Town annual report of Saugus 1864-1888, Part 19

Author: Saugus (Mass.)
Publication date: 1864
Publisher: The Town
Number of Pages: 562


USA > Massachusetts > Essex County > Saugus > Town annual report of Saugus 1864-1888 > Part 19


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66,231 25


18 20


1882


1,197,790


142,605


1,342,395


69,909 48


19 00


1881


1,205,210


223,752


1,425,962


70,345 49


17 60


1880


1,210,405


254,960


1,465,095


69,305 01


16 50


1879


1,202,054


260,890


1,462,944


69,901 28


17 00


187.8


1,210,725


299,810


1,510,535


72,425 67


18 00


1877


1,326,520


355,460


1,681,980


74,541 62


16 00


1876


1,317,128


381,300


1,698,428


84,217 55


20 00


1875


1,289,433


448,825


1,738,258


52,676 73


19 00


1874


1,253,233


543,000


1,796,233


36.832 18


18 50


1873


1,165,474


541,710


1,707,184


36,142 44


13 50


1872


1,110,125


492,225


1,602,350


35,730 42


12 50


1871


1,048,908


451,937


1,500,845


37,709 40


18 00


1870


1,004,929


457,160


1,462,089


12,769 89


15 00


1869


973,342


469,629


1,442,971


14,900 87


13 33


1868


914,214


396,558


1,310,772


16,113 62


14 50


1867


906,464


385,429


1,291,893


18,103 844


18 00


1866


895,312


453,366


1,348,678


20,201 36


15 00


1865


904,544


444,973


1,349,517


22,749 58


17 00


1864


909,646


397,400


1,307,046


30,080 86


12 50


1863


880,314


324,490


1,204,804


30,235 16


13 33


1862


876,690


270,005


1,146,695


18,407 98


8 00


1861


889,693


286,189


1,175,882


16,580 17


7 80


1860


877,605


301,087


1,179,592


16.601 33


6 80


40


TOWN WARRANT.


SAUGUS, FER. 7, 1887.


To SOLON V. EDMANDS, Constable of the Town of Saugus, in the County of Essex.


Greeting :


In the name of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, you are hereby required to notify and warn the inhabitants of the Town of Saugus qualified to vote in town affairs to meet at the Town Hall on Monday, the seventh day of March next, at 12 o'clock M., to act on the following articles, viz .:


ARTICLE I. To choose a Moderator to preside in said meeting.


ART. 2. To hear and act on reports of committees.


ART. 3. To bring in their votes for Town Clerk, Selectmen and Assessors, Overseers of the Poor, Treasurer, Constable, Tax Collector, Sinking Fund Commissioner for three years, and one Road Commissioner for three years, all on one ballot. Also, at the same time to bring in their votes on a separate ballot for two School Committee, one for three years and one two years. Also, at the same time to bring in their ballots, "Yes " or "No," in answer to the following question, " Shall licenses be granted for the sale of intoxicating liquor in this town ? "


ART. 4. To choose all other officers which towns are by law required to choose in the months of March or April annually.


ART. 5. To raise such sums of money as may be required to defray town charges for the ensuing year, and make appropriation of the same.


ART. 6. To revise the jury list.


ART. 7. To see if the town will authorize the Treasurer, with the approval of the Selectmen, to hire money and give notes of the town for the same for the following purposes, viz .: First, for the purpose of pay- ing notes coming due the present year. Second, for the purpose of paying notes not yet due. Third, to hire money temporarily, not ex- ceeding one year, in anticipation of taxes.


ART. 8, To see if the town will authorize the Treasurer with the approval of the Selectmen, to hire money of the Sinking fund Commissioners, and give notes of the town for the same, for the purpose of funding the town debt.


ART. 9. To see what action the town will take in relation to charging interets on taxes to be assessed for the ensuing year.


41


TOWN WARRANT.


ART. 10. To see if the town will appropriate a sum not exceeding one hundred dollars, to defray the expenses of Decoration Day.


ART. II. To see what action the town will take in relation to having a survey and plan of the town made, to aid the Assessors in the discharge of their duties.


ART. 12. To see what action, the town will take in providing street lights, and lighting the same.


ART. 13. To see what action the town will take to settle the claims made by John Roach and Benjamin Reed, for damages to their estates caused by raising the grade of Central street.


ART. 14. To see if the town will accept Atherton and Hamilton Sts., East Saugus, as laid out by the Road Commissioners.


