USA > Massachusetts > Hampden County > Agawam > Town of Agawam, Massachusetts annual report 1921-1925 > Part 5
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GRADUATION EXERCISES of the AGAWAM GRAMMAR SCHOOLS
North Agawam Thursday Evening, June 9, 1921
I Invocation.
2 Love Divine.
Chorus
3 The Man Without a Country-Dramatization, Agawam Center
4 The House With Nobody in It, John Church, North Agawam
5 Our Flag, Marjorie Leonard, Feeding Hills
6 Wand Drill, Girls of Feeding Hills
7 (a) Eldorado,
(b) Song of the Armorer, Chorus
8 Dainty Step,
Girls of North Agawam
9 Home, Sweet Home-Pantomime, Girls of Feeding Hills
IO Evening Wind, Chorus
II Jerry, the Bobbin Boy,
Marion Smith North Agawam
12 Excelsior,
Chorus
13 Presentation of Class for Diplomas, Mr. Burgess, Assistant Supt.
14 Presentation of Diplomas, Mr. Granger, Chairman of School Board
15 Benediction.
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GRADUATES
Agawam Center
Charles B. Bailey
John Edward Carroll
Paul Bertrand Carroll
Hazel E. Madden
Beatrice Evelyn Daly
Henry Godfrey Otto
H. Grant Dickinson Charlotte Mabel Goss
Pearl Margaret Randall
Harry Walter Raplus
Charles G. Raymond
Fannie Victoria Statkum
Clintina Lou Wright
North Agawam
John Edward Church
Jennie M. Pattison
George Joseph Phillips
Adolphus J. Provost
Rhea E. Duclos
Lena M. Rapetti
Katherine M. Ferrarini
Marion Esther Smith
Katherine H. Lucardi
Eugene L. Tisdel
Rose J. Montagna
Feeding Hills
Flora Catherine Christopher
Anna M. Saunders
Helen Lillian Holmes
Nettie R. Sturm
Hersey C. Gagnon
William F. Sullivan
Opel A. Wingord
Frank J. Rosso
HOUSING CONDITIONS
Notwithstanding the fact that next fall Agawam will be able to house its Junior and Senior high schools in the new building, the situation is still very critical in the remaining schools of the town.
We had hoped we should be able to do away with rooms en-
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Gladys D. Daly
Clara R. Duclos
Stanley Emerson Hamer
Leslie Charles Inman
Raymond Leroy Jones
Roy Joseph King
Edward Cooley Knudson
Margery Chittenden Leonard
tirely unfit for use, that we should be able to make the average number in our schoolrooms nearer what it ought to be, and that we should have fewer problems resulting from pupils being trans- ferred out of their district. Yet, under existing conditions it ap- pears such cannot be realized.
Congestion, is at present, and from all indications will be for some time, in the sections of the town known as the plains and south end. It would seem that an addition must be made to the Springfield Street school. This would also relieve the congestion at the Feeding Hills and the North Agawam schools, since many of the pupils ordinarily attending the Springfield Street school are forced at present to attend the schools mentioned.
At present we are able to house but two grades at the South Street school, having been forced to transfer the third grade to the Center this fall. The South Street school is not adequate from several points of view. The building itself is not on a par with most of your other buildings. Its location is a menace to the safety of the smaller children attending it. And the parents justly criticise transportation of their younger children in electric cars. Therefore, I would recommend that a suitable building, conveniently and safely located, be erected at the south end of the town. If this is done, the housing situation will be much better at Agawam Center.
Coming at the time a very expensive building is being erected by the people of the town, these recommendations may seem stu- pendous. Yet our schools must be run and it is an inevitable law that two bodies cannot occupy the same space at the same time, and I think I can reasonably state that we are utilizing practically every available space at present.
HEALTH EDUCATION
As a result of recent investigation regarding the physical con- dition of our citizens it became very evident that a large number of people of the United States were not physically fit. And the striking fact is that the condition of children and adults of the city was much superior to that of their country cousins. This, it has
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appeared to many, may be traced to the fact that health received more emphasis in the city and there are many organizations in school and out, working to insure a healthy physique to its people.
Health has been named as the first in a series of seven funda- mental objectives of education. Massachusetts has passed a law making physical education a required part of our public school curriculum.
What are we doing in Agawam.
