USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Arlington > Town of Arlington annual report 1908-1909 > Part 3
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Article 3 taken from the table. (Reports of Town Officers.)
Voted: That the reports of the various town officers as presented in their annual reports, with the addition of tables of statistics of the Assessors, be accepted.
Article 6 taken up. (Repairing of Highways.)
Voted: That the Town ways, highways and bridges be repaired during the ensuing year under the direction of the Board of Public Works.
Article 8 taken up. (Selectmen Agents of the Town.)
Voted: That the Selectmen be appointed agents of the Town to institute and prosecute actions in favor of the Town and appear and defend suits and legal proceedings against or involving the interests
28
TOWN RECORDS.
of the Town, with power to employ Counsel therein, and when neces- sary in all other legal matters and business appertaining to Town affairs during the year commencing March 2, 1908.
Article 19 taken up. (Powers of Collector of Taxes.)
Voted: That the Collector of Taxes be authorized to use all means of collecting taxes for the year 1908 which a Town Treasurer may use when appointed a Collector of Taxes.
Article 22 taken up. (Board of Public Works to convey to F. R. & G. M. Vail.)
Voted: That the Town authorize and empower its Board of Pub- lic Works, in the name and behalf of the Town, to release to Frederick R. and George M. Vail all the right, title and interest acquired by the said Town by virtue of the taking of land for sewer purposes in a strip or parcel of land 2 feet in width on Laurel Street, so-called, as described in Article 22 of the warrant.
Article 9 taken up. (Appointment of Committee of Twenty-one.)
Voted: That a Committee be appointed consisting of 21 citizens, other than Town officers elected by ballot, to serve throughout the ensuing year and until the end of the annual meeting of 1909. The members of said committee to be selected as follows: Nine from the residents of the Russell School District, four from the residents of the Locke School District, four from the residents of the Cutter School District, four from the residents of the Crosby School District.
To this Committee, when appointed, are hereby referred all articles calling for an appropriation of money in any town warrant issued during its term of office.
Said committee shall, after due consideration of the subject matter of said articles, report thereon in print or otherwise such recom- mendations as it shall deem best.
Said Committee shall choose its own officers and have power to fill vacancies.
The following citizens were nominated and elected to serve on said committee of twenty-one:
Edward W. Nicoll Clerk. 10 Montague St.
Bert S. Currier. Salesman. . 82 Claremont Ave.
Frank B. Records, Jr Architect. 179 Westminster Ave.
James F. Tilden. Asst. Treasurer. .101 Hillside Ave.
William H. Murray
Grocer .. 47 Mt. Vernon St.
Robert J. Kelly
Express Agent. .15 Walnut St.
Henry Finley
Piano Case Maker 1125 Mass. Ave. . Summer St.
Oman E. Bennett.
Farmer.
. Civil Engineer . 336 Mystic St.
Arthur D. Hill.
Farmer 253 Pleasant St.
Frank H. Hubbard.
George A. Smith.
Manufacturer. 47 Academy St.
William K. Cook.
Salesman. .23 Addison St.
Charles T. Dennen .
Plumber S Warren St.
Charles A. Hardy
. Clerk.
34 Gray St.
Frank V. Noyes
Insurance. 22 Gray St.
Max H. Meyer
. Piano Maker . 69 Henderson St.
John J. Lyons.
Farmer 170 Lake St.
Charles F. Wyman.
Farmer. 121 Lake St.
Henry C. Hoyt. Bookkeeper. 17 Teele St.
George A. Kimball.
.Salesman. 361 Mass. Ave.
George O. Goldsmith
. Blacksmith Whittemore St.
Article 29 taken up. (Town Grant.)
Voted: That the several amounts appropriated at this meeting for
29
TOWN RECORDS.
the purposes indicated by the various votes, and not otherwise pro- vided for, amounting to $182,354.27, together with the sum of $4,500 appropriated at the November meeting of 1907, making a total of $186,854.27, be raised by general tax the present year.
Article 26 taken up. (Lot in Mt. Pleasant to George W. Marston.)