ART. 15. To see if the town will accept Sec. twenty of Chapter fifty of the Public Statues giving the Selectmen or Road Commissioners power to estab- lish and grade sidewalks.


ART. 16. To see if the town will grant the use of the so called Library Room in the Town Hall to the Saugus Public Library Association.


ART. 17. To see if the town will appropriate a sum of money to place said Library Room in proper condition to receive the books of the Association.


ART. 18. To see if the town will grade and repair the cemetery and make appro- priation for the same.


ART. 19. To see if the town will authorize the Road Commissioners to make some arrangement with the land owners on the street, to drain the surface water from Lincoln Ave. between Ballard and Bristow Sts.


And you are directed to serve this warrant by posting up attes- ted copies of the same at the usual places in said town, seven days at least before the time of holding said meeting.


Hereof fail not, and make due return of this warrant, with your doings thereon, to the 'l'own Clerk at the time and place of meet- ing.


Given under our hands, this first day of February, A. D., 1887. JOHN W. HITCHINGS, EDWARD S. KENT, WILLIAM F. HITCHINGS,


Selectmen of Saugus.


ANNUAL REPORT


OF THE


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


OF THE


TOWN OF SAUGUS,


FOR THE YEAR ENDING


DECEMBER 31, 1886.


PRI INTERS


230


LEWIS & WINSHIP


UNION ST LYNN


MASS


SAUGUS SCHOOL COMMITTEE, 1886.


GEORGE PARSONS, Chairman, term expires 1888. DR. GEO. W. GALE, Secretary, " 1 887. ALBERT H. SWEETSER, 66 1889.


Truant Officers, all the members of the Board.


Regular Meetings of the Board are held in the High School room on the first Monday of each month, at 5.30 P. M.


At the regular meeting of the Board, June 7, 1886, the resig- nation of Dr. Geo. W. Gale was received and accepted, and at a joint special meeting of the Board of Selectmen and School Com- mittee, held June 14th, and called for that purpose, Mr. Wilbur F. Newhall, of East Saugus, was unanimously chosen by ballot to fill the vacancy for the remainder of the term. The Board was reorganized by electing Mr. Sweetser Secretary. At the regular meeting of the Board on Monday, Feb. 7, 1SS7, the resignation of Mr. A. H. Sweetser was received and accepted, and Mr. W. F. Newhall was chosen Secretary.


SCHOOL REPORT.


The School Committee of Saugus respectfully submit their Annual Report.


CHANGE OF TEACHERS.


During the past year our schools have continued in their usual steady course, with but few changes. Early in the year Miss Nellie M. Johnson, after nearly three years of very efficient service as assistant teacher in the High School, handed in her res- ignation, to take effect as soon as her successor should be chosen. Your committee very reluctantly accepted her resignation, and secured the services of Miss M. L. Moulton, of Newburyport, who assumed her duties on Feb. 15, and who, although young and inexperienced as a teacher, gave such evident satisfaction to the Committee that at our regular meeting in July she was unani- mously re-elected for another year. Miss Clara C. Farnham, of the Intermediate School in East Saugus, one of our most success- ful teachers, who had been in the town's service for eleven years, was obliged, through ill health, at the close of the school year in June, to ask for a year's leave of absence, which was granted, and Miss A. M. Gove, of Nahant, was elected to fill the vacancy, which she has so far very acceptably done.


During the summer vacation all of the school-houses received a much-needed attention in the way of repairs, under the super- vision of the Selectmen. The buildings in North Saugus, Oak- landvale and East Saugus were thoroughly repaired and painted inside and out. The buildings in the Centre and Cliftondale were repaired but not painted, and your committee believe that for the


4


SCHOOL REPORT.


proper preservation of the buildings, this should be attended to during the coming summer vacation. The walls and ceilings of all the school-rooms were either whitewashed or painted, while the floors all received a thorough cleaning, so that at the com- mencement of our school year in September, our school-rooms, from a sanitary point of view, were in a much better condition than for some years past. In the Grammar school-room in East Saugus, the floor, being very much worn, was taken up and re- placed by one of hard pine. The seats also of this room, which were all double, of an ancient pattern, and many of them consid- erably diminished by the jack-knives not only of the boys of to-day, but, without any doubt, of their fathers also, were taken out and replaced by single seats of a modern pattern, and to-day we may well say it is the model school-room of our town. Some of the best of these seats, however, were taken to Cliftondale, and utilized as far as practical, by being repaired, and placed in the Primary and Intermediate school-rooms. We were obliged to procure some new seats also, to accommodate the rapidly increas- ing numbers in our schools in this growing part of the town. The heating apparatus of all our school-rooms received a thorough overhauling.


