk, three Selectmen, a Treas- urer, a Collector of Taxes, a Surveyor of Highways, a Tree Warden, seven Constables, one member of the Board of Public Welfare, all for one year.


One member of Park Commission for two years.


One member of the School Committee, one Cemetery Com- missioner, one Commissioner of Trust Funds, two Trustees of Public Library, one member of the Board of Public Welfare, one Assessor, one member of the Board of Health, one Water Commissioner, one Park Commissioner, and two members of the Planning Board, all for three years.


All the foregoing to be voted on the official ballot. The polls will be open at 6.15 o'clock in the forenoon and will remain open continuously until four in the afternoon, when they shall be closed.


And you are required to notify and warn the inhabitants of said Town qualified to vote in town affairs to meet at the Town Hall on


WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1935


at 7.45 P. M., then and there to act on the following articles :


Article 1. To hear reports of the Town officers, agents, and committees, and act thereon.


Article 2. To choose all necessary Town officers, agents and committees not elected by the official ballot.


Article 3. To grant money for necessary Town purposes. See Finance Committee's Report.


9


Article 4. To see if the Town will authorize the Treasurer with the approval of the Selectmen, to borrow money from time to time in anticipation of the revenue of the financial year beginning January 1, 1935, and to issue a note or notes therefor, payable within one year, and to renew any note or notes as may be given for a period of less than a year in accordance with Section 17, Chapter 44, General Laws.


The Finance Committee recommends the approval of this article.


Article 5. To see if the Town will appropriate and assess the sum of $3,282.30 to pay the following 1932, 1933 and 1934 bills which were presented for payment after the Town books were closed, or do or act.


UNPAID BILLS OF 1932 AND 1933


Public Welfare :


The Great A. & P. Tea Co.


$107.12


Town of Natick


964.75


$1,071.87


Old Age Assistance :


City of Newton


$56.00


Town of Watertown


10.00


66.00


Vocational Tuition : 16.92


City of Boston


UNPAID BILLS OF 1934


Collector :


T. H. Harrington


57.56


Clerk :


M. Alice Neale


$12.45


Natick Printing Co.


4.50


16.95


Election Expense :


Natick Bulletin Press


13.50


Sealer of Weights and Measures :


Albert B. Marchand


18.00


Board of Health :


North Reading State Sanatorium


$236.00


State Infirmary


76.00


312.00


Public Welfare :


George W. Fullick


$30.00


Charles Mathews


10.00


10


Thomas W. Bowles


15.04


Hoplow Trimming Co.


4.63


Colby & Co.


2.00


Earl F. Prior, M. D.


53.00


B. W. Johnson, Jr.


21.20


Otto H. Hohler


20.97


Hiram Nisbet


9.97


Isabella A. Higgins


2.00


Metropolitan Ice Co.


9.63


Twin Maple Farm


2.40


William J. Dahill, M. D.


2.00


Town of Natick


224.76


407.60


Old Age Assistance :


Ernest E. Sparks, M. D.


$ 3.00


Gibbs Funeral Service


100.00


Town of Natick


387.34


490.34


Soldiers' Relief :


A. W. Atwood


$14.00


First National Stores, Saxonville


14.00


Peck & Davieau


4.97


Ida J. Kenrick


32.00


Grace A. Hardy


15.00


A. J. Lizotte


4.25


Saxonville Coal Co.


16.25


J. C. Penny Co.


35.43


Peck & Davieau


26.00


The Great A. & P. Tea Co.


10.50


Town of Marshfield


137.42


309.82


Schools :


J. C. Massie


$ 3.38


A. W. Atwood


55.54


City Fuel Co.


55.64


Phillips Petroleum Co.


1.25


James C. McKay


3.00


118.81


Vocational Tuition :


City of Boston


$207.69


City of Newton


96.71


304.40


11


Water Department :


Badger Chevrolet Co.


$17.10


New Eng. Tel. & Tel. Co.


3.35


Edison Elec. Ill. Co. of Boston


18.00


General Oil Products


26.07


64.52


Cemeteries :


Charles L. Fullick


$5.00


6.31


William Read James C. Mckay


2.70


14.01


Total $3,282.30


The Finance Committee recommends that these bills be paid.


Article 6. To see if the Town will accept the following gift : $100.00 received from Anna P. Arnold to establish the "Jahleel B. Sherman Fund," income from which to be used for perpetual care of lot No. 217, North Cemetery.


The Finance Committee recommends the approval of this article.


Article 7. To see if the Town will accept the following gift: $100.00 received from Mrs. Isabella Bacon to establish the "W. B. Braman Fund," income from which to be used for perpetual care of lots Nos. 99 and 100, North Cemetery.


The Finance Committee recommends the approval of this article.


Article 8. To see if the Town will accept the following gift: $100.00 received from Mrs. Mabel L. McKewan to establish the "Mabel L. McKewan Fund," income from which to be used for perpetual care of lot No. 63, Section C, Lake View Cemetery.


The Finance Committee recommends the approval of this article.


Article 9. To see if the Town will accept the following gift : $100.00 received from Eugene R. Clapp to establish the "Harriet E. Clapp Fund," income from which to be used for perpetual care of lot No. 71, Section G, Lake View Cemetery.


The Finance Committee recommends the approval of this article.


12


25039


Article 10. To see if the Town will accept the following gift : $100.00 received from Mrs. Florence E. Beane to establish the "Sawin and Beane Fund," income from which to be used for perpetual care of lot No. 21, Section B, Lake View Ceme- tery.


The Finance Committee recommends the approval of this article.


Article 11. To see if the Town will accept the following bequest : $100.00 received from Mary A. Stevens, Executrix, to establish the "Hiram Thurston Fund," income from which to be used for perpetual care of lot No. 37, Section F, Lake View Cemetery.


The Finance Committee recommends the approval of this article.


Article 12. To see if the Town will accept the following gift: $100.00 received from Willard C. Hunting to establish the "Willard C. Hunting Fund," income from which to be used for perpetual care of lot No. 50A, Section E, Lake View Cemetery.




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.