I. We are teaching physiology and hygiene in the three up- per grades.
2. Health habits are taught by some of the teachers in the lower grades, but the instruction is not definitely worked out.
3. Short periods of calisthenics are being carried out in many of the schoolrooms.
4. Some of the teachers direct organized play at recess periods.
5. Through the assistance of the North Agawam Wel- fare League and of several private individuals, some athletic equipment has been secured and is being used by the pupils. By means of this equipment and the co-operation of the principals we have had a baseball league and other athletic games.
6. A school physician is employed by the school committee.
Can we do more at a small expense? I would recommend the following :
I. That the physical training teacher of our high school be supervisor in the grades. If he cannot give much time to grade supervision, he can prescribe a course to be followed in the grades.
2. That a regular prescribed course in health habits be fol- lowed in the lower grades.
3. That a competent school nurse be appointed for part time, at least. The school nurse can and should, assist and vitalize the work of a school physician.
ATTENDANCE
I am pleased to be able to report a distinct improvement in the school attendance since Mr. Cesan was secured as attendance
96
officer. Actual truancy has dwindled to a very few cases and many parents who have previously been very careless about keep- ing their children at home have seen the error of their ways. We hope that this very important problem is to be kept in the hands of Mr. Cesan.
AGAWAM HIGH SCHOOL
Some of our residents feel that Agawam, situated closely to West Springfield and Springfield, communities with high schools of a high grade, is presuming too much in attempting a high school education within the limits of this town.
The quality of education obtainable in Agawam high school remains to be proven, but I am sure we need not have any grave fears on that score. It is an established fact that Agawam pupils have shown themselves to be of good caliber and well equipped for work in other towns. And I am sure that the citizens of Agawam have, in their committee, a safe medium for the securing of competent teachers, well able to provide a very adequate sec- ondary education.
But one might ask if that could not be fully as well done in the neighboring towns. I would grant that. Yet is there not some- thing higher than knowledge than can be obtained in Agawam High School by Agawam boys and girls, that cannot be obtained in another school system? Can anyone have the same feeling or spirit in a neighboring high school that he would have in his own school? John J. Tigert, U. S. Commissioner of Education, has aptly said that this spirit of co-operation, commonly called "school spirit" is a far greater preparation for a worthy life than the ac- quiring of book knowledge. The pupils commuting from neigh- boring towns never enter into the spirit of the school with an equal participation and spirit to that of the resident pupils. And may we not expect a stronger spirit of co-operation in a common interest between the different parts of the town, due both directly and indirectly to the high school ?
And further, we certainly cannot be positive that our neigh- bors, with greatly increased school populations, will always accom-
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modate us by providing a high school education for our pupils. Especially if the law is passed raising the age of compulsory educa- tion from fourteen to sixteen.
THE STATUS OF OUR PRESENT TEACHING FORCE
The amount of training a teacher has had beyond high school is a criterion by means of which a teacher may be judged. This basis, together with the amount of experience and graduate work are the criteria used by many towns and cities for a basis of salary increases and are also used by the state in determining the amount of state reimbursement per teacher.
Massachusetts stands highest of any state in the Union as far as teacher training is concerned with an average of 2.5 years. You may be interested to know that the training of Agawam teachers averages over 2.4 years. When we stop to realize that chis average will be appreciably increased in another year when high and junior high teachers are added to our force, for many of these will be college graduates with at least four years training, I think that the school committee and residents of Agawam can be sure that as far as teacher training is concerned, their teachers compare very favorably with those of other towns and cities.
And in regard to teaching experience: The average teaching experience of Agawam teachers is seven years. That I believe, may be considered a very fair average.
And still further, over thirty-five per cent of our teachers have taken summer courses and have done extension work to keep themselves in tune with educational progress.
In the light of these facts, should we have any compunctions regarding our teachers, granting, of course, that there may or may not be cases of individual inefficiency ?
SOCIALIZED EDUCATION
Professor Dewey has said "Education is life, not a prepara- tion for life." Is it not true then that our education should be more akin to life, and less like an institution? Educators, realiz- ing this fact have for a number of years put much study on the
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social aspects of education. Normal schools and colleges have placed much emphasis on the training of their students to intelli- gently carry on socialized recitations, that is, recitations in which the teacher is more of a guide than she formerly was and in which pupils' own ideas are utilized in a social sense, not curbed.
