USA > Massachusetts > Hampden County > Agawam > Town of Agawam, Massachusetts annual report 1911-1915 > Part 19
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240.00
C. D. Parker & Co., schoolhouse loan 40.00
Old Colony Trust Co., water loan 1,160.00
Old Colony Trust Co., water loan
4,421.25
$7,625.14
Appropriation
7,500.00
.49
PAYMENT OF LIABILITIES
Sinking fund $226.66
Five notes payable at Nat. Bank of the Com-
monwealth 25,000.00
Natick Five Cent Savings Bank, note water loan
1,000.00 ยท
C. D. Parker & Co., schoolhouse loan. .. ..
2,000.00
Old Colony Trust Co., water bond 1912 issue 1,000.00
Old Colony Trust Co., water bonds, 1913 issue 3,500.00
$32,726.66
Amounts Available
From liquor licenses. . $2,025.00
Premiums on bond issue 2,190.00
Sale of Almshouse property
2,150 00
Sinking fund 25,000.00
Taxation 1,361.66
$32,726.66
LIABILITIES OF THE TOWN, DEC. 31, 1914
Six notes held by Natick Five Cent Savings Bank, due $1,000 annually Jan. 1, 1916-
21 (water loan) .
$6,000.00
Four notes held by Boston Five Cent Sav- ings Bank, due $1,000 annually Jan. 1, 1922-25 (water loan) . 4,000.00
Eight notes payable to C. D. Parker & Co., Boston, due $2,000 annually July 1, 1915-22 (schoolhouse loan) .
16,000.00
Twenty-eight bonds payable annually Oct.
1, 1915-42 to Old Colony Trust Co., Bos- ton (water loan) . 28,000.00
Bonds of water loan of 1913, payable July 1, 1915-43, $3,500 yearly. . 96,500.00
One note payable April 1, 1915, temporary loan ,to Union Trust Co. 5,000.00
$155,500.00
50
ASSETS
Cash in treasury Dec. 31.
$1,446.97
Due on 1911 taxes.
27.09
Due on 1912 taxes.
365.51
Due on 1913 taxes.
4,732.07
Due on 1914 taxes
16,145.76
Due on water rents.
1,775.73
Due on water connections
2,244.72
Due on sewer assessments.
580.00
Due from Commonwealth, care of poor
600.00
Due from Commonwealth, State aid.
479.00
Excess of liabilities over assets.
28,396.85
$127,103.15
DANIEL J. COLLINS, JAMES H. CLARK, FRANK J. POMEROY,
Selectmen, Overseers of Poor, Board of Health.
1
Report of Library Trustees
EXPENSES
Johnson's Bookstore, supplies
$259.86
F. P. Halladay, annuity .
110.00
C. W. Hastings, insurance.
28.35
Forbes & Wallace, supplies. 33.30
R. G. Badger, supplies .. 6.97
Young Folks Educational League, supplies
16.25
Agawam Electric Co., light.
14.51
J. F. Barry, wood. 3.50
W. J. O'Connor, coal
40.81
Simpson Clark, repairs.
3.95
Harper Bros., supplies.
15.00
Carl S. Swanson, labor
20.00
Edwin Goss, labor.
1.80
M. J. Mecum, labor.
3.00
Mrs. M. J. Mecum, cleaning
1.25
Dorris Mecum, services
16.25
Ralph Perry, services.
55.00
Avery K. Gleason, services
63.75
Julia E. Tower, services
20.00
$713.55
RECEIPTS
Appropriation
$200.00
Rent of tenement.
114.26
Unexpended balance
567.68
$881.94
BOOKS
Number at Agawam. 3,481
Number at Feeding Hills.
2,740
Number at Mittineague
375
96.
