USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Medfield > Town annual reports of Medfield 1920-1929 > Part 14
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 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58
When the lunch committee began to make arrangements for .
103
this, requests came in for sandwiches to be served as well as the milk and cocoa, also that the older children of the seventh and eighth grades and the high school be included with the rest.
As a result it was decided to serve sandwiches, cocoa, milk and soup, and these may now be obtained by any pupil or teacher during the high school recess or the noon intermission.
An average of seventy children patronize the lunch, the number having steadily increased.
It is the intention of the committee having charge of the lunch to keep the prices as low as is possibly consistent with covering expenses.
Visitors will be welcome.
4. Attendance. Attendance at School during the past year has been improved. The appointment of a regular attendance officer has contributed greatly to this result.
5. Report of School Nurse. "The school nursing in Medfield requires a great deal of time, in as much as it takes more time than that which is given to the school building alone. When cases are found which require medical attention and hospital care, follow up work must be done to see that this attention is received. Occasionally, cases are found which have to be taken to hospitals. This type of work is a very important part of school nursing, and although the time is not actually spent in the school building, it is spent on school work.
The general health of the school children during the past year has been good. During the year only 24 cases of contagious diseases were found.
Children have been weighed and measured, and health talks and inspections have been given frequently.
Hot lunch has been introduced in the school, with a well equipped room. This will soon prove its own merits. We all realize the importance of a hot lunch and also of a well equipped room for the children to eat their lunches in, instead of in the school room.
The children have received with enthusiasm any suggestions made to them, and seem to realize the importance of the nurse in the schools.
The Dental Clinic is still supported by the Red Cross and
104
very good work is being accomplished among the members of the clinic.
"Co-Co" the health clown, visited the children last spring and the lessons that he taught were very beneficial.
Any who attended the school exhibition and saw the posters and read the essays on health subjects written by the school children, will realize how much these different health movements have meant to them.
The splendid spirit of cooperation throughout the whole school, shown to me by the teachers, pupils and parents, has been more than noticed by me. It wish to take this opportunity to thank them. Because of this spirit shown, my work has been made very much easier and pleasanter."
Respectfully submitted,
MARTHA ELLEN HONEY, R. N.
The Committee asks for an appropriation of $24,200 for the year 1922, an increase of $700 over that for the previous year.
WILLIAM F. BEARSE,
MRS. SUSAN M. CLARK, WILLIAM G. PERRY.
Committee.
FINANCIAL REPORT OF SCHOOL COMMITTEE
Town Appropriation
$23,500.00
From Town Treasurer, Interest on School Fund. 157.62
$23,657.62
EXPENSE OF GENERAL CONTROL
School Committee
William F. Bearse
$35.00
William G. Perry
35.00
Susan M. Clark. 35.00
Susan M. Clark, clerk. . 50.00
The Rogers Press, stationery
10.00
Wright and Potter, printing . 2.05
105
Albert S. Ames, Supt. of Schools 625.00
Albert S. Ames, travelling expenses 88.10
The Rogers Press, for Supt. 28.05
B. F. Rhoades, Attendance Officer 8.00
Lawrence Dewar, Attendance Officer 40.00
Alton H. Hartford, travelling expenses
3.48
$959.68
EXPENSE OF INSTRUCTION Salaries of Teachers High
Alton H. Hartford
$2,270.00
Theresa E. MacMurray
1,370.00
Margaret E. Dolan
1,370.00
Mary F. Toland.
803.50
Helen Putnam.
520.00
Mrs. Jane L. Hersey
390.00
Louise Gove 915.00
$7,638.50
Elementary
Mrs. Gladys M. Rawding
$ 1,166.00
Mrs. Mabel M. Follensby
500.00
Mary L. Waite.
400.00
Elizabeth S. Buck.
1,070.00
Anne F. MacInness
630.00
E. A. Maud Craig
400.00
Agnes Donlan
300.00
Pauline Goss.
800.00
Frances Collins .
