USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Dedham > The record of the town meetings, and abstract of births, marriages, and deaths, in the town of Dedham, Massachusetts, 1887-1896 > Part 28
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23 Sarah Kimball .
86
10 17 Apoplexy.
24 Ruth E. Whitney 55
6
26
Paralysis.
[meningeal.
Mch. 1| John F. Hartnett 34
1
Tuberculosis, pulmonary and
5
Mary H. Brindley
..
3
4 Vasicular bronchitis.
9 James Welch 69
Old age.
20 Mattie D. Ivers
34
10
8 Broncho pneumonia.
21
Albert H. Glover
57
7
21
Rheumatism of the heart.
25 Amelia Turner
74
7 10
Disease of heart and lungs.
27 Prudence Connor
73
Heart disease. 5
29 Mary J. Bailey
15
9 25
Suicide.
21 Joseph Colburn
86
10
5
Old age.
April 4
Catherine Bowran.
65
Cancer of throat.
4 James H. Prince
68
6
Heart disease.
4 Ebenezer Gay
66
11 18 Heart disease.
..
..
.
D.
| M.
Typhoid fever. 1 8
348
AGES.
Date.
NAMES.
Cause of Death.
Y.
| D.
.
April 6 Mehitable B. White
82
8
19 Old age.
11
Aloise Enes
31
4
9
Bright's disease.
12
Roger W. Jensen
..
5
2 Meningitis.
13 Lewis A. Richards
82
7
3
Cancer of prostate and heart
14 John T. O'Neil
1 ..
25
Pneumonia.
19 William F. O'Keefe
31
10
15
Pneumonia.
19 Ellen Welch.
95
..
..
20 Joshua Lynas
84
5
Apoplexy.
21|Jobn Connelly
85
..
Bronchitis and heart disease.
22 Charlotte L. Davis
5
9
Disease of liver (enlargement)
26 Peter Morse
63
2
19
Disease of heart.
26 Mary A. Doyle
17
5
6
Scarlet fever, pulm'ry oedema.
3
11
24
Scarlet fever.
67
11
24
Paralysis and bronchitis.
67
2
Influenza follo'd by bronchitis.
May
1 Ira Russell . ..
87
Paralysis. 8
59
9
6
Acute nephritis.
10 George L. Shallcross
5
15
Whooping cough. pneumonia.
14 James Doyle .
6
7
10 Scarlet fever, hyperpyrexia.
14 Hannah E. Grover
71
4 14
Senile dementia & exhaustion.
15 John J. Dolan
..
. .
2
Cyanosis.
16 Morris Fitzgerald
23
9 16
Acute phthisis.
17 Albert W. Nickerson
53 . .
Peritonitis. . .
23 Mary M. White
62
2
20
Pneumonia & heart failure.
June 1 Abby C. Nichols
56
5
5 Apoplexy.
2 Grace S. Fisher
66
3
20 Cancer of bowels.
3 James Olmsted .
36
..
..
Paralytic dementia, paralysis.
William Dean
49
9
2
Cancer.
5 Albert Newman
1
5 Exhaustion.
6 Simon Fagan
72
2
..
10 Mary E Dennen
2
3
5 Meningitis.
12 Mary C. Matthes.
46
:
.. Uterine hemorrhage.
13 Olive E. Snow
5
6
1 Membraneous croup.
19 Howard Gill
86
7
14 Old age (exhaustion).
26 George M. Doyle
26 James Walley.
28 . Martha R. Wight
8 Louisa F. Laforme
.
Convulsions.
[disease.
Bronchitis and inanition.
£
349
AGES.
Date.
NAMES.
Cause of Death.
Y.
M.
D.
- June 20 Peter Keegan
62
Consumption.
28 Austin F. Newcomb
39
6
17 Heart disease.
- July 15
James Tracy
80
..
..
Old age.
8 Ellen M. V. Quinlan
22
11
8 Typho-malarial fever.
10 Ella D. Bell
32
11 22 Quick consumption.
12 Susan Richardson
83
6
20
Old age.
20 Susan P. Sawtelle
70
1
19
Progressive vulvar paralysis.
21 Eliza L. Darling
56
8
.. Tuberculosis of lungs.
22 William M. Cull
25 ..
22
Congestion of brain.
22 Mary B. Eaton
..
