USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Somerville > Report of the city of Somerville 1932 > Part 22
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1047
778
870
428
539
5913
831
1545
1147
832
920
463
575
6313
Group 1
.
382
ANNUAL REPORTS
District Delegates-8th District
Group 1
Francis X. Hurley
661
1088
877
673
713
401 412
476
4889
James E. Hagan
690
1343
953
690
755
Group 2
John J. Murphy
338
495
447
473
524
198
251
2726
John H. Burke
237
294
306
354
376
149
205
1921
George J. Moran
215
597
284
149
221
102
102
1670
Alternate District Delegates
Group 1
Mary E. McGoldrick
781
1426
1113
S03
860
417
537
5937
John W. Lyons
733
1356
1010
761
802
413
516
5591
Jerome J. Cahill ......
238
330
303
342
345
145
188
1891
M. Leo Looney, Jr.
215
356
307
351
366
155
191
1941
PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY April 6, 1932 REPUBLICAN
Total Votes Cast
171
99
334
393
231
512
654
2394
Name of Candidate
Wards
Totals
Delegates-at - Large
1
2
3
4
5
6 450
7 536
2043
William M. Butler
140
79
299
354
201
455
557
2085
Alvan T. Fuller
143
85
313
373
206
476
580
2176
Mary Pratt Potter
13€
70
294
343
195
434
526
1998
Felix Forte
1
1
Alternate Delegates-at-Large
Frank G. Allen
144
80
311
259
205
470
560
2129
Gaspar G. Bacon
133
71
291
346
196
437
531
2005
Leverett Saltonstall
135
70
300
348
200
443
543
2039
Louise M. Williams
132
69
290
349
192
433
514
1979
District Delegates
Eugene A. F. Burtnett
129
72
299
349
209
465
612
2135
George S. Miller
119
68
286
323
186
432
557
1971
Edwin P. Bliss
8
11
15
25
11
29
24
123
Joseph J. Pincus
2
2
John G. Niles
1
1
Frederick Wolfer
2
2
Alternate District Delegates
Lottie W. Buxton
135
81
296
350
201
445
537
2045
Emma L. Schofield
141
75
298
360
204
459
551
2088
George F. Booth
136
70
299
351
201
471
5314
Not Grouped
Group 2
383
ELECTION COMMISSIONERS
STATE PRIMARY DEMOCRATIC September 20. 1932
384
ANNUAL REPORTS
DELEGATES TO STATE CONVENTION DEMOCRATIC
WARD ONE Group 1
John J. Crowley
693
John J. Brennan 675
Mary Wholey 464
Mary A. Dedrick
454
William J. Keeley
480
Philip P. Burke
501
Ernest W. Cahill
396
John A. Murphy
472
Thomas W. Sheehan 438
Margaret M. Sonnenberg 412
Group 2
James E. Johnson 269
William P. O'Meare 333
Edward Mahoney 280
John M. Grattan 428
Ernest W. Cahill 232
Eugene H. Giroux
638
Joseph F. X. Leahy
266
John J. Duggan
242
Thomas F. Grattan 340
George J. Coughlin
280
WARD TWO
George J. Moran 2085
Edward T. Brady 1944
James F. Stynes 1957
Francis J. Greeley 1918
William F. Dewire 1948
Elizabeth J. Cairnes 1895
Joseph A. Haley 1841
William J. Wright, Jr.
1883
Joseph J. MacFarlane 1796
Stephen J. Doherty, Jr.
1783
WARD THREE
John J. Murphy
1133
Maurice F. Ahearn
1128
John C. Kelleher 1208
Robert J. Muldoon 1116
Mary E. McGoldrick
1157
Mary V. Sullivan 1074
James J. Cronin 1
Joseph L. Murphy
1079
Robert J. Donovan
1
John J. Denning 1122
James Rooney 1
1154
P. J. Malaney
1
Mary K. Brennan
1067
Hildreth McFarlane
1
J. P. Corish
2
John Whitney 1
James J. Corbett
1
David Murphy 3
John W. Casey 1
WARD FOUR
Leo B. Havican 1210
David J. Kelley 1092
Francis J. Daley 1127
Edward L. Hagan 1119
Annie H. Candage 1023
Walter E. Struble, Jr.