295.00
Dorothy Jones
400.00
Caroline Merrill .
150.00
Marion Knapp
67.10
Jessie L. Boyd .
75.00
Gladys M. Russell
50.00
Marguerite Murphy
10.00
Mabel Miller .
2.50
Marjorie Doane 5.00
106
Katherine Ehnes 5.00
Beatrice Rossmeisl.
49.10
Jane Hinkley .
2.50
$6,377.20
Special
Nettie F. Hamant, music. $ 312.00
Alfreda M. Dean, drawing
312.00
$624.00
Text Books
High $ 74.80
Elementary $255.38
Edward E. Babb & Co
J. L. Hammett
8.72
10.84
Ginn & Co.
3.33
5.58
Kenney Bros. & Wolkins
75.50
4.00
Hinds, Hayden & Eldridge. . .
32.94
D. C. Heath & Co.
89.32
Houghton, Mifflin Co
12.31
The Palmer Co.
3.92
Silver, Burdett & Co
5.76
American Book Co
42.62
Benjamin H. Sanborn
12.85
F. M. Ambrose & Co
38.39
Laidlaw Bros.
.49
$300.84
$375.91
$676.75
Supplies
Edward E. Babb & Co.
High $232.67
$265.05
Kenney Bros. & Wolkins
17.42
34.85
J. L. Hammett.
12.90
7.99
Royal Typewriter Co
50.00
L. E. Knott Apparatus Co.
31.77
Oliver Ditson Co
26.27
Carl Fischer .
1.68
Silver, Burdett & Co.
9.61
W. C. Blodgett & Co.
16.00
!
Elementary
107
Gregg Publishing Co 2.40
Wright & Potter
6.60
Alfreda M. Dean
1.65
E. J. Keyon .
1.25
Ginn & Co
2.31
J. H. Hatfield .
3.30
Educational Publishing Co ...
.47
National Survey .
16.00
D. C. Heath & Co.
1.69
Robert D. Buckley .
6.00
11.00
$416.22
$342.66 $758.88
EXPENSE OF OPERATION
John Dyer, Janitor.
$1,304.00
Janitor Supplies
Masury, Young Co.
$46.00
Louis B. Fairbanks
7.30
Blood Bros.
7.50
E. H. Abell .
3.50
Edward E. Babb & Co.
1.56
F. R. Schools & Son.
.51
$66.37
Fuel
Blood Bros
$959.45
Water
Medfield Water Co. for 1922.
$80.00
EXPENSE OF MAINTENANCE
Allan A. Kingsbury
$391.37
Edward E. Babb & Co
157.14
Edison Elec. Ill. Co., R. W. School
32.46
Medfield Plumbing and Heating
196.72
Paul F. Tibbetts, wiring R. W. S
70.60
Edgar Kingsbury, removing ashes .
26.25
William J. Hayward, labor at R. W. S.
25.00
108
Henry H. Clark, stock and labor 88.51
Frank V. Weaver, restringing piano ... 28.50
R. S. Hunt, repairing victrola. .. Albert A. Dean, sharpening lawn-mower
1.25
William Weiker, express 5.30
C. F. Reed, express . 2.91
N. Y., N. H. and Hartford, freight
.50
Lawrence Dewar, flushing sewer
3.00
Everett K. Dewar, flushing sewer
3.00
City of Boston, tuition
19.28
$1,053.79
EXPENSE OF AUXILIARY AGENCIES
Promotion of Health
Frank H. Clough
$100.00
Martha E. Honey, nurse
525.00
Supplies for school nurse
25.31
$650.31
Transportation
Mrs. Amie Newell . $752.00
George W. Currier
754.00
Ervil C. Kennett.
376.00
George J. Ehnes
278.00
P. Pederzini .
99.50
$2,259.50
SUMMARY
Expense of General Control $ 959.68
Expense of Instruction
14,639.70
Text Books .
676.75
Stationery, supplies, etc
758.88
Expense of operation
1,304.00
Janitor supplies .