10
.. Meningitis.
Patrick Burke
37
..
..
-Aug. 3
Paul H. Kreutel
13 4
3
Endocarditus.
5 Florence Frazier
1
5
22
Membraneous croup.
8 Mary C. Shea
. ..
Meningitis.
17 Timothy Allen, Jr.
67
1
9 Heart disease.
20 Mary F. McCue
..
1
10 Cholera infantum.
22 Samuel Schuler
7
9
15 Bright's disease.
24 Thomas W. Killikelly
37
1
19 Alcoholism.
25 Carrie J. Fulton
27 9 23 Phthisis pulmonalis.
25 William E. Hurley
26 . .
Alcoholism.
28 Thomas C. Coleman
..
9
2
Cholera infantum.
28 Francis E. Twomey
12
3
14
Tetanus.
29 Caroline H. Pipping
72 11
18 Old age, paralysis.
30 George Shortman
2
12 Cholera infantum.
:Sapt. 2 Emeline Butler
Donald L. Estey
6
9 Cholera infantum.
7 Ada B. Smith ..
4 28
Meningitis.
10 -- Keenan
..
. ..
Stillborn.
13 Ethel M. McNeece
..
1 14 Enteritis.
6 Mary A. Finnerty
39
..
5 Phthisis pulmonalis.
16 Maria Baker
76
1
16
Consumption.
17 Laura B. Chamberlain
..
11
17
Marasmus.
18
John J. O'Keefe
33
11
15 Consumption.
..
Unknown. ..
23 William J. Martin
Pulmonary consumption.
8
28
..
76 10 19 Gangrene of foot
$50
AGES.
Date.
NAMES.
Cause of Death.
Y.
-1 | M.
Co | D.
Meningitis.
29 Frances Curtis .
52
Consumption.
30) Richard Comick
72
.. ..
Bright's disease.
Oct. 1 Myrtilla R. Brown
50
4 11 Marasmns.
1 Wilhelmine Mittelmeier
54
4
2 Bright's disease.
11 Oscar S. Williams
49
3
9 Bright's disease.
18 Michael O'Brien
50
Consmpution.
21 Matthew McGuiness 70
..
.. Bright's disease.
24 Charles H. Watye
12
1
21 Diabetes.
26 Lyman W. Lord
74
t-
15 Dilatation of heart.
Nov. 2 Mary M. Brooks
29
Phthisis pulmonalis. ..
3 Campbell ..
3 Convulsions.
5 Catharine A. Hogan
..
2
25 Unknown.
8 Margaret Seery
38
. . Cancer of uterns.
9 Rebecca S. Hewins
10 14 Paralysis.
10 Mary Murray
45
Heart disease. ..
14 Mary A. Smith
57
7
14 Emphysema of lungs.
22 Jennie G. Smith
8
.. Diabetes Mellitus.
25 Isaac N. Ellis
83
..
29 Old age.
26 John O'Brien
37
5 21 Paresis.
29 Lizzie F. Tully
24 7 .. Tuberculosis.
Dec. 7 - - O'Neil ..
..
Stillborn. ..
9 Alfred C. Billings
51
10 24 Cerebro-spinal sclerosis.
10
Hepzibah Everett
96
6
12 Old age.
10| Andrew Tracy
50
11
10 Cancer of lower bowel
10 Bridget Daly .
45
..
.. Cirrhosis
19 Benjamin F. Gillett
81
4 29 Paralysis
26 Nancy W. Grant
75
10 ..
Pneumonia
29 Harvey J. Davenport
82
2
.. Heart Disease
Sept. 25| Harold B. Parker
:
..
..
POOR FARM BUILDING, WEST DEDHAM. ERECTED, 1893.
RECORD OF
TOWN MEETINGS
OF THE
TOWN OF DEDHAM FOR THE YEAR 1894-5.
1
RECORD OF TOWN MEETINGS.
1894-5.
TOWN MEETING WARRANT.
[Town Seal.]
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
NORFOLK, SS. To either of the Constables of the Town of Ded- ham, in said County, Greeting.
You are hereby required, in the name of the Commonwealth aforesaid, to notify and warn the inhabitants of said Town of Dedham, qualified to vote in town affairs, to assemble in Memo- rial Hall, in said town, on the first Monday in March, (being the fifth day of said month), A. D. 1894, at seven o'clock in the forenoon, then and there to act on the following articles, namely:
Article One-To choose a Moderator to preside at said meeting.