52
BORROWERS
Agawam
227
Feeding Hills
247
Mittineague
110
Riverside
19
CIRCULATION
Agawam
4,284
Feeding Hills
5,136
Mittineague
968
Riverside
271
LIBRARIANS
Agawam Ralph Perry
Feeding Hills A. K. Gleason
Mittineague Julia E. Tower
Riverside
Mrs. T. C. Parsons
RALPH PERRY, A. K. GLEASON, H. L. TOWER,
Trustees.
REPORT OF THE Tree and Forest Warden
To the Citizens of Agawam :
In submitting my annual report for your consideration I shall necessarily make it brief.
As far as your servant can determine most of our shade and highway trees are in a normal condition and comparatively free from the insects and diseases they are subject to.
Besides doing our annual spraying for the elm leaf beetle we have planted 150 new trees, removed 75 dead or diseased ones, removed dead and broken branches from over 300.
We have also cleared several miles of highway from brush and rubbish.
I wish to call your attention to the fact that the Massachu- setts State laws cover all trees, bushes and vines growing within the highway limits.
Many small trees are cut annually which in a few years would make good shade trees.
Some of our best shade trees were self-seeded and a little care now in their respect will greatly benefit future generations.
FOREST FIRES
We have had no large or costly forest fires the past season, but several small ones which were promptly extinguished with damages of only a few hundred dollars.
The largest and most costly forest fire our Fire Warden at- tended was on Provin mountain, Feeding Hills, but was confined wholly to the Southwick territory and took several days to ex- tinguish. This fire cost us over one-half of all other fires attended in 1914.
54
Ninety-seven permits were granted for building fires. The total cost for extinguishing forest fires was $91.20.
I would be pleased to have all parties contemplating cutting wood or timber to notify your Tree Warden so that he may co- operate with them relative to saving trees for shade, also rela- tive to the new State fire law, January 1, 1915, to which I hereby respectfully call your attention :
LAW RELATING TO DISPOSAL OF SLASH OR BRUSH FOL- LOWING WOOD OR LUMBER OPERATIONS
Sect. 1. Every owner, tenant or occupant of land, and every owner of stumpage, who cuts or permits the cutting of wood or timber on woodland owned or occupied by him or on which he has acquired stumpage by purchase or otherwise, and which bor- ders upon the woodland of another or upon a highway or railroad location, shall clear the land of the slash and brush wood then and there resulting from such cutting for such distance, not ex- ceeding forty feet, from the woodland of such other person, high- way or railroad location as the local forest warden shall deter- mine, and within such time and in such manner as he shall deter- mine.
Sect. 2. Any person who cuts or causes to be cut trees or brushes or undergrowth within the limits of any highway or public road shall dispose of the slash and brush wood then and there resulting from such cutting within such time and in such manner as the forest warden of the city or town wherein such cutting is done shall determine.
Sect. 3. Whoever neglects to comply with the directions of the forest warden with regard to the disposal of slash and brush, as provided in sections one and two of this act may be punished by a fine of not less than five dollars nor more than fifty dollars.
Sect. 4. This act shall take effect on the first day of January in the year nineteen hundred and fifteen.
:
1
55
EXPENDITURES
Hisgen Bros., gasolene.
$13.95
Autogenous Welding Co., repairs.
.75
L. F. Walsh, supplies.
24.00
Fitzhenry, Guptill & Co., supplies
41.75
Breck Bros., supplies.
1.65
D. W. Mellen, supplies.
2.43
C. W. Hastings, insurance.
6.00
Dow Chemical Co., supplies
100.00
Chase & Cooledge, supplies.