66.37
Expense of maintenance
1,053.79
Fuel.
959.45
2.00
109
Water
80.00
Health .
650.31
Transportation
2,259.50
$23,408.43
249.19
Unexpended Balance.
$23,657.62
Respectfully submitted,
SUSAN M. CLARK, Clerk of Committee.
Correct :
L. W. WHEELER,
Accountant.
110
SUPERINTENDENT'S REPORT
To the School Committee of Medfield:
Educational Standards
Standards of education depend upon material, state and com- munity ideals. The National Bureau of Education has little direct relation to the local school administration. It publishes, however, valuable statistics and reports. The state has general control of its educational legislation. It establishes Normal Schools for training teachers, appropriates funds for school purposes, and helps in many ways to secure and maintain proper standards.
The chief responsibility for good schools, however, falls upon the individual town or city. The training of boys and girls is not a matter of how little can be done to comply with the law; it is rather a community obligation to do all that is possible to produce the highest type of citizenship.
Teachers
A high standard of education implies a high standard of teachers. The old idea of teaching as a "stepping stone" to some business or profession has well nigh passed away. Teach- ing is itself a business and a profession. The state has es- tablished a minimum salary, a school fund reimbursing towns and cities for expenses of instruction, and a pension system-all tending to secure and retain competent teachers.
Each town must study and know its own special needs con- cerning teachers and act on that knowledge to obtain proper results. Frequent changes of teachers will not produce proper results. It is of course impossible for the smaller towns to compete in the matter of salaries with the larger towns and cities. It is possible, however, for each town to adopt a salary schedule which will enable them to secure properly qualified teachers, and retain them long enough to give a reasonable degree of permanency to school organization.
111
Growth
Higher standards of education and better teachers mean improved methods and results. The state has again been helpful to the cause of education by its requirement of com- pulsory physical training in all public schools. Health and strength are foundations which cannot be ignored. Proper exercises and games are mental as well as physical in char- acter; they develop mind and body together.
Another evidence of growth in our schools is the realization that education is not merely a preparation for life work but that it is a very real part of life work; language, arithmetic, history and geography have a close and important relation to conditions here and now. That teaching is most effective which emphasizes this relationship.
Increasing sympathy between the home and the school is also a most helpful sign. The right kind of home lessons, re- ports, conferences and exhibits of school work all help towards higher and better ideals. The efficiency of the public schools can be made continuous and progressive only through sympa- thetic as well as financial support.
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS Outline for the Year 1923
1. Course of Study.
2. Geography.
3. Essentials in Language and Arithmetic.
4. Promotions.
5. Work-Interest-Self Control.
6. Gymnastic's Day's Orders.
7. Monthly Papers. September-Writing January-Geography
October-Language February-History
November-Arithmetic March-Examinations
December-Writing
April-Writing
Respectfully submitted,
ALBERT S. AMES.
112
STATISTICS
Total membership-year 1921-1922 311
Enrolled in other schools of state first : 8
Number between five and seven years- Boys 31, girls 26. Total 57
Between seven and fourteen- Boys 89, girls 90. Total. 179
Between fourteen and sixteen-
Boys 25, girls 20. Total 45
Over sixteen- Boys 21, girls 16. Total
37
Membership by Grades December 1, 1922
I
II III IV V VI VII VIII IX
X XI XII Total
34 39 36 23 23 25 31 22 22
14 16 15 300
Eye and Ear Test
Pupils examined
300
Defective in sight.
10
Defective in hearing
1
Parents or guardians notified
7
ATTENDANCE, SEPTEMBER 6, 1921 TO JUNE 23, 1922
Grades High IX
Teachers
Total Memb. 77
Av. Memb. 71
Av. Att. 67
of Att. 95
66
66
66
Mary Toland
66
66
Margaret Dolan
66
Jane Hersey
66
66 Louise Gove
VII-VIII
Gladys Rawding
48
43
41
95
V-VI
Edith Holden
46
44
41
91
IV-V
Elizabeth Buck
38
36
31
91
II-III
Anne MacInnes
60
56
51
91
I
Agnes Donlan !