Some of this work has been done in our schools, and we hope to do more. Recently, during a visiting day, your assistant super- intendent and four of the upper grade teachers in town observed some very fine examples of group work, a form of socialized reci- tation, at the Forest Park Junior High School in Springfield. We were able to consult with the teachers themselves and they all ex- pressed themselves as being very well pleased with the results ob- tained. I am frank to say that I have never seen work that ap- pealed to me as much and which secured as good results as the work at that school.
Miss Danahy, principal of the North Agawam school has been studying a course of Socialized Education conducted by Pro- fessor Scott of Mount Holyoke College and Mr. Ramsey, the principal of the Forest Park Junior High School, and she has al- ready started group work. We expect to be able to give a dem- onstration of this work after school some night for the benefit of the other teachers of the town. The group method is adaptable in some form in all of the grades.
The teachers of Agawam recognize the fact that the ulti- mate test of our schools is not in the class rooms, but in their con- duct in the homes, on the streets, and in the higher schools or busi- ness, and are anxious to use any method or methods that has this end as an objective.
In conclusion I desire to sincerely commend the teachers of Agawam for the high grade of work they are doing. I also wish to express my thanks for the co-operation and help given me by the school committee and Superintendent Gushee.
Respectfully submitted,
JOSEPH R. BURGESS.
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To the Superintendent of Schools, Agawam, Mass. :
I herewith submit my first report as supervisor of music. I have for the past year given two and one-half days a week to the Agawam schools. I have made use of this schedule :-
Mon.
Tues. Wed.
A. M. Agawam Center
A. M. N. Agawam P. M.
P. M. Agawam Center
Feeding Hills South St.
P. M. Springfield St.
West St. Suffield St.
Each class with few exceptions, in the central schools is vis- ited once a week, the outlying schools once in three weeks. The Weaver system has been used for many years in our schools with most satisfactory results, and it is the system still in use. Briefly outlined the course of study follows :
Grade I.
Study of first five tones of scale.
Quarter, half, dotted-half, whole notes.
Grade II.
All scale tones.
Group of two-eighth notes.
Grade III.
Finding "do" from key signatures.
Dotted quarter and eighth note.
Grade IV.
Chromatic tones one-half step above scale tones. One and two part songs.
Grade V.
Chromatic tones one-half step below scale tones.
Theory of Common Time and relative note values. Grade VI.
Writing key signatures. Study of triplet and compound time.
Dotted eighth and sixteenth notes.
Group of four sixteenth notes.
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Their relative values with eighth and half note units. Two and three part songs.
Grade VII.
Review of all work in time and tone.
Three part singing.
Grade VIII
Study of Bass Clef.
Three and four part songs.
Grade IX
History and music appreciation.
We have returned to the singing of the Bowen Individual Melodies, for we feel that they give the foundation needed for ability and independence in sight reading. With this ability the student will be able to enjoy the highest type of songs, and from them receive a love and appreciation of good music.
In addition to the book material already in use we have re- ceived through the kindness of the School Committee copies of the Baldwin Progressive Songs. These are used in the fifth and sixth grades for special drills in chromatics and two part work. We have also received the Junior Laurel Song books to be used in the seventh grades as an aid in sight singing and tone work.
Many of the pupils in the schools are especially interested in instrumental music, and requests for the organization of a school orchestra have been frequent. In response to this call it has been thought advisable to form an orchestra which in time we hope will be representative of the three Agawam Schools.
I wish to thank the Superintendent and members of the School Committee for their support and the Principals and teachers for their efficient work and splendid co-operation during the year.
Respectfully submitted,
ALICE POWERS.
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SCHOOL DIRECTORY, 1922
Name
Position
Date of Appointment
Home Address
Walter E. Gushee
Superintendent of Schools
Dee.
1901
Ludlow
Joseph R. Burgess
Asst. Supt. of Schools
Jan.
1921
Agawam
Alice Powers
Supervisor of Music
Sept.
1920
North Wilbraham
Katherine G. Danahy, Prin. North Agawam, Gr. VIII-IX
Sept.
1899
North Agawam
Mae P. Lynch
North Agawam, Gr. VII
Sept.
Gr. VI
Sept.
Gr. V
Sept.
1921
20 Cliftwocd St., Springfield
Olive A. Fox
North Agawam, Gr. IV
Sept.