1077
Edward V. Maloney
1045
Robert Ford
1034
Henry J. McHenry
1018
Fred F. Russo
1167
Alfred N. Conivo 1
Edward Trembly
1
WARD FIVE Group 1
Paul A. McCarthy 474
John M. Lynch 539
Edward B. Lynch 440
Perry T. Nangle 526
Cornelius A. Murphy
403
James O'Leary
397
John J. Conroy
373
Patrick Henry Ryan
550
Mary A. Ryan 386
Joseph S. Brennan 438
Group 2
John M. Lynch 234
Harry F. O'Connell 474
401
Philip Koen
234
John A. Colbert
284
Eugene C. McCabe
305
Alice McNamara
215
Winifred McHugh
223
Charles L. Mooney 343
John H. Collins 234
WARD SIX
George S. Ryan 416
John A. Donovan 430
Quinlan J. Sullivan
28
Frank X. Venerie 28
Leo A. McDougall
28
Arthur S. Walsh
Edward F. Moynihan
28
John F. Sullivan 28
John L. Carroll
385
ELECTION COMMISSIONERS
S. Van Samesses
1
WARD SEVEN
Patrick W. Power
28
William G. Barrett 648
Edward Donovan
1
Thomas F. Murphy 541
Thomas F. Geary, Jr. 28
William L. Conlon 538
John Varney 1
Jennie G. Crine 532
William F. Burke
28
Julia M. Quinn
535
Bernard Sheridan
2
Catherine G. Bailey 522
Robert F. Donovan
2
James F. Walsh
540
B. A. Callahan
1 Margaret A. White
503
Richard D. Long
1
Margaret A. Campbell 552
Louise G. Cushing
518
WARD COMMITTEE DEMOCRATIC
WARD ONE Group 1
John J. Crowley
594
John J. Brennan
550
Mary Wholey
31)
Mary A. Dedrick
355
William J. Keeley
370
Bridget V. Mooney 1691
Thomas W. Sheehan
324
Margaret M. Sonnenberg
333
Dennis S. Canty
338
Philip P. Burke 409
WARD THREE
John J. Murphy 1082
Maurice F. Ahearn 1082
John C. Kelleher 1137
Robert J. Muldoon 1059
Group 2
Mary E. McGoldrick 1093
Mary V. Sullivan 1013
Joseph L. Murphy
1005.
Edward Mahoney 320
John J. Dennin ;;
1061
John M. Grattan 438
Arthur F. Walsh
1069
Eugene H. Giroux
637
Mary K. Brennan
994
Ernest W. Cahill 255
Gerald L. McSweeney
1016.
Joseph F. X. Leahy
285
James J. Cronin
1
John J Duggan 280
Margaret Bryan
998
Thomas F. Grattan
389
Robert J. Donovan 1
George J. Coughlin
282
Thomas F. Mackey
1056
James B. Fay
276
Joseph J. Collins
1
William J. Thompson
255
John F. Knight
1013
Louis Mercurio
262
George Campbell
1
Henry V. Dedrick
296
W. J. Mangan
1
Francis E. O'Meara
334
John Whitney
1
WARD TWO
David J. Murphy
14
George J. Moran 2000
James J. Corbett
1
Edward T. Brady
1842
R. Kelley
1
James F. Stynes
1872
Allan Butler
1
Francis J. Greeley
1824
P. J. Malaney
1
Robert W. Houley
1823
James Rooney
1
Ernest W. Cahill
312
Mary A. Fothergill
313
Henry L. Twohig 330
Joseph Thornton
385
William F. Dewire 1850
Dennis L. Donovan 1719
William J. Wadland 1660
Elizabeth J. Cairnes
1796
John J. Murray 1693
John D. Medeiros 1714
Helen M. E. Kerivan 1664
John A. Murphy 406
Thomas S. McDonough 1695
William J. Wright, Jr.
