USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Arlington > Town of Arlington annual report 1913 > Part 26
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ORNAMENTAL LIGHTING SYSTEM.
In accordance with vote passed at the Annual Town Meeting making an appropriation for street light poles and grading, the question of construction of an ornamental street lighting system was delegated, by your board, to Mr. Robert W. Pond, Superintendent of Public Works and to the Superinten- dent of Wires. After careful investigation of various new light- ing systems installed in several New England cities and towns, it was our opinion that a system of incandescent lights enclosed with Alba glass globes and attached to iron posts would be appropriate for the location where these lights were to be installed. Eleven (11) wood poles were removed on Massa- chusetts Avenue between Academy and Pleasant Streets, these poles being replaced by steel trolley poles to support the span wires of the Boston Elevated Railway Company. These trolley poles were equipped with ornamental arms for lights and globes and also were fitted with bases and ring casings to give a finished appearance to same. Three (3) independent lamp posts were installed, one (1) on Pleasant Street near Massachusetts Avenue and two (2) on Academy Street. On these fourteen (14) poles were placed thirty-eight (38) 60-watt incandescent lights. These lights are on a metered service controlled from time clocks in basement of Public
429
REPORT OF SUPERINTENDENT OF WIRES
Library and are operated on an 110-volt (low tension) system. Thirty-four (34) lights burn from thirty minutes after sun- down to 12 P.M. and four (4) lights burn from thirty minutes after sundown to thirty minutes before sunrise. Two (2) 5-light ornamental iron posts were placed in front of New Town Hall and one (1) 2-light iron post on Academy Street near drive to Town Hall building. These twelve (12) lights are on the New Town Hall meter and are turned on as needed. These three post fixtures were not included in the cost of construction of the other parts of the new lighting system; the cost of these posts, wiring, etc. being paid for by the Misses Robbins. In order that this lighting system might be built, arrangements had to be made with the various com- panies owning pole locations to abandon these poles and provide underground conduits for aerial wires existing. The New England Telephone and Telegraph Company removed eleven (11) poles on Massachusetts Avenue between Academy and Pleasant Streets and these locations were given to the Boston Elevated Railway Company to erect steel poles being owned and maintained jointly by this company and the Town of Arlington. The Edison Company removed five (5) poles on Academy Street and also installed a system of under- ground conduits on the street for all wires for lighting and power to buildings, including conduits and wires for the orna- mental street lighting system. All conduits and wires on Massachusetts Avenue for the new lighting system were built by the Edison Company ready for connecting to wires for light poles as provided by the Town. The New England Telephone and Telegraph Company built a system of under- ground conduits on Academy Street from Massachusetts Avenue to Maple Street for the wires of this company, also providing a conduit for the fire alarm wires which were removed from poles with the construction of underground conduits. The Town of Arlington is indebted, in the opinion of Mr. Pond and myself, to the various electrical corporations who went to much expense to help carry out satisfactorily the building of "Arlington's White Way Lighting System" which was put in service June 25, 1913, and which seems to meet the approval of its citizens.
430
ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT
Fifteen (15) 40 c.p. and one (1) 80 c.p. incandescent lights were installed during the past year on streets as specified below.
Three (3) arc lights, nine (9) 40 c.p., four (4) 60 c.p. and one (1) 120 c.p. incandescent lights were removed during the year.
LOCATION OF NEW STREET LIGHTS.
Date
Street Location
Pole No. Incandescent Installed
Crescent Hill Ave. 350 ft. W. Montague St.
820/6 1-40 c.p. Nov. 18, 1913
Crescent Hill Ave. 350 ft. E Montague St.
21/7 1-40 c.p. Dec. 20, 1913
Henderson St.
Near Bridge
Special 1-80 c.p. Oct. 14, 1913
Highland Ave.
300 ft. S. from Mass. Ave.
836/3 1-40 c.p. May 14, 1913
Highland Ave.
900 ft. S. from Mass. Ave.
836/8
1-40 c.p. May 14,
1913
Highland Ave.
cor. Plymouth St.
836/6
1-40 c.p. Oct. 31,
1913
Lakeview Ave.
End of Street
842/5 1-40 c.p. Nov. 8,
1913
Lakeview Ave.
Near Pleasant St.
842/2 1-40 c.p. Nov. 8, 1913
Medford St.
Cor. Lewis Ave.
849/13
1-40 c.p. Nov. 12,
1913
Medford St.
350 ft. N. Lewis Ave.
849/16
1-40 c.p. Nov. 12,
1913
Mt. Vernon St.
300 ft. S. Mass. Ave. 853/3
1-40 c.p. May 14,
1913
Mystic St.
Opp. Russell St.
5/11
1-40 c.p. Nov. 12,
1913
Mystic St.
Opp. Gas House Lan
854/13
1-40 c.p. Nov. 12, 1913
Park Ave.