Article Two-To choose all necessary Town Officers. The following are to be chosen by ballot, under the provisions of Chapter 386 of the Acts of 1890, and Acts in amendment thereto, viz .: One Town Clerk, one Town Treasurer, one Collector of Taxes, five Selectmen, three Assessors, three Overseers of the Poor, three members of Board of Health, three Auditors, nine Constables, all for one year ; two School Committee for three years ; three Trustees of the Public Library for three years. And also upon the same ballot to vote upon the question : "Shall license be granted for the sale of intoxicating liquors in the town?" All Town Officers, except as above named, are to be chosen for one year.
Article Three-To hear and act on the report of the Auditors of the Treasurer's and Collector's account.
Article Four-To see if the Town will accept the list of jurors, as prepared by the Selectmen, and posted according to law.
354
Article Five-To hear and act on the report of the Commit- tee on the distribution of the interest of the Damon and Draper donations, and choose a committee to distribute the interest the ensuing year.
1
Article Six-To see if the Town will authorize the Collector of Taxes to use the same means as town treasurer may use when acting as the collector.
Article Seven-To see what sums of money the Town will raise to defray the incidental and other necessary expenses of the town, not otherwise provided for, for the ensuing year.
Article Eight-To see what sum of money the Town will raise and appropriate for the decoration of the soldiers' graves.
Article Nine-To see what sums of money the Town will raise and appropriate for the Dedham Public Library.
Article Ten-To see if the Town will raise and appropriate money to keep the cemeteries in Dedham Village and West Ded- ham in repair.
Article Eleven-To see what rate of interest the Town will authorize the Collector to charge on all taxes not paid November 1st, 1894.
Article Twelve-To see what sum of money the Town will raise and appropriate for the support of public schools and the payment of the salary of the Superintendent of Schools, for the ensuing year.
Article Thirteen-To see if the Town will appropriate the amount received from other towns for scholars attending the pub- lic schools in Dedham for contingent expenses of the public schools.
Article Fourteen-To see if the Town will vote to purchase land contiguous to the Avery School-house lot for enlarging said lot, and raise and appropriate money therefor, and take such other and further action as may be necessary and desirable to carry out such vote.
Article Fifteen-To see if the Town will vote to erect a new school-house on the present Avery School-house lot, or on said lot as enlarged under the last preceding article, and raise and ap- propriate money therefor, and take such other and further action as may be necessary or desirable to carry out such vote.
Article Sixteen-To see if the Town, for the purpose of
.
355
carrying out its vote or votes, under the last two preceding articles, or either of them, will require and authorize the Select- men to borrow money upon the bonds, notes or scrip of the town, to such an amount, upon such terms of payment and at such rate of interest as shall be fixed and determined in its vote under this article, and take such other and further action as may be neces- sary or desirable to carry out such vote.
Article Seventeen-To see if the Town will authorize the School Committee to establish kindergartens 'in the town, and raise and appropriate money for the support of the same.
Article Eighteen-To see what sums of money the Town will raise and appropriate for the repairs of highways, sidewalks, and lumber for repairs of bridges and railings.
Article Nineteen-To see if the Town will accept as a town way the private way lying between Court street and Marsh street, as laid out by the Selectmen, and appropriate money for the same.
Article Twenty-To see if the Town will vote to extend the electric lights on Pond street, from the Baptist Church to the Norfolk engine house, No. 6, on High street, and on Clapboard- tree street, from Pond street to the residence of Willis C. Fuller, and on: Winter street, from Clapboardtree street to the :Norwood line, and raise and appropriate money for the same.
Article Twenty-one-To see if the town will cause Elm street, East street from Elm street to Washington, and Washington street from the Norwood line to Gay street, to be lighted with electric lights, and to raise and appropriate money for the same.
Article Twenty-two-To see if the Town will light East street, from Endicott to Canton street, and Canton to the house of the late John Eaton, and raise and appropriate money for the same.
Article Twenty-three-To see if the Town will vote to pur- chase the stone crushing plant owned by P. F. Tracy, and located off Mill lane street, East Dedham, and raise and appropriate money for the same.