42
38
34
95
Pauline Goss
-
Totals
311
288
265
93
Alton H. Hartford, Prin.
Theresa E. O'Brien, Asst.
Mable Follensby
Collins S
113
TEACHERS - DECEMBER 31, 1922
Grades High 66
Teachers Alton H. Hartford, Prin.
Theresa E. McMurray
Margaret E. Dolan
66
Louise Gove
66
Helen Putnam Gladys M. Rawding
M. Lucia Waite
Hyannis Normal Manitoba Normal
I
Pauline Goss
Bridgewater Normal Burdett College
Music Supervisor
Nettie F. Hamant
Northampton Inst.
Drawing Teacher
Alfreda M. Dean
Museum Art School
School Nurse
Martha E. Honey, R. N.
Framingham Hosp.
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY
September 6 to January 27
Warren Hunt
Gordon Newell
Linwood Herron
Clifton Roberts
Harry Heighton
George Mills
Hiram Mills
Frederick Hinckley
Lillian Corbett
Alden Pember
Lois Heard
Elliott Young
Katherine Kennedy
Irma Knight
Arthur Wills
Violet Keirstead
Jane Hinckley
Marion Wills
Grace Macleod
Mildred Mills
Clara Dray
Gerald Morgan
Katherine Ehnes
Joseph Roberts Floris Laverty
May Germain
Richard Carmichael
Rena Jackson
Vincent Hallowell
Dorothy Smith Everett Cobb
Arthur Rogers Freddie Vastaturo
January 30 to June 23
Rollin Babcock
Helen Babcock
Albert Ehnes
Edv. Hannock
Andrew Ehnes
Dana Lincoln
Vernon Patten
Alexander Petrie
Ernest Conrick
Charles White
Elliott Young
George Hardie
Esther Hinckly
For the Year
Burton Herron Adelaide Dray Mary Griffin
Stella Turvanen George Mills Beatrice Wills
Where Educated Boston University Brown University Salem Normal Boston University Jackson College Framingham Normal
VII-VIII
V-VI III-IV II-III Asst.
Elizabeth Buck
E. A. Maude Craig
Dorothy Jones
Hyannis Normal
Esther Peterson
114
GRADUATING EXERCISES
of the
MEDFIELD HIGH SCHOOL
Thursday Evening, June Twenty-Second Nineteen Hundred Twenty-two Chenery Hall, Medfield, Massachusetts Eight o'clock
PROGRAM
PROCESSIONAL, "The Flower of Liberty" Neidlinger SELECTION
SCHOOL ORCHESTRA
INVOCATION
Rev. Manly B. Townsend
SALUTATORY AND CLASS HISTORY Mabel Miller
SONG, "A Night in June" Targett
High School Chorus
ESSAY, "The Washington Conference on Disarmament" Edward F. Cornell
ESSAY, "The Torch-Bearers" Marjorie V. Doane
SONG, "Voice of the Western Wind"
Girl's Semi-Chorus
ESSAY, "The Necessity for a Secondary Education"
Grace M. Macleod
ESSAY, "The Advantages of a College Education"
Mary Griffin
SONG, "The Song of the Armorer" Nevin
High School Chorus
115
ESSAY, "The Significance of Recent Scientific Inventions" Walter F. Reynolds
ESSAY, "Progress in Radio-Telephony" Henry W. Newell
SONG, "Gleam, Gleam, O Silver Stream" Eighth Grade
de Faye
PRESENTATION OF CLASS GIFT William Palumbo, President of Class of 1922
ACCEPTANCE FOR THE SCHOOL
Esther M. Peterson, Vice-President of Class of 1923
ESSAY WITH GOWN ADDRESS AND VALEDICTORY "The Development of Modern Education" Adelaide M. Dray
ACCEPTANCE OF GOWN Earl B. Crocker, President of Class of 1923
SONG, "The Song of the Vikings" High School Chorus Faning
PRESENTATION OF DIPLOMAS
Mr. William F. Bearse, Chairman of School Committee
CLASS SONG Words by Edward Cornell Music by Adelaide Dray
"Medfield High you guided us in all our dangers And with you many happy days we passed; You have been to us a guardian angel, To '22 were faithful to the last. May we all uphold our guiding motto, And carry out its ideals to the last, And may we strive to follow it in future Just as we have followed in the past.