Voted: That the Town authorize and empower its Board of Ceme- tery Commissioners, in the name and behalf of the Town, to convey lot No. 271 in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery to George W. Marston of Somer- ville, on such terms as the said Board may deem proper.
The Selectmen appointed Constables John Duffy and Charles F. Donahue to have charge of the incoming turnstile No. 3,057 and the outgoing turnstile No. 3,056, respectively, who made a return in writ- ing at the adjournment of the meeting showing that 179 voters had entered the hall through turnstile No. 3,057 and 53 voters had left the hall through turnstile No. 3,056, showing that 126 registered voters attended the meeting.
All articles in the warrant calling the meeting having been acted upon it was announced by the Moderator.
In accordance with the vote passed under article 21 of the warrant, the Moderator appointed the following citizens to serve on the com- mittee to procure plans, specifications and estimates for a new school building in the Locke School District, and to report at a future ad- journed or special meeting:
Frank W. Hodgdon, Frederick A. Bisbee, Joseph C. Holmes, Jacob R. Estabrook and Peter Schwamb.
Voted: That this meeting be now dissolved.
Meeting dissolved at 9.20 P. M.
A true record. Attest:
THOMAS J. ROBINSON, Town Clerk.
30
TOWN RECORDS.
TOWN MEETING -- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1908, AT 8 O'CLOCK, P. M.
TOWN WARRANT.
. COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS. MIDDLESEX, SS.
To Garritt Barry, a Constable of the Town of Arlington, in said County. GREETING :
In the name of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, you are hereby required to notify and warn the inhabitants of the Town of Arlington, who are qualified to vote in elections and town affairs, to assemble in the Town Hall, on Wednesday, the twenty-ninth day of April, current, at 8 o'clock P. M., then and there to act on the following articles, viz :
ARTICLE 1. To choose a Moderator to preside at said meeting.
ART. 2. To hear and act on the reports of any Town officers or committees heretofore appointed.
ART. 3. To see if the town will erect an addition to the Locke School building substantially in accordance with the plans submitted by the committee appointed March 16, 1908, make an appropriation for the purpose and determine in what manner the same shall be raised and expended.
(Inserted at request of Committee on New School House.
ART. 4. To see if the Town will vote to enlarge the Locke School House lot by purchasing land on the northerly side of the pres- ent building and between Park Avenue and the present playground, make an appropriation therefor and determine the manner in which the same shall be raised and expended, or take any other action thereon.
(Inserted at request of Committee on New School House.)
ART. 5. To see if the Town will appropriate forty-four dollars and three cents to meet an unpaid bill contracted in 1906 for drain pipe laid on Town House Site, or take any action thereon.
ART. 6. To see if the Town will appropriate nine dollars and
31
TOWN RECORDS.
twenty-five cents to meet an unpaid bill contracted in 1907 for plants and labor in the care of Town House Lot, or take any action thereon.
ART. 7. To see if the Town will vote to carry liability insur- ance covering the work of any departments of the Town, and make an appropriation therefor, the saine to be extended under the direc- tion of the Selectmen, or take any action thereon.
ART. 8. To appropriate and raise by borrowing or otherwise such sum or sums of money as may be necessary for all or any of the purposes mentioned in the foregoing articles.
Hereof, fail not, and make due return of this Warrant, with your doings thereon, to the Selectmen, on or before said day and hour of meeting.
Given under our hands at said Arlington, this fourteenth day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and eight.
FREDERICK S. MEAD, J. HOWEEL CROSBY, WALTER B. DOUGLASS, Selectmen of the Town of Arlington.
Middlesex County.
Arlington, April 28, 1908.
By virtue of this warrant, I have notified and warned the inhabitants of the Town of Arlington, qualified to vote in elections and Town affairs, to meet at the time and place and for the purposes herein named, by causing a printed attested copy to be left at every dwelling house in the Town, and also by posting an attested copy on the doors of the Town Hall, seven days at least before said day of meeting. GARRITT BARRY, Constable.
In pursuance of the foregoing warrant the inhabitants of the Town of Arlington, qualified to vote in elections and town affairs met in the Town Hall in said Arlington on Wednesday, the twenty-ninth day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and eight, and were called to order at eight o'clock in the evening by the Town Clerk, who read the warrant calling the meeting and the return thereon of the Constable, who served the same upon the inhabitants.