MAPS AND GLOBES.


President Eliot, of Harvard University, says : " It is impos- sible to teach History and Geography effectually without a con- siderable collection of maps and globes, and they are as indispen- sable in a successful school as blackboards, tables and desks." The maps and globes which had been in use in our schools, I should judge, for the past thirty or forty years, were of no practical use whatever, and your committee felt justified in making a con- siderable expenditure, to place these much-needed implements of instruction in the schools where necessary. After carefully in- specting the maps and globes of a number of manufacturers, we decided to adopt those of A. H. Andrews & Co., of New York. These maps show the very latest political and geographical


5


SCHOOL REPORT.


changes, are plainly printed, well colored, showing all the princi- pal cities, mountains, lakes, etc., in every country. Seven maps constitute the set, viz., The World, North America, South Amer- ica, United States, Europe, Asia and Africa, mounted on spring rollers, and placed in a substantial hard wood case, fastened to the side of the room, so that any map wanted can be drawn down like a curtain, and, after using, returned, the case locked, and the maps thereby protected from dust or liability to injury. Eight cases of these maps were procured, and with eight twelve-inch globes from the same parties, placed in the Grammar and Inter- mediate schools in Saugus Centre, Cliftondale and East Saugus, and also the mixed schools in North Saugus and Oaklandvale.


TARDINESS.


We certainly feel justified in calling the attention of the parents of our children, again, to this great evil, for we consider that you are in a large measure responsible. It is not only a drawback to the child who is tardy, but to the whole school, and is an annoyance which, we think, with a little effort on your part, might be to a large extent prevented. Punctuality is a lesson which every child should be taught, even before he enters a school-room, and every scholar should make it one of the founda- tion-stones of his education. In examining the several registers of our schools, we find that a comparatively small number of our scholars are responsible for nearly all of this tardiness, and to illustrate it we will begin with our High School. We here find that out of 61 scholars 41 have not been tardy at all, while out of the 78 cases of tardiness, 3 scholars are responsible for 43, and 4 others 18. In the Centre our schools make a much better show- ing, especially since the opening in September, and this can be attributed in a large measure to the bell placed on the Grammar school-house during the summer vacation, the number of cases having fallen from 547 in 1885 to 316 in 1886. In Cliftondale the number has increased from 332 in 1885 to 462 in 1886, and one of the teachers in this ward writes me " That one boy has been tardy


6


SCHOOL REPORT.


24, another 16, and a girl 15 times," and asks, " If they bring a note asking to be excused, as they were needed at home to do errands or work, what is a teacher to say to the children?" and also adds : " I have felt lately that it was bad for the children to be falling into such a habit, and some notice should be taken of it." From another school in this ward the teacher writes me that out of the 187 cases, two boys are responsible for 60 of them. In East Saugus cases of tardiness have always been much smaller, no doubt owing to the fact that this ward is much more concen- trated, and the children have not so far to go, yet the number of cases here has increased from 120 in 1885 to 216 in 1886, in North Saugus from 145 in 1885 to 250 in 1886, while in Oaklandvale it has dropped from 47 in 1885 to 21 in 1886. We certainly trust that the parents of our children will see from this how important it is thot they should become interested in this matter, and en- deavor to start their children from home in season to reach their schools before the opening hour.


SALARIES.


The salaries of our Intermediate, Primary and Mixed school- teachers were advanced fifty cents per week, and that of the Prin- cipal of the High School to $1000 per annum. It was only by the strictest economy that we were enabled to make this advance, keep our schools running the full 38 weeks, and keep within the appropriation, but we find that the salaries of our teachers are so much below those of the surrounding towns and cities that we felt fully justified in taking this step.


OUR HIGH SCHOOL.