"Medfield High, our days with you are over And from you we must depart, Onto the road of life we go forever, But your memories still linger in our heart;
116
And our colors, Green and Gold, Like the sunshine will unfold A wealth of joy and gladness in the strife That thy lessons we may carry on through life.""
BENEDICTION
Rev. Manly B. Townsend
CLASS OF 1922 * "Pas egalite mais excellence" First Honor Adelaide Mary Dray
Second Honor Mabel Miller
Third Honor Edward Francis Cornell
Marjorie Virginia Doane
Grace Mildred Macleod
George Freeman Fairbank
Mary Griffin Jane Esther Hinkley
Henry Willard Newell William Palumbo Walter Francis Reynolds
Arthur Edward Wills Class Colors-Green and Gold
Not to equal but to excel.
GRAMMAR SCHOOL GRADUATES
Everett Bryan Cobb
Harry William Cornell
Albert Frank Ehnes
Patrick Edward Hegarty
Elizabeth May Hinkley George William Hinkley Malvirena J. G. Jackson Charles Warren Keirstead Jean Frances Kimball
Agnes J. Loughery Jessie Agnes Macleod
Agnes Middleton Miller George Francis Miller Charles Milton Newell
Gordon Everett Newell
Roy Owen Congetta Palumbo Fred Palumbo Vernon Harold Patten
Brunetta Eloise Peterson Mildred Margaret Phelps Orpheus Joseph Rossi
Salon Wills
117
TOWN WARRANT
1
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Norfolk, ss.
To either of the Constables of the Town of Medfield, in said County, Greeting:
In the name of the Commonwealth you are directed to notify and warn the inhabitants of the Town of Medfield, qualified to vote in elections and in town affairs, to meet at the Unitarian Meeting House in said Medfield on
MONDAY, THE FIFTH DAY OF MARCH, A. D. 1923, at 6 o'clock in the Morning,
then and there to act on the following articles:
Article 1. To choose all town officers required to be elected annually by ballot, viz .: One Moderator, One Town Clerk, One Treasurer, One Collector of Taxes, Three Constables, One Tree Warden, all for one year; One Selectman for three years; One Assessor for three years; One Assessor for one year; One School Committee for three years; Two Trustees of the Public Library for three years; One Park Commissioner for three years; One Cemetery Commissioner for three years; One Water Commissioner for three years. One member of Board of Health for three years.
Also to vote on the following question:
Shall license be granted for the sale of non-intoxicating beverages in the town for the ensuing year? The vote to be "Yes" or "No." All the above to be voted for on one ballot. The polls to be opened at 6.15 o'clock in the forenoon and may close at two o'clock in the afternoon.
118
Article 2. To choose Fence Viewers, Field Drivers and Pound Keeper.
Article 3. To see if the town will accept the reports of the several town officers for the past year.
Article 4. To grant and appropriate such sums of money as may be necessary to defray the expenses of the town for the ensuing year.
Article 5. 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 present municipal year to an amount not exceeding in the aggregate thirty thousand dollars, and to issue a note or notes therefore payable within one year, any debt or debts incurred under this vote to be paid from the revenue of the present municipal year.
Article 6. To determine in what manner the taxes shall be collected for the ensuing year, also determine what percentage shall be allowed the Collector for the ensuing year.
Article 7. To see if the town will authorize the Collector to use all such means in the collection of taxes as the Treasurer might if elected to that office.
Article 8. To see what compensation the town will allow the members of the Fire Department for the ensuing year.