Article 1 taken up. (Choice of Moderator.).
Frank A. O'Brien and Edwin A. Bailey were appointed tellers to receive, sort and count ballots for Moderator and were sworn to the faithful performance of their duties.
Two (2) ballots were cast, each bearing the name of John G. Brackett, and he was declared elected Moderator and sworn by the Town Clerk.
Article 2 taken up. (Reports of Officers ond Committees.)
Frank W. Hodgdon, chairman of the committee appointed March 16, 1908, regarding a new schoolhouse for the Locke School District, presented the report of said committee in print and illustrated the proposed changes to the present building and the additional land proposed to be purchased for playground purposes by means of stere- opticon views.
32
TOWN RECORDS.
The report of the committee was accepted.
George A. Kimball, chairman of the Committee of Twenty-One, presented the report of said committee in print, and on his motion it was,
Voted: That the recommendations of the Committee of Twenty- One under the various articles in the warrant calling for appropria- tions be considered as now before the meeting without further motion, to be voted on in their order and to be voted on separately.
Article 2 was then laid on the table.
Article 3 taken up.
(New Locke School Building.)
Voted, by a two-thirds vote: That the sum of forty-eight thousand (48,000) dollars be appropriated for the erection and furnishing of an addition to the Locke School Building, substantially in accordance with the plans of the committee appointed by the Town, March 16, 1908, and that the town borrow forty-five thousand (45,000) dollars of said sum, and in payment therefor issue eighteen negotiable notes or bonds, for the sum of two thousand five hundred (2,500) dollars each, ene payable in the year 1909, and one in each of the seventeen suc- ceeding years, said notes or bonds to be signed by the Treasurer and countersigned by the Selectmen, and to be designated on the face thereof, "Locke School Addition Loan," and to bear interest semi- annually at a rate not exceeding four per centum per annum; also that the remaining three thousand (3,000) dollars be raised by general tax, and that the committee appointed March 16, 1908, be authorized and empowered to supervise and direct the work of the erection and furnishing of said building, and the expenditure of the sum hereby appropriated.
Article 4 taken up. (Enlargement of Locke School House Lot.) Voted by a two-thirds vote: That the Selectmen be authorized and empowered, in the name and behalf of the Town, to purchase for the purpose of the enlargement of the Locke Schoolhouse Lot, a cer- tain lot of land bounded and described as follows: Southwesterly by the present Locke Schoolhouse Lot, about 195 feet; northwesterly on Park Avenue about 70 feet; northeasterly on other land of Elizabeth J. Gleason about 183 feet, and southeasterly on a portion of the present playground about 137 feet, and containing about 19,250 square feet; and to pay therefor the sum of $4,250; that the sum of $4,250 be appropriated for the purchase of said lot, and that the Town borrow $4,000 of said sum, and in payment therefor issue eight (8) negotiable notes or bonds, for the sum of $500 each, one payable in the year 1909, and one in each of the seven succeeding years; said notes or bonds to be signed by the Treasurer and countersigned by the Selectmen, and to be designated on the face thereof "Enlargement of Locke School Lot Loan," and to bear interest, semi-annually at a rate not exceed- ing four per centum per annum; also that the remaining $250 be raised by general tax.
Article 5 taken up. (Unpaid bill of 1906 for drain pipe on Town House Site.)
Voted: That the sum of $44.03 be appropriated to meet an unpaid bill contracted in 1906 for drain pipe laid on Town House site, and that said sum be raised by general tax in 1908.
Article 6 taken up. (Unpaid bill for plants, etc., for Town House Site.)
Voted: That the sum of $9.25 be appropriated to meet an unpaid bill contracted in 1907 for plants and labor in the care of Town House lot, and that said sum be raised by general tax in 1908.
Article 7 taken up. (Liability insurance.)
33
TOWN RECORDS.
Voted : That the sum of $400 be appropriated to pay for liability insurance covering the work of certain departments of the Town, to be designated by the Selectmen, and that the said sum be raised by- General tax in 1908, and be expended under the direction of the Select- men.