Article Twenty-four-Tosee if the Town will instruct the Superintendent of Streets to pay the laboring men two dollars per day, and nine hours to constitute a day's work.
356
Article Twenty-five-To see if the Town will petition the Massachusetts Highway Commission, that Washington street, from the Boston line to the line of Norwood, be laid out and ac- quired as a State highway, and raise and appropriate money for the expenses of said petition, as provided in Chapter 476 in the laws of the year 1893.
Article Twenty-six-To see if the voters of the Town of Dedham will vote to authorize or instruct the Selectmen of the town to bargain, sell and convey all the rights, title and interests which the town now owns or possesses, or may possess, in the strip of land on Washington street, directly opposite the front of Memorial Hall land, bounded on Washington street to its terminus of the said strip of land ; thence by land of C. B. Danforth, of Dedham, and thence running parallel with Washington street, by land of William Carberry, of Hyde Park, or however said premises may be bounded or described, to said William Carberry of Hyde Park.
Article Twenty-seven-To see if the Town will accept Chap- ter 154 of the Acts of 1882, entitled "An act authorizing towns and cities to lay out public parks within their limits."
Article Twenty-eight-To hear and act upon the report of the Committee appointed at the annual town meeting in 1893, under article 36 of the warrant of that meeting, relating to public play grounds, parks, etc.
Article Twenty-nine-To see if the Town will elect three competent persons to constitute a Board of Park Commissioners for the Town of Dedham, and determine the manner of their election and prescribe their terms of office.
Article Thirty-To see if the Town will vote that hereafter Park Commissioners shall be elected by ballot at the annual , election of town officers, and fix their terms of office.
Article Thirty-one-To see if the Town will revise and correct the names of the streets, and give names to such as have none legally.
Article Thirty-Two-To see if the Town will instruct the Board of Health to make such arrangements or contracts as they deem best for the interests of the Town in relation to the removal of garbage, refuse and offal, and to see if the Town will authorize them to expend for such purpose a sum not exceeding three hun- dred dollars per annum.
357
Article Thirty-three-To see what action the Town will take regarding a system of sewerage for the town, and to see if the town will appoint a committee with instructions to present to the town a comprehensive report, with estimates, in relation to the subject of sewerage.
Article Thirty-four-To see what action the Town will take with relation to the drainage of Wigwam meadows and Little Wigwam pond and swamp, and to see if the town will vote to assess the costs of such drainage, {so far as may be, upon the abutting owners, and raise and appropriate a sum sufficient to de- fray the costs of such drainage.
Article Thirty-five-To see if the Town will adopt certain by-laws, to be presented by the Board of Health, to the town, for governing plumbers and the practice of plumbing in this town, in accordance with the requirements of Chapter 477 of the Acts of the Legislature of Massachusetts for 1893.
Article Thirty-six-To see if the Town will vote to introduce an electric fire alarm system, and raise and appropriate money for the same.
Article Thirty-seven-To see if the Town will vote to pur- chase one thousand feet of hose for the Fire Department, and raise and appropriate money for the same.
Article Thirty-eight-To see if the Town will raise and appropriate money to purchase a chemical fire engine for West Dedham.
Article Thirty-nine-To see if the Town will appropriate a sum of money for the enforcement of laws concerning the sale of intoxicating liquors, by means of additional police officers, or in other manner permitted by law.
Article Forty-To see if the Town will direct the maintain- ing of a supplementary public library, and the establishment and maintenance of a public reading room in connection with the same, or with the present Public Library, or in Memorial Hall, Lower Memorial Hall, or both, on evenings when the same are not leased, or in such other buildings as may be found con- venieEt.
Article Forty-one-To see if the Town will authorize the use of Memorial Hall, or Lower Memorial Hall, or both, on evenings when the same are not leased, for public industrial or other schools, and for a public reading room.
358
Article Forty-two-To see if the Town will authorize the Selectmen to change the position of the tablets in Memorial Hall if found necessary or desirable so to do, in the improvements of Memorial Hall building, for the better accommodation of the public officers of the town.
Article Forty-three-To see if the Town will compensate Mr. John Brennan for expenses and loss of services of his minor child, by reason of injuries received in March last, in the yard of the Ames schoolhouse, and raise and appropriate money for the same.
Article Forty-four-To see what sum of money the Town of Dedham will vote to pay Ernest Halbauer for taxes illegally assessed by the town, and paid by him.