1914
18 Hampden St., Westfield
Nellie T. Granfield
North Agawam, Gr. III
Sept.
1918
90 Genesee St., Springfield
Mary J. Kelley
North Agawam,
Gr. II
Sept.
1919
Lee, Mass.
Jennie M. Lueas
North Agawam, Gr. I
Sept.
1900
Plantsville, Conn
William J. Burke, Jr., Prin.
Feeding Hills, Gr. VIII-IX
Sept.
1921
40 Glendell Ter., Springfield
Beryl W. Stodden
Feeding Hills, Gr. VII
Sept.
1921
18 Meadow St., North Adams
Olive C. Duguid
Feeding Hills, Gr. V-VI
Sept.
1918
Pens cook, N. H.
Anna M. Giblin
Feeding Hills, Gr. III-IV
Sept.
1921
76 Cambridge St., Springfield
Bessie E. Sprowl
Feeding Hills, Gr. I
Sept.
1921
Searsmort, Maine
Springfield Street, Gr. I
Sept.
1909
20 Riverdale St., West Springfield
Harriet D. Peirce
Springfield Street, Gr. II
Sept.
1920
20 Riverdale St., West Springfield
Vicla E. Hopkins
Springfield Street, Gr. III
Sept.
1921
179 Montgomery St., Chicopee Falls
Edna B. Harmon
Springfield Street, Gr. IV-V
Sept.
1918
Great Barrington, Mass.
Hazel M. Sullivan
Springfield Street, Gr. V-VI
Sept.
1914
Smith Ave., Mittineague
Kate Adams, Prin.
Agawam Center, Gr. VIII-IX
Sept.
1917
Route 14, Concord, N. H.
Minta A. Loeke
Agawain Center, Gr. VI-VII
Sept.
1921
Pembroke, N. H.
Cora E. Halladay
Agawam Center, Gr. VI
Sept.
1915
Suffield, Conn.
Lena E. Collis
Agawam Center, Gr. V
Sept.
1917
39 Center St., Palmer
Idelle M. Beebe
Agawam Center, Gr. IV
Jan.
1921
5 Oak St., Springfield
Elinor E. Gibney
Agawam Center, Gr. III-II
Jan.
1920
Hillsboro, N. H.
Minnetta Jurgenson
Agawam Center, Gr. I
Sept.
1920
Great Barrington, Mass.
Viola W. Phillips
Agawam Center, Gr. I
Apr.
1920
85 Belmont Ave., Springfield
Elizabeth Hammond
West Street, Gr. I-IV
Sept.
1920
539 Hubbard Ave., Pittsfield
Gertrude Lawrence
South Street, Gr. I, II
Sept.
1920
88 Commonwealth Ave., Springfield
Mildred E. Simpson
Suffield Street, Gr. I-II-III
Sept.
1921
Northboro, Mass.
Clara S. Johnson
Feeding Hills, Gr. II-III
Sept.
1921
Brookfield, Mass.
Faolin M. Peirce
1917 Maple Ter., Mittireague
Catherine T. Powers
North Agawam,
Annette E. Deely
North Agawam,
1919 14 Gunn Sq., Springfield
.
102
ENROLLMENT By Schools and by Grades, January, 1922.
FEEDING HILLS
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
Totals
Room 1
35
35
Room 2
20
13
33
Room 3
13
26
39
Room 4
19
24
43
Room 5
34
34
Room 6
21
18
39
Totals
35
20
26
26
19
24
34
21
18
223
SPRINGFIELD STREET
Room 1
47
47
Room 2
45
45
Room 3
39
39
Room 4
27
12
39
Room 5
14
27
41
Totals
47
45
39
27
26
27
211
NORTH AGAWAM
Room 1
51
51
Room 2
40
40
Room 3
38
38
Room 4
35
35
Room 5
35
35
Room 6
38
38
Room 7
40
40
Room 8
32
9
41
Totals
51
40
38
35
35
38
40
32
9
318
AGAWAM CENTER
Room A
12
12
Room 1
16
19
35
Room 2
18
30
48
Room 3
48
48
Room 4
39
39
Room 5
37
37
12
26
38
24
12
36
Totals
28
37
30
48
39
49
26
24
12
293
OUTLYING SCHOOLS
Suffield St.