Article 8 taken up. (Amount appropriated and how raised.) ---
Voted: That the several amounts appropriated at this meeting for the purposes indicated by the various votes and not otherwise pro- vided for, amounting to $3,703.28, be raised by general tax the present year.
The Selectmen appointed Constables John Duffy and Charles F. Donahue to have charge of the incoming turnstile No. 3,057 and the outgoing turnstile No. 3,056, respectively, who made a return in writ- ing at the close of the meeting showing that 117 voters had entered the hall through turnstile No. 3,057 and that 1 voter had left the hall through turnstile No. 3,056, showing that 116 registered voters at- tended the meeting.
Voted: That this meeting be now dissolved.
Meeting dissolved at 8.35 P. M.
A true record. Attest:
THOMAS J. ROBINSON, Town Clerk.
34
TOWN RECORDS.
TOWN MEETING-TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1908, AT 6.00 O'CLOCK, A. M.
TOWN WARRANT.
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
MIDDLESEX SS.
To either of the Constables of the Town of Arlington, GREETING :
In the name of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, you are hereby required to notify and warn the inhabitants of the Town of Arlington, qualified, as the constitution requires, to vote in elections and town affairs, to assemble in the Town Hall in said Town, Tues- day, the third day of November next, it being the Tuesday next after the first Monday in said month, at 6.00 o'clock, A. M., then and there to act on the following articles, viz :
ARTICLE 1. To bring in their votes to the Selectmen for sixteen Electors of President and Vice President of the United States, to wit : Two electors at large and one elector for each Congressional District in the Commonwealth; a Governor; a Lieutenant Gover- nor; a Secretary ; a Treasurer and Receiver General ; an Auditor of Accounts ; an Attorney General for the Commonwealth ; a Rep- resentative of the Commonwealth in the Congress of the United States for District Number Eight; a Councillor for the Sixth Coun- cillor District ; a Senator for the Sixth Middlesex District ; a Repre- sentative in the General Court for the Twenty-ninth Representative District in the County of Middlesex ; a County Commissioner for three years; a Register of Probate and Insolvency for five years ; a County Commissioner for two years to fill vacancy ; an Associate Commissioner for two years to fill vacancy.
All the above to be voted for on one ballot. The polls will be opened immediately after the organization of the meeting and will be kept open until four o'clock and thirty minutes in the afternoon, and as much longer as the meeting directs, provided the time shall not be after the hour of sunset.
Hereof fail not, and make due return of this Warrant, with your
35
TOWN RECORDS.
doings thereon, to the Selectmen, on or before said day and hour of meeting.
Given under our hands at said Arlington, this twentieth day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and eight.
FREDERICK S. MEAD, J. HOWELL CROSBY, WALTER B. DOUGLASS, Selectmen of the Town of Arlington.
Middlesex County. Arlington, October 30, 1908.
By virtue of this warrant I have notified and warned the inhabitants of the Town of Arlington, qualified to vote in elections and town affairs to meet at the time and place and for the purpose named, by causing a printed attested copy to be left at every dwelling house in the Town and also by posting an attested copy on the doors of the Town Hall, seven days at least before said day of meeting.
GARRITT BARRY, Constable of Arlington.
A true record. Attest:
THOMAS J. ROBINSON, Town Clerk.
In pursuance of the foregoing warrant the inhabitants of the Town of Arlington, qualified to vote in elections and town affairs, met in the Town Hall in said Arlington on Tuesday, the third day of Novem- ber, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eight, it being the Tuesday next after the first Monday in said month, and were called to order by Frederick S. Mead, Chairman of the Board of Selectmen of Arlington, at six o'clock in the forenoon. The presiding officer read the warrant calling the meeting and the return thereon of the Constable who served the same upon the inhabitants.
Selectman Frederick S. Mead took charge of the meeting and acted as presiding officer. In conformity to the laws of the Commonwealth in relation to elections the Town Hall, was fitted up as a polling place, a space railed off and booths or shelves provided for the use of voters to examine and mark their ballots. Each booth was sup- plied with suitable facilities for the purpose and with cards of instruc- tions.