1796
James E. Johnson
323
William P. O'Meara
337
John W. Casey
16
Joseph Corish
15
386
ANNUAL REPORTS
WARD FOUR
John J. Conroy 218
Patrick Henry Ryan 357
David J. Kelley
1015
Francis J. Daley
1019
Thomas J. Cahill
201
Edward L. Hagan
1013
Margaret T. Dow
987
Annie H. Candage
956
Walter E. Struble, Jr.
1017
Richard M. McLaughlin
983
Charles R. Brunelle 973
George McAvoy
1
Henry J. McHenry 961
WARD SIX
George F. Hoye
938
Elwin W. Mican
1
George S. Ryan 390
John P. Bowe
341
Edmand Trembly
1
John W. Bates
340
Edwin V. Malaney
13
John Leary
322
Robert Ford 2
Richard D. Long, Sr.
317
Eben W. Miller, Jr.
20
George R. Young
317
Alfred J. Welch
4
Quinlan J. Sullivan
35
Edward Mahoney
1
Frank X. Venerie
35
Patrick Carr
1
Leo A. McDougall
35
E. Monahan
35
J. Sullivan
35
P. Power
35
T. Geary
35
W. Burke
34
Robert F. Donovan
1
Harry F. O'Connell
639
John L. Carroll
560
Philip Koen
403
John A. Colbert 426
479
Winifred McHugh
390
WARD SEVEN
Dennis F. Donovan
552
Claire F. Cotter 524
Jeremiah J. Regan 541
506
Louis B. Connelly
467
Margaret A. White
517
William J. Koen
377
Margaret A. Campbell
541
Jennie G. Crine
517
William C. Barrett
585
Group 2
John M. Lynch
198
Julia M. Quinn
514
Edward B. Lynch
269
Catherine G. Bailey
516
Perry F. Nangle
203
Abbie E. Skidmore
522
Cornelius A. Murphy
232
James F. Walsh
530
James O'Leary
220
Cornelius J. Collins
515
John E. O'Brien
246
William L. Conlon
528
1
Alfred Coniro
1
WARD FIVE Group 1
John M. Lynch
540
B. A. Calaghan
1
John Varney
1
Edward Donovan
1
S. Van Saessen
1
Charles L. Mooney
491
John H. Collins
376
Ethel M. Coffey
377
Perry F. Nangle
509
Henry A. Reegan
397
Thomas J. Martin
190
Mary A. Ryan
238
Lillian M. Ryan
208
Joseph S. Brennan
264
Joseph Corish
2
Raymond Ryan 1015
John A. Donovan 435
Fred F. Russo
1098
Edmund V. Maloney
Leo B. Havican 1140
Jeremiah T. Kelley 194
Thomas F. Murphy 521
Eugene C. McCabe
Louise G. Cushing
387
ELECTION COMMISSIONERS
STATE PRIMARY REPUBLICAN September 20, 1932
388
ANNUAL REPORTS
DELEGATES TO STATE CONVENTION REPUBLICAN
WARD ONE
Josephine H. Ham
670
Belma R. Sears 666
Dorothy Winkfield Taylor 676
WARD FIVE
Joseph J. Pincus 812
Walter C. Mentzer 784
Horace E. Whitten 787
Charles W. Eldridge
853
Alfred J. Buchan
772
Harriet M. Hurlburt 757
Frank M. Elwell, Jr. 1
WARD THREE
Russell A. Wood
1
Wm. S. Howe
1
Alfred S. Wass
10
Louis C. Gobron 1805
George H. Norton
1
John W. F. Hobbs 1777
Fronie A. Johnston
13
Louis A. Merry 1755
Frances Kaan 1
William Stern
1759
Lettie E. Rose 12
Edwin G. Blois 1757
Warren S. Pratt
1
Caulder L. Freeman
1759
John H. Gartland
12
Roscoe E. Estes
1735
John W. Drake
1
William F. Beaman
1741
Harvey E. Frost
13
John MacFarlane
1
Bernard Giorni
12
John F. McGann
12
Frank Teele
1
John M. Webster
4
John S. Edward
1
Scattered votes
28
WARD FOUR
Ethel C. Kammerer
1119
J. Lucille Marquess 1125
Margaret P. Bunker 1115
Edmund H. Fisher 1135
Edith L. Hurd 1173
Sarah A. Lewis
1
Warren A. Perry
1191
Frank A. Teele
1
Louis Turco
1107
Earl M. Woodward
5
David Y. Ross
1213
Howard Johnson
1
Suzella C. Loan
1102
Nina W. Heald
1519
WARD COMMITTEE
REPUBLICAN
WARD ONE
Belma R. Sears 629
Cecil Taylor
644
ıda M. Hazen 629
Botsford Kempston 626
627
WARD TWO
George W. Pratt 246
Lillian M. Starbird 620