18.75
W. R. Winn, supplies.
1.50
J. W. Adams, trees
73.80
Pay rolls
486.75
Forest fire payrolls
72.55
$843.88
Appropriation
800.00
E. M. HITCHCOCK, Tree and Forest Warden.
Report of Fire Commissioners
To the Citizens of Agawam :-
In presenting a report of the department we feel that a statement of the condition in which we were placed seems neces- sary. The last annual meeting appropriated one thousand dol- lars and in addition the amount of the corporation tax and the bank tax for the department, a sum sufficient, it was thought, to fit up stations at Feeding Hills and Agawam Center, and provide apparatus for the latter. But like the boy who had counted his eggs, the hatching failed to give us the $2,800 we had expected. It seemed imperative that suitable stations should be provided at these places and sufficient apparatus procured to meet immediate needs early in the year. At Feeding Hills the barn on the town property was thoroughly remodeled, the front part being taken for the department. The ground floor was fitted for the storage of the apparatus and a small room on the second floor for a social room. The cost of remodeling the building was shared by the other departments of the town. Thus a useless and unsightly building has been converted into an excellent station and social rooms from which some income may be derived, and also con- venient storage room at the rear for road implements.
At Agawam Center a section of the horse shed at the Con- gregational church was purchased and enclosed, which will house the apparatus till a more suitable building can be provided. A company has been organized in this part of the town, which makes the organization of the department complete, with a com- pany at each tsation.
The department is equipped at Mittineague with one combin- ation hand truck, one hose cart and a complement of hose. At Feeding Hills with an auto truck, hose and extinguisher. Aga- wam Center with one combination truck and two hose carts, one of which is kept at the corner of Suffield and Silver street, and a complement of hose.
57
The station at Agawam needs fitting up inside with floors and drying racks, a set of ladders and hand appliances. At Feeding Hills ladders and appliances and more hose are needed. When these are provided the department will be fairly well equipped.
EXPENDITURES
John F. Wilson, rent.
$60.00
Joseph Borgatti, supplies.
3.60
Agawam Electric Co., light.
11.08
Maynard Rubber Co., supplies.
19.60
Revere Rubber Co., supplies.
146.00
Combination Hook and Ladder Co., supplies
934.07
Stevens-Duryea Co., repairs.
8.85
M. Maloney, contract on barn
1,200.00
H. L. Stannard, wiring.
45.00
A. S. Jamieson, wiring.
5.15
Robert Ely, freight and cartage.
4.49
E. S. Decker, lumber
6.03
L. A. Johnson, labor.
28.00
M. P. Blanchard, repairs.
6.50
Graves Hardware Co., supplies
3.21
C. W. Hastings,s supplies.
1.26
J. A. Roy, supplies .
1.77
Mrs. A. M. Dunscomb, shed.
10.00
F. H. King, shed.
10.00
$2,504.61
J. A. ROY, W. H. PORTER, W. J. LITTLEFIELD, Fire Commissioners.
REPORT OF THE Board of Water Commissioners
To the Citizens of the Town :-
We have been looking over the year's work of our depart- ment. New work in the way of extensions was done where it seemed necessary.
Leonard Street .- About two thousand feet of 2-inch galvan- ized wrought iron pipe was laid, furnishing some eleven families.
Silver Street (west of Suffield street) .- About nine hundred feet of 2-inch galvanized wrought iron pipe was laid to the W. H. Porter farm.
An extension of the line on Perry street was made to the Perry oak of 11/4-inch galvanized iron pipe from end of 4-inch cast iron pipe near J. C. Toelken, about seven hundred feet.
A 2-inch main of galvanized wrought iron pipe was laid in New street on H. L. Tower's property on Maple street, some four hundred feet.
Homer Street .- About twelve hundred feet of 2-inch galvan- ized wrought iron pipe was laid in Homer street, to furnish four families. The abutters did the excavating and back filling, a saving to the Town of about $150.00.
About one thousand feet of 11/4-inch wrought iron galvan- ized pipe has been laid to furnish water to Messrs. Salowski and Pease. At the north end of Westfield street a 1-inch galvanized pipe was laid to furnish Mr. Peterson with water.
Something like two hundred new takers during the year.
The payroll for labor during the year amounts to about $1,100.00, paid to citizens of Agawam.
This included pay for work done on extensions, making service connections and numerous connections from street line to houses for which bills have been rendered to owners of property.