12
10
8
30
South St.
19
14
33
West St.
7
7
6
4
34
Totals
38
31
14
4
87
Grand Totals 199 173 147
140
119
138
100
71 39
1132
Total in Public Grade Schools
1132
Attending High School
102
Attending Vocational School
8
Total Public School Enrollment
1242
103
.
Room 6
Room 7
Articles in the Warrant for the Annual Town Meeting MARCH 6, 1922
Art. I. To choose a Moderator to preside in said meeting.
Art. 2. To choose two or more Fence Viewers, and two or more Field Drivers.
Art. 3. To hear and act upon the reports of the Town Officers.
Art. 4. To see what method the Town will adopt for the support of the Poor for the ensuing year.
Art. 5. To see if the Town will appropriate a sum of money for the observance of "Memorial Day," and provide for its expenditure.
Art. 6. To see if the Town will vote the School Commit- tee any compensation for their services.
Art. 7. To see if the Town will appropriate a sum of money for the payment of a proper charge of an Insurance Com- pany for acting as surety on the official bond of its officers.
Art. 8. To see if the Town will appropriate a sum of money for liability insurance of its employees.
Art. 9. To see if the Town will appropriate a sum of money for the purpose of constructing permanent pavement on School
105
Street, and authorize the Treasurer, with the approval of the Selectmen, to borrow said sum or any portion of the same, or act in any way relating thereto.
Art. 10. To see if the Town will appropriate the sum of three hundred dollars or any other sum to be expended by the Trustees for County Aid to Agriculture of Hampden County, in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 273, Acts of 1918, or take any other action thereon.
Art. II. To see if the Town will authorize its Treasurer, with the approval of the Selectmen, to borrow during the current municipal year, beginning Janauary 1, 1922, in anticipation of the revenue for said year, such sums of money as may be necessary for the current expenses of the Town.
Art. 12. To see if the Town will appropriate the sum of fifty dollars for the payment of a Fish and Game Warden.
Art. 13. To see if the Town will appropriate a sum of money for extending the work of numbering the houses of the Town.
Art. 14. To see if the Town will adopt Section 25 A of Chapter 41, Revised Laws, providing for the appointment of As- sistant Assessors. ,
Art. 15. To see if the Town will adopt a by-law governing the calling and holding of its annual Town meetings.
Art. 16. To see if the Town will make any change in its officers to be elected hereafter by official ballot or in the number of terms of office thereof.
Art. 17 To see if the Town will adopt the provisions of Section 120 Chapter 94 of the General Laws.
Art. 18. To see if the Town will lay out and accept Lee- land Avenue, or any portion of the same as a public street.
Art. 19. To see if the Town will appropriate the sum of two hundred dollars for the construction of a cement walk and beautifying the Green at Feeding Hills Center.
106
Art. 20. To see if the Town will vote to pay its officials a salary as such officials.
Art. 21. To see if the Town will appropriate a sum of money not to exceed five hundred dollars for repairs on sewers.
Art. 22. To see if the Town will amend any of its by-laws heretofore adopted or adopt any further by-laws.
Art. 23. To see what action the Town will take regarding the acceptance of Poplar Avenue.
Art. 24. To see what method the Town will adopt to raise money for payment of repairs on bridges.
Art. 25. To see if the Town will vote an appropriation for finishing Springfield Street construction.
Art. 26. To see if the Town will instruct the Water Com- missioners to extend the water system on Cooper Street.
Art. 27. To make the necessary appropriations for the en- suing year.
Art. 28. To transact any other business that may legally come before said meeting.
107
Annual Report of
Town Officers
of the
Town of Agawam
Massachusetts
OF A G
-
NCOR
45.1855
ORAT
ED
J
-
For the Year Ending December 31 1922
.
Town Officers 1922-1923
Selectmen, Overseers of the Poor, and Board of Health JOHN R. LOYD GILES W. HALLADAY H. PRESTON WORDEN
Town Clerk, Treasurer and Tax Collector HENRY E. BODURTHA
School Committee
J. ARSENE ROY Term expires 1924
CLIFFORD M. GRANGER Term expires 1923
PERCIVAL V. HASTINGS Term expires 1925
Assessors
R. MATHER TAYLOR Term expires 1924
WILLIAM H. PORTER Term expires 1925
H. PRESTON WORDEN Term expires 1923
Auditor JAMES C. ATWATER
Library Trustees
CARRIE W. KENDALL. Term expires 1925
CLARENCE H. GRANGER Term expires 1923
GRACE M. DUMAS. Term expires 192+
Trustees of Whiting Street Fund
FREMONT H. KING
Term expires 1923
ALBERT H. BROWN Term expires 1924
3
Cemetery Commissioners
WILLIAM D. RISING. Term expires 1924 ROBERT ELY Term expires 1923
DELOS J. BLOOM.