We have often been asked, what was the use of teaching so many studies in our High School, that would in all probability be of n > practical benefit to the scholars in after years, such as Geom- etry, Algebra, Latin, French. etc., and if we were obliged to have such studies, why not allow the scholars to select such of the courses as they desired to study? Your commiitee gave a good


7


SCHOOL REPORT.


deal of consideration to this matter two years ago, and after con- ferring with agents of the State Board of Education and the Prin- cipal of our High School, adopted the course as it is now laid out. It would be impossible to allow each scholor to select his own studies, as it would require so many more classes, and besides, we doubt if a scholar, upon entering our High School, has arrived at that point of maturity that would enable him or her to select such studies as would prove the most beneficial in after years. We do not expect every scholar to become a civil engineer because he has been obliged to study Geometry, neither do we expect them all to become book-keepers because we teach Book-keeping, or all to become architects because we teach Drawing, neither do we ex- pect all our boys to become Congressmen because we teach His_ tory, Civil Government, etc. ; but we do expect that some of them will become at least good business men, and have something to do with banks and bankers, architects, artists and artisans, and all to become good, intelligent citizens.


The most of our studies are by law required to be taught. in order that we may participate in the State School Fund, and we do not think that any scholars who will apply themselves as they should, and give sufficient time to their studies outside of the school-room, would find our course. as now laid out, too difficult to master. On the other hand, it is a matter of fact that fault has been found by some parents because the studies were considered too easy, but we think that a good deal of the responsibility of success or failure remains with the scholars themselves. Children are not all alike in mental capacity, any more than in physical ability, and what some would consider an easy task to perform others might pronounce hard. Our High School is increasing in numbers yearly, and although we have but the small class of five to graduate this year, we hope that the middle class, which now numbers fifteen, will all be promoted to the first class of next year. Of the class of 26 who entered this year nearly all remain, and we trust that another equally as large will enter this year. Our Prin- cipal and Assistant both speak in high terms of the class who


8


SCHOOL REPORT.


entered this year, which reflects much credit on our Grammar school-teachers.


CHANGE OF GRADE IN WARD THREE.


No promotions were made this year in Cliftondale, thus rais- ing the grade in the Primary and Intermediate schools, and leav- ing but two classes in the Grammar grade, as at East Saugus. In March Mr. J. F. Prince, of the State Board of Education, visited all of our schools, spending three days in the different wards, and on the afternoon of March 5th met all our teachers in the High School room, when he criticised their work, pointing out the weak places and giving them some timely suggestions as to im- provements. Before leaving, Mr. Prince expressed himself as being well satisfied with the condition of our schools. On the whole we believe our schools are in a good, prosperous condition. A year of good work has been done. We have a corps of active, earnest, conscientious teachers, whose hearts are in their work, and who are alive to all new methods and measures which prom- ise to increase the efficiency of our school system. While the people are sometimes slow to see the needs in this direction, yet there is no more popular cause on the face of the globe to-day than the cause of education, and as long as the world sees and knows that " knowledge is power," we trust the public schools of our town will receive that hearty endorsement and generous sup- port which in justice we think they deserve.


Respectfully submitted, .


GEORGE PARSONS, Chairman.


9


SYNOPSIS OF TEACHERS' REPORTS.


No. of Ward.


Grade of School. Name of Teacher.


When Elected.


Salary per Week.


Whole No. belong'g


Average No.


No. Males.


No. Females.


Average Weekly At-


tendance Ist Term.


Whole No. belong-


Average No. belong-


No. Males.


No. Females.


Average Weekly At-


tendance 2d Term.


Total Tardiness.


Average Yearly


Attendance.


Promoted.


High


Nellie M. Johnson


1883


$21 00 1,000 per yr. 10 00


39


37


18


21


36+


15


44


19


26


13+ 78


39+


6


1 Mixed


L. F. Armitage


1885


8 50-9 00


29


23


13


16


21


26


22


10


16


21 250


21


()


Grammar ·


E. W. Boardman


1865


10 00


17


43


22


25


39


47


42


22


25


39


103


38


9


Intermediate


E. A. Parker


1863


9 00-9 50


37


32


19


17


30


42


11


21


21


37


51


34


14


Primary . .


G. A. Walton .


1873


8 50-9 00


42


37


19


23


35+


37


35


19


18


33+ 88


33


19


Sub-Primary .


M. L. Walton .


1885


8 00-8 50


13


27


20


23


21


36


26


15


21


21


74


28


17


( Grammar


A. D. Moulton


1883


10 0)


44


40


27


17


35


26


23+


17


9


21+ 159


29


12


3


Intermediate .


M. C. Orr


1366


8 50-9 00


33


30


18


15


29


45


36


23


22


34


187


31


0


Primary .