Meters have been set in nearly all services.
59
Very few leaks have developed in the thirty or more miles of mains recently laid. At small cost the leaks have been stopped.
With a pressure of 130 to 150 pounds, we think the work of Mr. Williams was well done.
It has been the policy of the department to furnish takers wrought iron galvanized pipe at cost to connect services from street line to house, as any leaks between main and meters would be Town's loss.
EXPENDITURES Construction
Channell & Wright, cartage
$95.58
J. L. Tighe, engineering.
700.00
A. Williams & Co., contract.
3,300.00
Jennie E. Wright, storage.
5.00
Sullivan & Carmody, supplies.
45.43
National Meter Co., supplies. 1,862.00
R. D. Wood & Co., pipe. 99.41
New England Plumbing Supply Co., supplies
808.92
H. Mueller Mfg. Co., supplies 120.15
Pay rolls
1,300.00
$8,336.49
MAINTENANCE
Springfield Machine Co., repairs.
$3.85
Agawam Electric Co., thawing pipes
25.95
City of Springfield, water.
1,946.58
Town of West Springfield, water
218.32
C. S. Axtell & Co., printing.
2.50
Buffalo Meter Co., meter books
3.15
W. B. Deane, tools.
5.55
N. E. Plumbing Supply Co., supplies
623.03
C. E. Burt, printing.
26.00
M. L. Miller, repairs.
54.16
O. C. Alderman, supplies.
2.00
Johnson's Bookstore, supplies.
3.50
60
A. L. Litch, cartage. 1.20
W. R. Winn, oil.
1.43
D. M. Crowley, freight. 6.97
City of Springfield, supplies
31.25
W. J. Letellier, cartage.
.50
Oliver & Howland, supplies.
2.66
W. J. Eldred, book.
9.00
E. A. Kellogg & Sons, supplies
13.07
Pay rolls 738.41
$3,719.08
$12,055.57
Amounts Available
Balance on bonds.
$8,701.11
Received on construction account.
2,763.47
Received on rents 3,459.94
$14,924.52
EDWARD A. KELLOGG, JOHN MERRELL, DENNIS M. CROWLEY, Water Commissioners.
ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
School Department
OF THE TOWN OF
AGAWAM MASSACHUSETTS
NCORE
18
RP
ORAT
ED
For the Year Ending December 31 1914
M. J. DOYLE PRINTING COMPANY HOLYOKE, MASS.
UNIONE .. TABEL
4.52
9.05
TRONGA JAURMA
@ foodse
MAWADA
Agawam Public Schools
ORGANIZATION OF SCHOOL BOARD
J. ARSENE ROY, Chairman. Term expires 1915 Post office address, Mittineague, Mass.
PERCIVAL V. HASTINGS, Secretary. . Term expires 1916 Post office address, Agawam, Mass.
CLIFFORD M. GRANGER, Purchasing Agent. Term expires 1917 Post office address, Feeding Hills, Mass.
Superintendent of Schools
WALTER E. GUSHEE,
Post office address, Ludlow, Mass.
Regular meetings of the Committee are held at 7.30 p. m. on the sec- ond Tuesday of each month.
SCHOOL CALENDAR, 1915-1916
School Year, 38 weeks
Fall term, September 7 to December 17 15 weeks
Winter term, January 3 to March 17 11 weeks Spring term, March 27 to June 16. 12 weeks
The Superintendent of Schools will be at the
Grammar School Building at Agawam Center, Mondays from 10.30 a. m. to 12 m.
Grammar School Building at Feeding Hills, Mondays from 2.30 to 3.30 p. m.
Grammar School Building at Mittineague, Tuesdays from 2.30 to 3.30 p. m.
-
Report of School Committee
To the Citizens of Agawam :-
We herewith present for your consideration our report for 1914-1915.