Leon Brenner 181
Edith T. Smith 626
Raimondo Cangiano 178
A. Gertrude Strout
621
William L. Hansom
184
WARD TWO
George W. Pratt
273
Leon Brenner 221
WARD SIX
Paul O. Curtis 1791
WARD SEVEN
Eugene A. F. Burtnett 1774
Leslie E. Knox 1717
Agnes E. Frohock 1516
Philip Sherman 1759
Marie A. Berg 1521
Christian A. Wickstead 1522
Benjamin H. Shute 1622
Wilbur F. Lewis
1899
Ida M. Hazen
664
David Y. Ross 1213
Suzella C. Loan 1102
Dorothy Winkfield Taylor 655
John J. Hurley 630
Josephine H. Ham
Albert C. Waterman 620
Lyman A. Hodgdon 708
389
ELECTION COMMISSIONERS
Joshua S. Blake 182
Stewart Mackenzie 184
Maurice A. Pearlman 178
Frank H. Gilmore 191
Richard H. Smith 183
Harold A. Short 197
WARD THREE
Alfred S. Wass
12
Lettie E. Rose 12
Fronie A. Johnston 12
John H. Garland
12
J. Edward G. Donegan
210
Harvey E. Frost 12
Bernard Giorni
12
Emma H. Sanders
12
William S. Howe 12
Felix Forte 12
Angeló Merluzzi
12
John F. McGann
12
Arthur Forte
12
Grace M. Wellington
12
Fayette Haskell
13
Austin H. Connor
1
Richard H. Goode
142
Walter H. Nangle
1
John F. Thompson 102
Roger Blanchard 160
Otie E. Merrifield
120
WARD SIX
Paul O. Curtis 1735
Louis C. Gobron 1742
John W. F. Hobbs 1731
Louis A. Merry 1696
William Stern
1699
Edwin G. Blois 1686
E. Maude Stanton 1690
Leonora B. Burnett 1718
George A. Parker 1699
Edmund H. Fisher
1062
Caulder L. Freeman 1708
Louis Turco
1038
Roscoe E. Estes 1680
Edith L. Hurd
1121
Edward H. Riley 1673
Edith B. Davidson
1161
Warren A. Perry
1138
Suzella C. Loan
1048
Charles C. Grimmons
1117
Percy R. Crowell
1749
Joseph W. Jolly 1042
Eugene M. Carman
1740
Russell S. Palmer
1051
William T. Wright
1045
Adelia H. Waters
1051
Isabelle M. Huff 1054
Elizabeth E. Toothaker
1081
Albert W. Furbish
1069
David Y. Ross
1166
1
WARD FIVE
Group 1
Joseph J. Pincus 285
Horace E. Whitten 265
Charles W. Eldridge 331
Alfred J. Buchan 252
259
Florence B. Greenlaw 259
Humbert Celata
211
Mabel L. Staples
252
John F. Thompson 261
Harriet M. Hurlburt 249
Guiseppe Ciavardone
201
William J. Shea
205
Elizabeth Pierce 244
Arthur W. White 264
Frederick W. Wolffer
247
Group 2
George A. Wilson 179
Albert W .Scott 160
Anna M. Joiner 122
Harry Soule
1
Rich B. Cleary
1
Albert L. Haskell
1
Paul T. Phalen
2
John M. Webster
2
H. E. Haskell
1
Scattered votes
18
WARD FOUR
Ethel C. Kammerer
1077
J. Lucille Marquess 1067
Margaret P. Bunker 1062
William F. Beaman 1691
David A. Morrison 1690
Ernest J. Combie 1674
Wilber F. Lewis 1785
John MacFarlane
1
WARD SEVEN
Eugene A. F. Burtnett 1712
Marie A. Berg 1480
Daisy Bartlett
Leslie E. Knox
1644
Foster G. Hardin 1051
Bethea A. Smith
390
ANNUAL REPORTS
Agnes E. Frohock
1457
Benjamin H. Shute
1542
Philip Sherman
1664
Daniel E. Gumm
2
Christean A. Wickstead 1463
John C. Juther
2
Orville S. Waldron 1497
Frank P. Daley
1
Nina W. Heald
1457
Earl W. Woodward
1
George E. Brennan
1452
Howard Johnson
4
Frederick L. Bosworth
1463
Earl Woodward
10
Sarah A. Lewis
1511
Dayton B. Wright
2
391
ELECTION COMMISSIONERS
STATE ELECTION November 8, 1932
392
ANNUAL REPORTS
Question No. 1
LAW PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION
Shall the proposed law which defines and legalizes the practice of chiropractics; establishes a board of registration of chiropractors and defines the number, mode of appointment, tenture, qualification and compensation of its members, and its powers and duties; provides for the preliminary qualifications, examination, certification, original regis- tration and annual license of chiropractors and regulation of their practice, and defines the mode, subjects of and fees for examination, the mode of practice and penalties; and other matters related thereto, which are chiefly as follows:
That chiropractic be "the science or practice of locating and adjust- ing by hand the malpositions of the articulations of the human spine."
That any person, with one preceding year's residence in this Com- monwealth and with degree from a qualified chiropractic school re- ceived at least one year prior to the date when this law takes effect, may, within ninety days after such date, be certified by the board at its discretion without examination.
That otherwise no person, except a member of the board of registra- tion, shall practice chiropractic unless, being over twenty-one years of age, of good moral character and graduated from a reputable chiro- practic school after personally attending courses of at least twenty-two hundred sixty-minute daylight hours given to persons qualified to grad- uate from a public high school, he shall qualify by examination, pay a fee of twenty-five dollars and be registered and certified; except that any person licensed in another State maintaining standards equal to those of this Commonwealth may be registered without examination.
That the examination be scientific and practical in character, in subjects including anatomy, physiology, symptomatology, hygiene, san- itation, chemistry, histology, pathology, chiropractic analysis, and the principles and practice of chiropractic.
That the board may, after hearing, revoke a certificate for cause.
That the board shall make an annual report and shall keep public records of its proceedings and of the names of persons examined or registered by it and of the names and addresses of all registered chiro- practors, who shall pay an annual license fee, promptly notify the board of any change in address and furnish such other information as the board may require.
That the board consist of three members, residents of the Common- wealth for three years, graduates of a chartered chiropractic school having power to confer degrees in chiropractic, to be appointed by the governor, with the advice and consent of the council, for a term of three years.
That the board have authority to administer oaths, summon wit- nesses and take testimony and adopt reasonable rules and regulations pertaining to their duties, and that they pay into the state treasury fees received by them, and that they receive compensation and reim- bursement for expenses in such amounts as may be annually appropri- ated therefor not exceeding the amount of such fees.
393
ELECTION COMMISSIONERS
Penalties are provided for practicing chiropractic without holding a certificate or for using the words "Chiropractic Practitioner," the letters "D.C.", or any title or letters indicating engagement in such practice, or for buying, selling or fraudulently obtaining any diploma or record of registration.