M. L. Newhall


1883


8 00-8 50


48


38


26


22


31


61


51


30


31


-12


116


35


0


Grammar ·


I. V. Austin


1885


10 00


35


3.1


14


21


31


38


36


18


20


34


140


33


7


4


Int'mediate


m.


C. C. Farnham


1875


9 00-9 50


12


35


22


20


1


38


35


32


16


19


38


55


35


15


Primary .


·


E. A. Mansfield . 1851


9 00


51


40


24


27


34


52


49


27


25


46


21


39


11


5 Mixed


C. E. Carnes


1882 8 50-9 00


29


28+


15


14


26


30


26


17


13


24


76


25


1


·


1885


9 00


2


·


.


A. M. Gove .


9 50


First Term.


belong'g First Term.


SCHOOL REPORT


Wilbur F. Gillette


1881


M. I .. Moulton


ing 2d Term.


ing 2d Term.


10


SCHOOL REPORT.


SCHEDULE OF STATISTICS.


Amount expended by School Committee for 1886 :


Teachers' salaries $5,433 80


Janitors 305 00


Fuel . 231 80


Cleaning school-houses 72 97


School books and supplies 392 66


Maps and globes 322 50


School furniture 190 49


Repairing stoves


189 23


Incidentals 86 74


Total for schools $7,225 19


In addition to this sum there was expended : For additions to High School library $32 36


" globe for High School . 22 50


" maps · 6 00


" apparatus and chemicals 9 57


Total


$70 43


This sum, however, was not taken from the town's appropri- ation, but was the proceeds of the Prize Exhibition given by the High School at the close of the school year in June last, and which reflected much credit on our able Principal and Assistant of the High School.


Number of schools 13


" teachers 14


" weeks in school year 38


66 " children in Saugus between five and fifteen


years of age, May 1, 1886 516


11


SCHOOL REPORT.


Ward I, North Saugus


29


2, Saugus Centre 184


3, Cliftondale 138


66 4, East Saugus


I33


66 5, Oaklandvale


32


More than May 1, 1885


30


Average yearly attendance


440


Number of graduates from High School


6


NAMES OF GRADUATING CLASS, JUNE, 1886.


Corinne Alice Coburn,


Winslow Armitage Parsons,


Ada Louise Oliver,


Nellie Louise Joy,


John Kimball Newhall, Lewis Orrin Stocker.


12


SCHOOL REPORT.


HIGH SCHOOL COURSE OF STUDY.


JUNIOR YEAR.


Fall.


Winter.


Spring. Algebra,


Algebra,


Algebra,


Physical Geography,


Book-keeping.


Book-keeping,


Latin or French.


Latin or French.


Latin or French.


MIDDLE YEAR.


Winter.


Spring. Geometry,


Natural Philosophy,


Geometry,


Rhetoric,


Physiology,


Latin or French.


Botany, Latin or French.


Latin or French.


SENIOR YEAR.


Fall.


Winter.


Spring. Civil Government,


Astronomy, Latin or French,


Chemistry,


Latin or French,


Arithmetic,


Hist. and Literature, Hist. and Literature. Hist. and Literature. General Exercises during the Year .- Spelling, Letter-writing, Drawing, Reading, Declamations and Compositions, with weekly exercises in Arithmetic through the entire course.


LIST OF TEXT-BOOKS USED AT THE HIGH SCHOOL.


CLASSIFIED.


Junior Class .-- Warren's Physical Geography, Munroe's Sixth Reader, Greenleaf's Algebra, Meservey's Book-keeping, Prang's Drawing-book (No. 6,) Selections from Irving's Sketch Book, Methods Berlitz, Premiere et Deuxieme Partie, Jones' Latin Lessons.


Middle Class .- Steele's Natural Philosophy, Walker's Physiol- ogy, Prang's Drawing-book No. 7, Gray's Botany and Apgar's Plant Analysis, Westlake's Letter-writer, Hart's Rhetoric, Went-


Fall.


13


SCHOOL REPORT.


worth's Geometry, Methods Berlitz Deuxieme Partie, Dumas' La Tulip Noire, La Poudre aux Jeux, Harkness's Latin Grammar and Cæsar.