Article Forty-five-To hear and act upon the report of the Town Clerk, relating to printing the Town Records, and raise and appropriate money for the same.
Article Forty-six-To see if the Town will raise and appro- priate the sum of three hundred dollars to be used with the unex- pended balance appropriated for a like purpose a year ago, to procure horses, harnesses, etc., to be located at the Steamer house.
Article Forty-seven-To see if the Town will raise and appro- priate money to continue the work of permanently improving the .sidewalks.
Article Forty-eight-To see what action the Town will take with reference to the compensation of the Collector of Taxes, as provided in Section 6, Article 3, of the Town By-Laws.
By-Laws of the Town require the polls to be opened at seven o'clock and remain open till thirty minutes past four in the after- ·noon.
Hereof fail not, but make return of this warrant, with your doings thereon, unto the Selectmen, on or before said day and time.
Given under our hands, and the seal of said Town of Ded- ham, aforesaid, this twenty-first day of February, A. D. eighteen hundred and ninety-four.
THOMAS P. MURRAY, FERDINAND F. FAVOR,
J. EVERETT SMITH, HENRY E. FRENCH,
GEORGE W. WEATHERBEE, -
Selectmen of Dedham.
359
On said warrant the following return was made :-
Norfolk, ss.
Dedham, March 5, 1894.
By virtue of this warrant I have notified and warned the legal voters of the Town of Dedham, aforesaid, to meet at the time and place, and for the purposes specified in said warrant, by posting attested copies thereof in each of the post offices in said town, and in twenty other public places in said town, seven days at least before the day of said meeting, and by causing an attested copy thereof to be published twice before the time of said meet- ing, in the Dedham Transcript, a newspaper published in said town of Dedham.
JOHN DEAN, Constable of Dedham.
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
Norfolk, ss.
At a meeting of the inhabitants of the town of Dedham, in said, County, qualified to vote in town affairs, held pursuant to the foregoing warrant, at Memorial Hall, in said town, on the first Monday of March (being the fifth day of said month), A. D. 1894.
The meeting was called to order at the time and place named in said warrant, by the Town Clerk, who presided at the choice of Moderator.
Alonzo B. Wentworth was chosen Moderator by written ballot, in receiving which the check list was used.
Article Two-Before the opening of the polls, the Selectmen appointed as Ballot Clerks,' Henry D. Humphrey and Aaron W. Baker, and they were sworn into office by the Town Clerk before the ballots were delivered to them.
Voted that the Town proceed to ballot for one Town Clerk, one Town Treasurer, one Collector of Taxes, five Selectmen, three Auditors, three Assessors, three Overseers of the Poor, three members of the Board of Health, and nine Constables, all for one year; two School Committee and three Trustees of the Public Library for three years each. ' Also to ballot on the questions, "Shall Licenses be granted for the sale of Intoxicating Liquor in this Town ?" and "Shall an Act passed by the Legisla- ture of the Commonwealth in the year 1882, entitled, 'An Act authorizing towns and cities to lay out Public Parks within their
360
limits' be accepted ?,, under Articles two and twenty-seven of the Warrant.
The Moderator appointed as additional ballot officers John F. Reilly and. Crawford R. Brown, and they were sworn by the Town Clerk.
After the Moderator had been chosen as aforesaid, and before the opening of the polls, the Town Clerk delivered to said ballot clerks the bundle packed by him and sealed as required by law, containing 2400 official ballots and 75 special official ballots for School Committee only, and the Town Clerk caused the cards of instruction to be posted in each of the twenty-three voting com- partments, provided by the town and guarded as required by law, and the Town Clerk also caused three such cards and five spec- imen ballots to be posted about the polling room outside the guard rails, and a receipt for said ballots was given by the ballot clerks to the Town Clerk.
Upon the delivery of the ballots to the voters by the ballot clerks, the check list was used, and the name of each voter receiv- ing a ballot was announced and checked thereon. The ballot, as delivered to each voter, was by such voter marked in the voting compartments, and deposited by the voter in the ballot boxes, called the Standard, furnished and certified to by the Secretary of the Commonwealth, the ballots cast by the women being depos- ited in a separate box from those deposited by the men, and the name of each voter depositing a ballot in said boxes was announced in a loud and distinct tone of voice, and checked upon the voting list by the election officers in charge at said boxes and list.