The committee organized for the year with J. A. Roy, chair- man; P. V. Hastings, secretary; and C. M. Granger, purchasing agent. Dr. J. W. Hastings was re-elected as medical inspector, and Edward Connor chosen as truant officer for the whole town. In accordance with the recommendation of the State Board of Education we employed Mr. Connor to take the annual school census. The introduction, by the State, of a new system, making use of the card index method, caused additional expense.
At our June meeting we adopted a new salary schedule for teachers, providing for annual increases, based upon teaching experience and term of service in Agawam. This move was necessary in order to maintain a highly efficient teaching force at all times.
In September we opened three new rooms: one at Mittin- eague, on the third floor of the grammar building, one each at Agawam and Feeding Hills in the old primary buildings. The opening of these rooms necessitated the purchase of new furni- ture and equipment, besides a general renovation of walls, ceil- ings and floors in the old primary buildings.
Owing to the rapid increase in school enrollment, we must again report crowded conditions in nearly all rooms. At the Suffield Street School it was necessary to transfer the fourth grade to Agawam Center. A building on the Plains may relieve the situation at Feeding Hills and at Mittineague, but it does not provide for Agawam where the need seems to be most urgent. One solution of this problem is suggested in our superintendent's report. We urge that immediate action be taken for increased school accommodations in all parts of the town.
65
For a number of years it has been the policy of this town to provide transportation for school children during the winter months. There has never been any fixed date for beginning or ending such transportation, the committee in that respect being governed entirely by the condition of the roads.
The parents in two families made an urgent request for transportation throughout the entire year, and they refused to send their children to school unless conveyed at the expense of the town. After considerable delay a court ruling was given declaring the parents guilty of violating the compulsory attend- ance law.
There is no law in Massachusetts compelling the transporta- tion of school children below the high school grade. According to chapter 25, section 15, Revised Laws, a town may at legal meetings appropriate money "For conveying pupils to and from the public schools, or, if it maintains no high school or public school of corresponding grade but affords high school instruction by sending pupils to other towns, for the necessary transporta- tion expenses of such pupils, the same to be expended by the school committee in its discretion." This law was amended in 1913, making it compulsory for towns not maintaining a high school to furnish transportation to pupils attending high schools in other towns.
We do not wish to exercise our discretionary power in an arbitrary manner. If the voters of this town favor the trans- portation of school children, living at a distance, throughout the entire year, and appropriate money for the purpose, the com- mittee will try to arrange for such transportation.
Transportation as now conducted costs the town about $1,200 yearly, not including cost for high school pupils. During the spring and autumn it would be difficult to hire teams unless we paid much higher prices than during the winter months. Consequently, transportation for the entire year would mean an estimated additional expense of about $3,000.
If no action is taken by the voters regarding this question, we shall assume that the present plan of transportation is satis-
66
factory to the town, and your committee will continue to main- tain transportation when road conditions seem to justify it.
At present we are sending 68 pupils to the Springfield and West Springfield High Schools. The increased charge for tui- tion, and the rapid yearly growth of our high school enrollment, seem to demand as a matter of economy an immediate change of policy. Therefore, we recommend that the town of Agawam build, on a site as conveniently located to all parts of the town as possible, a high school building, this building to be so planned and constructed that it will serve the educational, social and athletic interests of our high school students for years to come.
For information concerning probable cost of maintaining a high school and further discussion of the subject we refer you to the report of our superintendent of schools.
As this report covers only eleven months' work and but thirty-two weeks of school, you will find in our financial state- ment a balance left from our last appropriation. We now have a school year of thirty-eight weeks to provide for. This fact, in addition to the general increase of teachers' and janitors' sal- aries, makes it necessary to ask for a large appropriation for next year.
We believe that our present teaching force is obtaining satis- factory results, and we ask for your cordial co-operation with them, the superintendent, and the committee.
Respectfully submitted, J. ARSENE ROY, PERCIVAL V. HASTINGS, CLARENCE H. GRANGER,
Committee.