Article 9. To see how much per hour the town will allow for work on the highways for the ensuing year, or do or act any- thing relating thereto.
Article 10. To see if the town will accept the following named sums as perpetual trust funds for the care of lots in Vine Lake Cemetery, the interest thereof, or so much as may be necessary to be used for said care, viz .:
For care of George Emerson lot. $ 50.00
For care of Pattee and Turner lot. 100.00
For care of James V. Morang lot. 100.00
For care of Henry M. Parker lot. . 100.00
For care of Hartshorn and Bishop lots. 450.00
119
Article 11. To see if the town will grant and appropriate the sum of three hundred dollars toward the support of a Visiting Nurse as authorized by the Acts of 1911, Chap. 72, Section 1, or do or act anything relating thereto. (Petition)
Article 12. To see if the town will grant and appropriate the sum of five hundred ($500.00) dollars for the erection and repair of guard rails on the highways at such places as may be considered necessary.
Article 13. To hear and act on the report of any committees appointed at previous meetings, grant and appropriate money, if necessary, to carry out recommendations, or do or act any- thing relating thereto.
Article 14. To see if the town will grant and appropriate a sum equal to the unexpended balance of last year, to. complete the work on Pleasant and Oak streets, or do or act anything relating thereto. (Water Commissioners.)
Article 15. To see if the town will grant and appropriate a . sum equal to the unexpended balance of last year, to complete the work on Frairy Street, or do or act anything relating thereto. (Water Commissioners.)
Article 16. To see if the town will grant and appropriate the sum of five hundred ($500.00) dollars for the Parks and Playgrounds. (Park Commissioners.)
Article 17. To see if the town will vote to change the name of Asylum Road, or do or act anything relating thereto. (Peti- tion.)
Article 18. To see what action the town will take relative to providing temporary quarters for Beckwith Post, American Legion, as permitted under Section 9, Chapter 40, General Laws, grant and appropriate money or do or act anything re- lating thereto.
Article 19. To see if the town will accept the provisions of Sections 26, 27, 28 and 29 of Chapter 81 of the General Laws, as amended, be appropriated and expended in said town by and under the direction of the Department of Public Works,
120
Division of Highways, in accordance with the provision of said statute. (Selectmen.).
Article 20. To see if the town will vote to grant and ap- propriate the sum of two thousand ($2,000.00) dollars, pro- vided the State and County will each grant a like sum for repairing and resurfacing Asylum Road.
And you are directed to serve this warrant by posting an attested copy thereof, in the usual place for posting warrants in said Medfield, 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, unto the Town Clerk at the time and place of meeting aforesaid.
Given under our hands this twenty-first day of February, A. D. nineteen hundred and twenty-three.
GEORGE H. SAUER, FRED LAVERTY, HARRY J. WEBB, Selectmen of Medfield.
273rd ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
TOWN OFFICERS
OF THE
TOWN OF MEDFIELD
E
1649
I
D
16 51
YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1923
Ambrose Press, Inc., Norwood 1924
MEDFIELD PUBLI LIBRARY
273rd ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
TOWN OFFICERS
OF THE
TOWN OF MEDFIELD
MEL
1649
L
16 51
YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1923
Ambrose Press, Inc., Norwood 1924
1
TOWN OFFICERS 1923
Moderator GEORGE L. L. ALLEN
Town Clerk WILLIAM H. EVERETT
Treasurer
JOHN H. TUTTLE, Resigned ALBERT L. CLARK, Acting Treas. LEWIS K. CONANT, Treas. Pro Tem. Appointed until March, 1924
Collector of Taxes ROBERT W. BAKER
Selectmen
FRED LAVERTY Term expires 1924
HARRY J. WEBB. Term expires 1925
HENRY E. YOUNG. Term expires 1926
Assessors
TURNER R. BAILEY, resigned Term expires 1924
EDWARD M. BENT, resigned . . Term expires 1924 ALDEN H. WHEELER, appointed until March, 1924 R. W. BAKER. Term expires 1925
EDMUND BULLARD Term expires 1926
School Committee
WILLIAM F. BEARSE. Term expires 1924 SUSAN M. CLARK. Term expires 1925 FRANCIS H. KINGSBURY Term expires 1926
4
Water Commissioners
IRA F. PENNIMAN . Term expires 1924
MICHAEL E. GRIFFIN
Term expires 1925
ALDEN H. WHEELER . Term expires 1926
Trustees of Public Library
ELLERY C. CROCKER Term expires 1924
HARRIET B. CROCKER Term expires 1924
NELLIE T. KEYOU . Term expires 1925
JAMES L. ATHERTON.