The following persons were appointed by the Moderator, as Tellers to aid him in receiving, sorting and counting the ballots cast at said meeting, viz :- Edward L. Burdakin, Arthur B. Whitman, Frank E. Morse, Thomas J. Hannon, A. F. A. Schulz, Henry W. Weeks, Fred E. Smith, Woodbury G. Smith, Charles A. Cline, Frank W. Power, Crawford R. Brown, John P. Cutter, Charles E. Russell, Alfred C. Smith, John F. Reilly, William C. Williams and Henry D. Humphrey; and said tellers were duly sworn to the faithful discharge of their duties.
All the ballots deposited in said boxes were sorted, counted,
-
361
and declaration thereof made by the Moderator, and were as follows :-
Whole number of ballots cast by the men voters was 1264; whole number of ballots cast by the women voters was 19. The two check lists used for the men voters each showed 1264 names checked thereon, and the two check lists used for women voters each showed 19 names checked thereon. The number of ballots left at the close of the polls, deducted from the whole amount receipted for by the ballot clerks, showed 1264 delivered to the men and 19 to the women.
For Town Clerk :
Don Gleason Hill, Willow street, had 802
Three persons had one each.
And said Hill was declared elected, and was sworn into said office by the Moderator in open town meeting.
For Selectmen :
Ferdinand F. Favor, High street, had 859
Henry E. French, High street, had 610
Daniel V. Kelley, Whiting avenue, had 435 ·
Thomas P. Murray, High street, had . .
712
David Neal, Washington street, had . 624
J. Everett Smith, Washington street, had 634
George W. Weatherbee, East street, had 735
Benjamin F. White, Nahatan street, had 415
H. G. Turner had three and eight persons had one each, and said Favor, Murray, Neal, Smith and Weatherbee were declared elected.
For Assessors :
Henry E. French, High street, had 755
. Hugh H. McQuillen, Village avenue, had . 638
Thomas P. Murray, High street, had . 811 Benjamin F. White, Nahatan street, had 593
H. G. Turner had 13
And four persons had one each, and said French, McQuillen and Murray were declared elected.
For Auditors :
Frank M. Bailey, Milton street, had .' 870
Daniel A. Lynch, Needham street, had 909
Edward C. Paul, Worthington street, had . 887
362
And five persons had one each, and said Bailey, Lynch and Paul were declared elected.
For Town Treasurer : Edwin A. Brooks, Willow street, had . . 875 And two persons had one each, and said Brooks was declared elected.
For Overseers of the Poor :
Howard Colburn, High street, had 857 Anna E. Ely, Washington street, had . 720
Henry Smith, High street, had . 652
George W. Weatherbee, East street, had 699
And three persons had one each, and said Colburn, Ely and Weatherbee were declared elected.
For School Committee for three years :
Charles F. Kimball, Wint hrop street, had . 563 Frederick B. Kingsbury, High street, had . 714 John L. Wakefield, Court street, had . · 604 And three persons had one each, and said Kingsbury and Wakefield were declared elected.
For Board of Health :
Francis L. Babcock, Walnut street, had 823
John W. Chase, Church street, had . 649
Edward W. Finn, High street, had 660 Erastus Worthington, Jr., Chestnut street, had 733 And one person had one vote, and said Babcock, Finn and Worthington were declared elected.
For Trustees of the Public Library for thee years : Albert Hale, Common street, had 807
Don Gleason Hill, Willow street, had 928
, Winslow Warren, High street, had 811 And six persons had one each, and said Hale, Hill and War- ren were declared elected.
For Collector of Taxes :
Thomas J. Baker, off Court street, had . 839
Two persons had one each, and said Baker was declared elected.
For Constables .:
Martin J. Barrett, Belknap street, had 899
Isaac H. Carter, Hartford street, had 469
363
John Dean, High street, had 693
James Devlin, High street. had . 332
Irving Donley, Winthrop street, had . 672
William F. Drugan, Elm View Place, had . 812
James R. Finn Mt. Hope street, had . .
576
Otis S. Guild, East street, had 581
Charles O. Haynes, off Westfield street, had 619
George E. Morse, Willow street, had . 581
Andrew J. Nolan, Greenhood street, had . 366
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