67
FINANCIAL STATEMENT OF SCHOOLS
GENERAL EXPENSES
W. E. Gushee, Superintendent. $716.72
J. A. Roy, School Committee. 55.00
P. V. Hastings, School Committee. 75.00
C. M. Granger, School Committee. 44.00
C. H. Granger, School Committee 10.00
E. S. Connor, taking school census. 22.14
30.25
W. E. Gushee, postage, express, supplies. . 16.94
J. A. Roy, express and supplies. 6.85
P. V. Hastings, postage, express, supplies. . .
12.97
Miss M. D. Taylor, issuing labor certificates
10.00
Johnson Bookstore, supplies ,20
Library Bureau, card file 8.00
Meekins, Packard & Wheat, supplies. .
.45
$1,008.52
TEACHERS' SALARIES
Caroline Chaffin, Supervisor of Music. ... $238.01
Helen L. Arnold, Supervisor of Drawing .. 302.62
Elsie E. Kendall, teaching 17 weeks. 255.00
Marion Hubbard, teaching 15 weeks. 256.50
Buena V. Barrett, teaching 32 weeks. ...
400.85
Margaret Cochrane, teaching 32 weeks ...
392.35
Hyacinth E. Roy, teaching 17 weeks ..
204.00
Mrs. Clara V. Moore, teaching 32 weeks ... 409.35
Sarah Wheaton, teaching 15 weeks. 189.90
Alice R. Sweeney, teaching 17 weeks. ...
178.50
Bertha L. Johnson, teaching 29 weeks .... 326.94
173.70 Hazel M. Sullivan, teaching 15 weeks. ..
Annie W. Richards, teaching 17 weeks .... 255.00 Frank S. Somerby, teaching 15 weeks .... 256.50
Theresa L. Custer, teaching 32 weeks. . ... 400.85
er
at
e
C. M. Granger, express and supplies
68
Katherine J. Keenan, teaching 32 weeks ... 409.35
Faolin M. Pierce, teaching 32 weeks. 409.35
Sadie E. Smith, teaching 15 weeks. 205.35 Julia F. Keenan, teaching 15 weeks. 185.55
Katherine G. Danahy, teaching 32 weeks. . 511.50
Olive A. Fox, teaching 32 weeks. 392.35
Anna M. Sullivan, teaching 17 weeks
204.00
Gladys E. Booth, teaching 17 weeks
195.50
Dora M. Turner, teaching 32 weeks. 409.35
Jennie M. Lucas, teaching 32 weeks. 409.35
Mary A. Danaher, teaching 15 weeks. 189.90
Etta Rosenberg, teaching 15 weeks.
205.35
Ella R. Taylor, teaching 15 weeks
205.35
Rosa N. Connor, teaching 11 weeks 132.00
Mable Ray, teaching 6 weeks.
72.00
Smith, teaching 2 weeks.
24.74
Mrs. William Dalglish, teaching
2.25
$8,403.31
TEXT-BOOKS AND SUPPLIES
Edward E. Babb & Co
$300.56
J. L. Hammett Co.
84.74
Johnson's Bookstore 16.50
A. S. Barnes Co.
8.06
Little, Brown & Co.
16.00
Silver, Burdett & Co.
29.32
Ginn & Co.
224.60
C. P. Thompson Co.
1.00
A. H. Bartlett.
8.10
American Book Co ..
40.60
Rand, McNally & Co.
11.60
Milton Bradley Co.
110.90
D. Appleton & Co.
32.09
Forbes & Wallace
.92
A. N. Palmer Co ..
36.50
Funk & Wagnalls Co.