Term expires 1925
Water Commissioners
DENNES M. CROWLEY Term expires 1925
ALVIN R. KELLOGG. Term expires 1923
JOHN L. BURKE
Term expires 1924
Tree Warden EDWIN M. HITCHCOCK
Constables
WALTER E. ALLEN
RILEY S. FARNSWORTH
DWIGHT E. BAILEY
ALVIN R. KELLOGG
FRANKIE H. CAMPBELL
ARTHUR H. ROWLEY
DANIEL O. CESAN
WINFIELD S. SAFFORD
EDWARD S. CONNORS
CHARLES H. WYMAN
Game and Fish Wardens
EDWARD S. CONNORS CHARLES H. WYMAN ARTHUR H. ROWLEY
Surveyors of Lumber
EDWARD A. KELLOGG N. G. KING
C. W. HASTINGS GEORGE H. TAYLOR
Measurers of Wood
FRANK W. KELLOGG N. G. KING
C. W. HULL, JR. L. S. JENKS
4
Public Weighers
HARVEY PORTER FRANK WHITTAKER WINFIELD S. SAFFORD
Sealer of Weights and Measures EDWIN U. LEONARD
Chief of Police EDWARD S. CONNORS
Registrar of Voters PHILIP W. HASTINGS
Inspector of Animals EDWIN U. LEONARD
Inspector of Meats
EDWIN U. LEONARD CHARLES F. BARDEN
Fire Engineers
WILFRED F. DUMAS CHARLES H. WOOD F. A. WORTHINGTON
Superintendent of Streets E. A. KELLOGG
Fence Viewers
WILLARD C. CROUSS THOMAS KERR
Field Drivers WILLIAM S. HALLADAY FRANK H. CAMPBELL
5
Town Clerk's Report
TOWN ELECTION, MARCH 6, 1922
Precinct
A
B C
Total
Number of ballots cast
196
190
324
710
RESULTS OF COUNT OF BALLOTS
For Selectmen, Overseers of the Poor and Board of Health :
Giles W. Halladay
111
147
262
520
John R. Lloyd
92
132
280
504
John A. Warner
78
67
77
222
H. Preston Worden
111
109
277
497
Blanks
196
115
76
387
For Town Clerk, Treasurer and Tax Collector :
Henry E. Bodurtha
144
147
3,00
591
Clarence H. Granger
0
6
1
7
Blanks
52
37
23
112
Assessors for three years:
William H. Porter
127
157
300
584
Blanks
69
33
24
126
School Committee for three years:
Mabel B. Hanchett
35
49
134
218
Percival V. Hastings
152
128
188
468
Blanks
9
13
2
24
6
Water Commissioners for three years :
Dennis M. Crowley
160
166
295
621
Blanks
36
24
29
89
Auditor :
James C. Atwater
54
115
256
425
Raymond F. Finnegan
119
47
45
211
William H. Seaver
0
0
6
6
Blanks
23
28
17
68
Tree Warden :
Edwin M. Hitchcock
139
159
301
599
Blanks
57
31
23
111
Trustee Whiting Street Fund
for two years:
Albert H. Brown
126
159
295
580
Blanks
70
31
29
130
Library Trustee for Tree years :
Carrie W. Kendall
58
96
156
310
Ralph Perry
80
60
155
295
Blanks
58
34
13
105
Cemetery Commissioner for three
years
Delos J. Bloom
120
135
291
546
Blanks
76
55
33
164
Constables :
Walter E. Allen
51
91
263
405
Henry G. Arnold
64
68
92
224
Dwight E. Bailey
43
86
260
389
Joseph J. Brady
53
37
164
254
Frankie H. Campbell
60
73
216
349
Daniel O. Cesan
38
128
191
357
Edward S. Connors
155
121
219
495
William De Forge
102
44
91
237
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