Term expires 1925
FRANK H. CLOUGH, M. D. Term expires 1926
LEWIS K. CONANT Term expires 1926
Board of Health
SIDNEY W. STEVENS Term expires 1924
E. J. KEYOU. . Term expires 1925
JOHN H. TUTTLE. Term expires 1926
Cemetery Commissioners
JOSEPH A. ROBERTS
Term expires 1924
DANIELS HAMANT. Term expires 1925
ALBION C. GILBERT. Term expires 1926
Park Commissioners
ROBERT W. WILLIAMS Term expires 1924
HARRISON H. CHILD. Term expires 1925
HENRY E. YOUNG, JR. Term expires 1926
Tree Warden
GEORGE L. L. ALLEN
-
5
APPOINTMENTS BY THE SELECTMEN Engineers of the Fire Department SAMUEL E. MITCHELL ALLAN A. KINGSBURY JOHN R. MILLER
Registrars of Voters
JOEL E. HEARD Term expires 1924
ANNIE L. BAILEY . . Term expires 1925
ALEXANDER MACLEAN Term expires 1926
Superintendent of Streets COLLAMER G. BRIDGE
Inspector of Animals GEORGE S. CHENEY
Inspector of Provisions JOSEPH W. CURTIS
Burial Agent ELLERY C. CROCKER
Pound Keeper GEORGE H. SAUER
Field Drivers and Fence Viewers GEORGE W. MILLS JOSEPH E. ALLEN
Constables CORNELIUS P. MCKEOWN LAWRENCE M. DEWAR LEVI C. TAYLOR
6
Police Officers CORNELIUS P. McKEOWN, Chief WALTER E. WILBUR LAWRENCE M. DEWAR
Sealer of Weights and Measures ALDEN H. WHEELER
Measurers of Wood and Bark
ALDEN H. WHEELER GEORGE H. THRASHER
Public Weighers
R. FRANK SCHOOLS
M. HOWARD BLOOD
D. HENRY LUCY
F. ROBERT SCHOOLS
RAYMOND B. BLOOD
VILLA P. BAILEY
Superintendent of Moth Work GEORGE L. L. ALLEN
Forest Warden ALLAN A. KINGSBURY
Special Police
CHARLES W. BROWNING
MICHAEL HORGAN
HENRY E. YOUNG
GEORGE L. BENT
RAYMOND B. BLOOD
JAMES LUCEY
DR. H. L. MORSE HARRY E. CONWAY
Town Accountant
L. W. WHEELER. Term expires 1923 WALTER E. GARDNER, appointed until March, 1924
7
Warrant Committee
M. E. GRIFFIN Term expires 1924
P. H. LEAHY
. Term expires 1924
EDWARD M. BENT
Term expires 1924
ALANSON H. CLARK.
GEORGE W. HINKLEY Term expires 1925
Term expires 1925
CHESTER H. CARMICHAEL Term expires 1925
ALBERT L. CLARK Term expires 1926
LEWIS A. CUTLER Term expires 1926
JOHN N. WILLS
. Term expires 1926
8
LIST OF JURORS AS PREPARED BY THE SELECTMEN
Arthur S. Atherton
Straw Worker
Edward S. Bissell
Salesman
Charles Brooks
Carpenter
Charles W. Browning
Supervisor
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.