It is further provided that the present law relating to the registra- tion of physicians and surgeons and providing penalties for the un- authorized practice of medicine shall not be held to discriminate against registered chiropractors; but no chiropractor, unless registered as a physician or surgeon, may practice obstetrics, or administer drugs or perform surgical operation by the use of instruments, or hold him- self out as and for other than a chiropractor, which was disapproved in the House of Representatives YES by a vote of 50 in the affirmative and 151 in the negative and in the Senate by a vote of 13 in the affirmative and NO 21 in the negative, be approved?
Question No. 2 LAW PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION
Shall the proposed law which provides for an additional method of nominating candidates for nomination, at the state primaries in September, by members of political parties, for offices to be filled by all the voters of the Commonwealth at a state election.
It provides that the state conventions of the political parties, in each state election year, shall be held before and not after the state primaries, as now, namely, not later than June 15. In order to elect delegates to such party conventions, party primaries are established to be held on the last Tuesday in April. Among other things, these state conventions may endorse candidates for offices to be filled by all the voters and to be voted upon at the state primaries. Such endorse- ment places a candidate in nomination, at such state primaries, with- out the necessity of filing nomination papers. The name of the en- dorsed candidate is to be placed first on the ballot and against his name is to be placed the words "Endorsed by (the name of political party) convention" in addition to the eight-word statement now author- ized by law. Candidates endorsed by a party convention may except said endorsement within ten days, and having so accepted may not withdraw.
It also provides for the election of district members of state com- mittees and members of ward and town committees at the proposed party primaries in April, as well as delegates to the state party con- ventions, instead of at the state primaries in September, as now.
It also provides for the election of delegates to national conven- tions (to nominate candidates for President) at the proposed party primaries instead of at the primaries, now specially held for that pur- pose, and which existing law requires to be held on the last Tuesday in April (the same day proposed for the proposed party primaries).
It also provides for certain other new provisions of law and certain changes in existing laws, relating to holding state conventions and party primaries, the number and election of delegates to state con- ventions, the number of members at large of a state committee, and other matters, which in more detail chiefly are as follows:
394
ANNUAL REPORTS
State conventions are to be composed solely of delegates elected at the party primaries, and the number is to be one from each ward and town and one additional for every fifteen hundred votes or major fraction thereof above the first fifteen hundred votes cast at the preceding state election in such ward or town for the political party candidate for Governor, instead of a number now fixed by the state committee of each party (not less than one from each ward or town) and certain mem- bers designated by existing law.
The time, for notice to the State Secretary by aldermen or selectmen of their determination to hold primaries by wards, precincts or groups of precincts, to be March 1, instead of August 1, as now.
The names of candidates for election for delegates to a state convention and for district members of a state committee to be arranged individually by alphabet instead of in groups ar- ranged by lot, as now.
Vacancies in the office of delegate to a state or national con- vention not to be filled except in case of a tie vote, and then by delegates from the same district, within ten days, and if no other delegate or if not so filled, then by a state committee, rather than solely by the remaining members of the delega- tion; and statement of filling of such vacancy to be filed with the State Secretary.
Seating of delegates at state conventions to be in groups by senatorial districts, and order of business at said conventions defined.
Voting on candidates, by a convention, to be by roll call, if more than one candidate for the office, or by groups of dele- gates unless any member of such group objects.
The number of members at large of a state committee of a political party to be fixed by the state convention of a party in- stead of by the state committee, as now.
The existing provisions as to preparation and filing of nomi- nation papers, objections to nominations, preparation, number, substance, arrangement and form of ballots, hours during which polls shall be open, opening of ballot boxes, canvass and return of votes, return and certification of votes, now applic- able to state primaries to be applicable to the proposed party primaries.
The power of a state committee to fix the number of district delegates to a national convention to be continued, but the date, of giving notice to the State Secretary, of such fixation to be March 1 instead of on or before the third Wednesday in March, as now.
The power of city and town committees to fix the number of members of ward and town committees to be continued, but the date, of giving notice to the State Secretary, of such fixa- tion to be March 1 instead of August 1, as now, which was approved in the Senate by a vote of 21 in the YES affirmative and 17 in the negative and was disapproved in the House of Representatives by a vote of 62 in the NO affirmative and 138 in the negative, be approved?