Senior Class .- Swinton's General History, Steele's Astronomy. Steele's Chemistry, Martin's Civil Government, Prang's Drawing- book No S, Brooke's Primer of English Literature, Hudson's Shakespeare, Richard III. and Merchant of Venice. Hudson's Text-book of Poetry, Method Berlitz Deuxieme Partie, Cinq Mars Agned de Vigny, Harkness's Cicero.


TEXT-BOOKS USED IN THE COMMON SCHOOLS.


Readers .- Franklin Primer and Advanced First, Second, Ad- vanced Second, Third, Advanced Third. Monroe Fourth, Fifth. and Sixth.


History .- Scudder's United States.


Grammar .- Reed and Kellogg's.


Drawing Books .- Bartholomew's Series Industrial.


Writing Books .- Duntonian Duplex.


Arithmetics .- Franklin Primary, Elementary, Written. Spellers .- Worcester's Primary, Worcester's New Pronouncing. Geography .- Harper's Common School. Warren's Primary.


Physiology and Hygiene .- Blaisdell's "Our Bodies and How we Live," and " How to Keep Well."


14


SCHOOL REPORT.


ROLL OF HONOR.


SAUGUS HIGH SCHOOL-1886.


NOT ABSENT.


Lizzie J. Brown,


Mary A. Burns,


Fred W. Carns,


Archie C. Cheever,


Clara H. Coburn,


Alice A. Cowdrey,


James Flaherty,


James E. Forster,


Cora E. Graves,


George I. Hull, -


Emma S. Mansfield,


Ada L. Oliver,


Winslow A. Parsons,


Lewis O. Stocker.


Geo. A. Sweetser,


M. Eda Waldron.


ABSENT ONLY ON ACCOUNT OF SICKNESS.


George W. Blodgett, Eva P. Brown,


Corinne A. Coburn,


Frank W. Foss,


Arthur F. Jenkins,


Frank B. Newhall,


Carrie G. McKenney. John K. Newhall,


Albert I. Oliver,


Charles F. Raddin,


George F. Scollin,


NOT TARDY. George W. Blodgett, Eva P. Brown,


Mary A. Burns,


Bertha M. Day,


Mabel E. Foss, Cora E. Graves,


George I. Hull, Emma I. Mansfield,


Arthur F. Jenkins, Frank B. Newhall, Albert I. Oliver,


John K. Newhall,


Ina M. Oliver, Addie M. Pranker, J. Arthur Raddin, George F. Scollin,


Lillian S. Oliver,


Walter E. Putnam,


Bertha M. Rawson, Mary E. Somes,


Annie M. Biffin, Lizzie J. Brown,


Alice A. Cowdrey, Frank W. Foss, Clinton M. Hill, Bertha B. Mansfield, Carrie G. McKenney, Gertrude H. Nourse, Winslow A. Parsons, Charles F. Raddin, Nellie J. Robinson,


Archie C. Cheever, James Flaherty,


Gertrude H. Nourse, Bertha M. Rawson,


Nellie M. Parsons, Nellie J. Robinson, Alice A. Waterman.


15


SCHOOL REPORT.


Allen M. Stocker, Jessie H. Stocker, Lewis O. Stocker,


George A. Sweetser, M. Eda Waldron, George Waterman, Mabel I. Westwood.


Alice A. Waterman,


WARD ONE.


MIXED SCHOOL.


NOT ABSENT. Madge A. Coburn.


ABSENT ONLY ON ACCOUNT OF SICKNESS. Harry Homan.


NOT TARDY.


Madge A. Coburn, Sidney Eaton, Allen Eaton, Harry Homan, Ernest Homan.


WARD TWO.


GRAMMAR SCHOOL.


NOT ABSENT.


Daisy Francois,


Rosa Robinson, Hattie Hall,


Amelia Philips,


Vergenes Leroyd, Harry Wilson,


Andrew Coney,


Charles Marden. Bertie Cook.


ABSENT ON ACCOUNT OF SICKNESS. James Pilling. Addie Leroyd,


Mary Higgins,


Jessie Ramsdell,


Mary Pilling.


Laura Cowdrey,


Julia Nourse, Grace Paul.


Stella Fairchild,


Grace Paul, Mary Higgins. Carrie Parker.


Alice Crooker,


NOT TARDY. Lillian Foster, Daisy Francois, Hattie Hall, Rosa Robinson. Ida Berrett,


Agnes Hallowel, Addie Leroyd, Hattie Sanborn, Jennie Ashworth. Amelia Philips,




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