The following persons had been appointed by the Selectmen as ballot clerks, tellers and inspectors and were sworn by the Town Clerk to the faithful discharge of their duties, and assigned as follows:
Ballot Clerks, Edgar Crosby and John J. Mahoney.
Tellers, Arthur L. Marston and George C. Tewksbury.
Inspectors, George W. Perkins and Frank F. Russell.
At Ballot Box, Horace A. Freeman and George M. Richardson.
Counters, Frank Y. Wellington, John W. Power, Thomas A. Smith, William D. Grannan, Arthur L. Bridgham, Daniel W. O'Brien, Henry K. Brown, Edward B. Mead, William E. Bunton, Frank A. O'Brien, Frank B. Records, Jr., Charles B. Hurley.
A sealed package containing 2250 ballots supplied by the Secretary of the Commonwealth was then delivered by the Town Clerk to the
36
TOWN RECORDS.
presiding officer, who publicly broke the seal and delivered the ballots to the ballot clerks.
Specimen ballots and cards of instructions were posted in conformity to law as were also cards of penalties to voters for violation of the law.
The ballot box was examined by the presiding officer and the Town Clerk and was found to be empty and the register set at zero.
A list of registered voters was supplied to the Ballot Clerks and Tellers by the Registrars of Voters.
At five minutes after six o'clock the polls were declared open for the reception of votes, and were kept open until thirty minutes after four o'clock in the afternoon, at which time, after due notice, they were declared closed.
By unanimous consent the ballot box was opened at 7 o'clock in the morning and at the following periods during the day for the purpose of removing the ballots to be counted :
At 7 o'clock the ballot box registered 226 votes.
8 9 12 2 3.45
At the close of the polls the ballot box registered sixteen hundred forty-eight (1,648) votes.
The keys of the ballot box were delivered by the presiding officer into the custody of Constable Garritt Barry and remained in his pos- session until the polls closed.
The names checked by the Ballot Clerks and the names checked by the Checkers at the ballot box were counted and found to agree with the number registered by the ballot box, sixteen hundred and forty-eight (1,648).
The unused ballots were enclosed in a package, sealed and delivered to the Town Clerk after being counted and endorsed by the Ballot Clerks. The number was found to be 602, which added to the number cast made the total 2,250, which corresponded with the number re- ceived from the Secretary of the Commonwealth.
The election officers canvassed the votes given in and the whole number was found to be sixteen hundred forty-eight (1,648), which were sorted, counted and declaration thereof made in open meeting as required by law at ten minutes after five o'clock by the Town Clerk as follows:
ELECTORS OF PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT. Bryan and Kern, Democratic.
At Large.
Richard Olney of Boston had four hundred nineteen (419) Jas. E. Cotter of Hyde Park 66 66
By Districts.
1. Luke J. Minihan of Pittsfield had four hundred nineteen (419)
2. Theobald M. Connor of North- ampton
..
66
3. John O'Gara of Spencer
66
66
66
66
66
66
5. Humphrey O'Sullivan of Lowell
66
66
66
66
66
66
66
7. Dennis H. Tyrill of Chelsea
8. Warren T. Morse of Medford
66
66
66
"
66
66
66
1582
66
500 793
66
1000
66
1200
4. Chas. A. Babbitt of Fitchburg
66
6. William Stopford of Beverly
66
1400
66 66 10.30 -
37
TOWN RECORDS.
9. William F. McClellan of Boston had four hundred nineteen
10. William T. Shea of Quincy
11. Josiah Quincy of Boston
12. Jeremiah J. Comba of Milford 66 66
66
66
66
13. John W. Coughlin of Fall River 66
14. Charles C. Paine of Barnstable 66
Chafin and Watkins, Prohibition.
At Large.
Hervey S. Cowell of Ashburnham had fifteen (15) John M. Fisher of Attleboro 66 66
By Districts.