395
ELECTION COMMISSIONERS
Question No. 3
PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES
Is it desirable that the proposed amendment to the Constitution of the United States,-
"ARTICLE
"SECTION 1. The terms of the President and Vice President shall end at noon on the 20th day of January, and the terms of Senators and Representatives at noon on the 3d day of January, of the years in which such terms would have ended if this article had not been ratified; and the terms of their successors shall then begin.
"SEC. 2. The Congress shall assemble at least once in every year, and such meeting shall begin at noon on the 3d day of January, unless they shall by law appoint a different day.
"SEC. 3. If, at the time fixed for the beginning of the term of the President, the President elect shall have died, the Vice President elect shall become President. If a President shall not have been chosen be- fore the time fixed for the beginning of his term, or if the President elect shall have failed to qualify, then the Vice President elect shall act as President until a President shall have qualified; and the Con- gress may by law provide for the case wherein neither a President elect nor a Vice President elect shall have qualified, declaring who shall then act as President, or the manner in which one who is to act shall be selected, and such person shall act accordingly until a Presi- dent or Vice President shall have qualified.
"SEC. 4. The Congress may by law provide for the case of the death of any of the persons from whom the House of Representatives may choose a President whenever the right of choice shall have de- volved upon them, and for the case of the death of any of the persons from whom the Senate may choose a Vice President whenever the right of choice shall have devolved upon them.
"SEC. 5. Sections 1 and 2 shall take effect on the 15th day of October following the ratification of this article.
"SEC. 6. This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Con- stitution by the legislatures of three-fourths of the sev- eral States within seven years from the date of its sub- mission,"-be ratified by the General Court?
.. YES
NO
To vote on the following, mark a Cross X in the square at the right of YES or NO :-
"Shall an act passed by the general court in the year nineteen hundred and thirty-two, entitled 'An Act establishing non-partisan municipal elections in the city of Somerville', be accepted ?"
YES
NO
396
REPRESENTATIVE IN GENERAL COURT 23rd District - Ward Two
Ward Two - Precinct
1
2
3
4
5
Total
James E. Hagan .... Dem.
619
1018
467
1086
943
4133
24th District - Wards One, Three, Four and Five
Ward Three
2
3
4 878
1 419
2 749
3 398 570
517
5 442
1 797 334
3 664
667
10437
Edith B. Davidson
Rep.
346
270
527
375
474
664
553
555
407
711
452
426
632
534
8277
Eugene H Giroux Dem
761
524
642
635
428
698
878
459
786
425
552
451
775
725
665
660
10906
Arthur G. Pearson
Rep.
334
436
277
486
352
448
603
536
565
478
608
702
488
380
430
619
557
8299
Warren A. Perry
Rep.
338
410
257
446
353
450
602
528
565
379
562
706
408
323
393
621
511
7852
Francis E. Ryan
Den.
677
734
444
564
633
424 2
716
884
406
752
409
535
412
813
733
676
649
10461 2
ANNUAL REPORTS
25th District - Wards Six and Seven
Ward Six
2
3 351
4 374
1 400
2 357
344
406
5 346
.....
Dem.
Dem.
422
422
334
386
365
346
362
364
370
3371
Hiram N. Dearborn
....
Rep.
784
675
857
997
688
577
846
488
632
6544
Philip Sherman
......
Rep.
796
716
869
1020
762
599
853
521
672
6808
4 575
John J. Crowley,
Dem
701
746
430
614
406
740
Ward Four
Ward Five
2
4 Totals
1
John M. Webster
Dem.
Ward Seven
3
4
Total
1 420
413
3411
William G. Barrett Joseph M. Barry
........
Ward One 2 3
1
4
694
447
842
STATE ELECTION, NOVEMBER 8, 1932
Ward One
Ward Two
Ward Three
Ward Four
Ward Five
Ward Six
Ward Seven
1
2
3
4
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
4
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
4
1
2
3
4
1
2
3
4
5
Totals
Total Vote Cast
1214
1397
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