13.50
69
W. E. Gushee, express. 5.22
The Cut Price Tailoring Co. .50
G. H. Blackburn, express 11.66
H. F. Desoe, express. .75
W. J. Letellier, express 2.10
$955.22
TUITION
Town of West Springfield, high school tui-
tion
$2,263.00
City of Springfield, high school tuition .. ... 1,002.50
$3,265.50
TRANSPORTATION
Springfield Street Railway, car tickets. $615.00
Irene K. Crouss, refund. . 1.80
M. L. Ahl, transporting children. 48.00
D. E. Bailey, transporting children. 61.00
W. H. Seaver, transporting children. 3.00
James T. Cleary, transporting children. . ..
50.40
E. E. Harlow, transporting children. .
46.50
A. Mercadante, transporting children
34.00
James Cesan, transporting children.
55.00
H. Johnson, transporting children. 37.60
Peter Peterson, transporting children.
48.00
Felix De Palma, transporting children. . ..
34.00
J. Hargraves, transporting children.
17.50
Fred Dudley, transporting children. 10.00
George Easton, transporting children. 10.80
Daniel Cesan, transporting children
10.00
$1,082.60
,31
70
EXPENSE OF OPERATING Janitor Service
D. Bloom, janitor $351.00
C. H. Wood, janitor 282.75
Letellier, janitor 350.00
A. Anderson, building fires and furnishing water 3.00
Mr. Fairbanks, building fires and furnish- ing water 21.00
James Morris, building fires
11.00
Everett Edwards, building fires
7.00
Bertha Johnson, care of room.
16.00
Margaret Cochrane, care of room
8.50
A. R. Sweeney, care of room.
8.50
Hazel M. Sullivan, care of room
7.50
Julia F. Keenan, care of room.
7.50
Edwin Goss, cleaning.
11.25
William Voudren, cleaning
2.00
John Van Slyke, cleaning.
18.00
Fuel
C. D. Farnsworth, coal 1,313.35
W. H. Seaver, wood
21.00
W. H. Granger, wood.
11.50
J. W. Hastings, wood. 21.00
Miscellaneous
Meekins, Packard & Wheat, supplies. 12.32
Charles H. Wyman
1.00
W. J. Letellier.
2.10
G. W. Miller & Co., supplies
12.00
H. W. Carter Paper Co., supplies
16.00
Homer Foot & Co., supplies. 4.10
Miller & Green, supplies
59.20
Mrs. Alice D. Cooley
16.10
P. V. Hastings, supplies.
4.13
E. A. Kellogg & Son, supplies
11.28
71
Graves Hardware Co., supplies 7.70
Frank C. Hinckley, inspecting boilers 8.00
P. C. Fitzpatrick, supplies .. 7.50
Charles W. Hastings, supplies 16.23
$2,649.51
MEDICAL INSPECTION
J. W. Hastings, M. D. $50.00
NEW EQUIPMENT
Smith & Murray $20.50
Kenney Bros. & Wolkins 442.40
Meekins, Packard & Wheat.
97.85
F. A. Robbins Co. 11.00
L. H. Scott & Co. 31.01
$602.76
MAINTENANCE
B. G. Bacon, repairs. $7.53
P. C. Fitzpatrick, supplies. 8.64
A. S. Jamieson, repairs 5.11
D. A. Quirk, repairs.
15.25
T. M. Walker Co., supplies. 42.96
Edwin Goss, repairs. 1.00
C. H. Wood, cleaning, supplies, repairs.
171.80
F. L. Hewes & Co., supplies.
4.35
Graves Hardware Co., supplies
1.75
P. V. Hastings, repairs.
5.30
A. H. Rowley, supplies and repairs
124.29
Homer Foot & Co., supplies.
1.12
Fletcher & Co. 1.70
Champion Metal Weather Strip and Part- ing Bead Co. 129.80
Julius Duval, labor 5.00
James Jasmin, labor
19.50
72
L. A. Johnson, supplies and repairs.
15.72
Smith & Murray, supplies. 3.20
Emile J. Pare, repairs. 31.44
Edward S. Decker. 5.72
Bowman & O'Neil, repairs 2.20
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