1. Wilbur M. Purrington of Williamsburg had fifteen (15)
2. Oliver W. Cobb of Easthampton
3. Christen Peterson of Worcester
4. Quincy Adams of Townsend
5. John B. Lewis, Jr., of Reading
6. Robert M. Martin of Salem .
7. Jonathan S. Lewis of Stoneham
8. Alfred A. Wright of Cambridge
66
9. Charles E. Eaton of Boston
10. Moses D. Monroe of Milton
11. Solon W. Bingham of Boston
12. Napoleon B. Johnson of Milford
13. David Morrison of Fall River
14. Herbert L. Chipman of Sandwich
Debs and Hanford, Socialist.
At Large.
Patrick Mahoney of Boston had six (6) Eliot White of Worcester
By Districts.
1. Henry O. Brigham of Westfield had six (6)
2. Alva E. Fenton of Springfield 66 66
3. James Cronin of Worcester
4. Timothy Richardson of Leominster
5. William E. Sproule of Lowell 66 66
6. John Quincy Adams of Amesbury 66 66 66
7. Ambrose Miles of Lynn 66 66
S. Clinton S. Hunt of Somerville 66 66
9. Samuel Zorn of Boston
10. A. Hale Kingsley of Quincy 66
66
11. George W. Galvin of Boston
12. Michael J. Moore of Newton
13. Wm. Ohnesorge of New Bedford 60
14. George A. Beedem of Brockton 66 66
Gillhaus and Munro, Socialist Labor. At Large.
Thomas F. Brennan of Salem had three (3) Herman Koepke of Pittsfield 66 66
By Districts. had three (3) 66
1. Henry Noffke of Holyoke
2. Frederick A. Nagle of Springfield
3. Gustave S. Peterson of Worcester
4. James Hayes of Leominster
5. Gilbert G. Smith of Lawrence
6. Jeremiah P. McNally of Salem
7. Michael J. Quirk of Saugus
8. Andrew Mortenson of Somerville 66
66
66
66 66
66
66
66
66 66
66
66
66 60
66
(419) 66
66 66
66
66
66
66
66
60
66
.
38
TOWN RECORDS.
9. Joseph C. Dunnack of Boston
10. Andreas L. Wallin of Quincy
11. Patrick Mulligan of Boston
12. Carl F. Fredrikson of Hyde Park
13. Dennis McGoff of New Bedford
14. Charles H. Tobin of No. Attelboro
Hisen and Graves, Independent League.
At Large.
Michael C. O'Neill of Boston had thirty-eight (38) William F. Aiken of Greenfield
By Districts.
1. Simon J. Griffin of West Springfield had thirty-eight (38)
2. Charles F. Warner of Northampton
3. William Crosbie of Worcester 66
4. William A. Pierson of Hudson
5. Michael A. Lee of Lowell
6. Roland D. Sawyer of Haverhill
7. George W. Casavant of Saugus
8. Grenville S. McFarland of Cambridge
66
66
10. Charles O. Power of Boston
44
66
11. John A. Coulthurst of Boston
66
46
12. Eugene L. Murphy of Norwood
13. Matthew Hart of New Bedford
14. Herbert E. Bryant of Kingston
Taft and Sherman, Republican.
At Large. John L. Bates of Boston had eleven hundred (1100) A. H. Goetting, Springfield “
By Districts.
1. Charles S. Shattuck of Hatfield had eleven hundred (1100)
2. Almond Smith of Athol
3. Frank Hartley of Webster
4. Allen G. Buttrick of Lancaster
5. James R. Berwick of Methuen
6. Ulysses G. Haskell of Beverly Charles N. Barney of Lynn
8. John Read of Cambridge
66
46
10.
11. James M. Thompson of Boston
12. Jesse S. Wiley of Brookline
13. Benj. H. Anthony of New Bedford
14. Alfred B. Williams of Taunton Blanks, 67.
66
7.
64
9. Jerome A. Petitti of Boston Milton C. Paige of Boston
:4
44
66
66
GOVERNOR.
James F. Carey of Haverhill had fifteen (15). Eben S. Draper of Hopedale had nine hundred and seventy-seven (977). Walter J. Hoar of Worcester had seven (7). William N. Osgood of Lowell had sixty-three (63). James H. Vahey of Watertown had four hundred sixty-six (466). Willard O. Wylie of Beverly had seventeen (17). Blanks, 103.
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