Cor. Linden St.
8602/4a 1-40 c.p. July 15, 1913
Pleasant St.
Opp. Cemetery
Special
1-40 c.p. Oct. 15, 1913
Westmoreland Ave. Cor. Crescent Hill
Ave.
884/4 1-40 c.p. Nov. 12, 1913
NEW STREET LIGHTS, ORNAMENTAL POLE SYSTEM.
Street
Location
Pole No. Incandescent Installed
Academy St.
Cor. Maple St.
Iron Pole No. 3 4-60 Watt June 25, 1913
Academy St.
Near High School
Iron Pole
No. 2 2-60 Watt
June 25, 1913
Mass. Ave.
Between Academy and Pleasant
Iron Poles Nos. 16/
. Sts.
28, 30,
32, 34, 36, 38,
40, 42, 46,
44,
48 28-60 Watt June 25, 1913
Pleasant St. Near Mass. Ave. Iron Pole
No. 1 4-60 Watt June 25, 1913
Date
431
REPORT OF SUPERINTENDENT OF WIRES
SUMMARY OF STREET LIGHTS, DECEMBER 31, 1913.
305*
Incandescent lights, 40 candle power
Incandescent lights, 60 candle power 14
Incandescent lights, 80 candle power 4
Incandescent lights, 100 candle power 1
Incandescent lights, 120 candle power (multiple burning all night) 7
Arc lights, 425 watts 78
Total lights in use 409
With sixteen (16) new lights installed and seventeen (17) removed during the year 1913. there is one (1) less light in use on the streets than in the year 1912, not including new lights installed on the Ornamental Lighting System.
SUMMARY OF STREET LIGHTS, DECEMBER 31, 1913. ORNAMENTAL STREET LIGHTING SYSTEM.
Incandescent lights, 60 watt 34
Incandescent lights, 60 watt (burning all night) 4
Total 38
Lights of the above system are supplied with current from multiple low tension system at 110 volts; this service being metered.
FIRE ALARM SYSTEM.
This important system of public safety has given good serv- ice, with minor troubles at times which were beyond control. Circuit No. 1 in the Heights section of the Town was damaged by lightning on May 27 and June 7, burning out magnets on Bell Striker No. 1 and in Fire Box No. 64. These troubles were quickly located and repaired. Two (2) new fire alarm boxes were installed as follows:
Box No. 29 was placed in commission on May 29 on Mystic Street near Old Mystic Street, twenty-one hundred and thirty (2130) feet of No. 10 insulated iron wire and five hundred
*Three (3) forty candle power incandescent lights on private ways paid for by abutters.
432
ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT
and thirty-five (535) feet of four-conductor circular loom cable were used to connect this box.
Box No. 412 was placed in commission on July 5 at corner of Bartlett and Windemere Avenues, thirty-four hundred and eighty feet (3480) of insulated iron wire being used to connect same.
All aerial wires and pole fixtures were removed on Academy Street between Massachusetts Avenue and Maple Street on account of the removal of poles on this section of street made necessary with the building of the Ornamental Street Lighting System. Eight hundred and twenty-five (825) feet of two- conductor lead encased cable was installed underground connect- ing Fire Alarm Box No. 38 to the underground fire alarm wires on Massachusetts Avenue. Five hundred and fifteen (515) feet of four-conductor circular loom cable was installed on Mystic Street to replace open wiring passing through trees near Farrington Avenue. This class of construction will ensure more reliable service to the Fire and Police Signal Systems on this street and greatly lessen the possibility of interference with the operation of these systems. Eight thousand four hundred and eighty (8,480) feet of insulated iron wire and one hundred fifty-five (155) feet of two-conductor lead encased cable was used to construct the proposed Arlington and Medford Mutual Aid Fire Alarm System from the central Fire Station on Broadway to the Medford line on River Street. This system will be put into commission as soon as the Fire Officials of these two communities make final arrangements, which have been delayed, owing to the changing over of horse drawn fire apparatus to motor driven. Complete inspection was made of the entire Fire Alarm System during the year and weak points strengthened. Box No. 26 was equipped with a new door which was broken early in the morning of July 4. Box No. 62 was placed on a new pole on September 16.
POLICE SIGNAL SYSTEM.
This system has given perfect service during the year. The central office desk and other electrical apparatus of the Police Signal System were moved on July 3 from the old police station to new quarters of this department in the Old Town
433
REPORT OF SUPERINTENDENT OF WIRES
Hall building, this change being quickly made and the system being out of commission but a few hours. Two (2) new police signal boxes were installed during the year. Box No. 42 located on Park Avenue at top of Heights was placed in commission on July 1, six thousand three hundred and twenty (6,320) feet of insulated iron wire being used to connect same. Box No. 45 located on Wollaston Avenue near Tanager Street was placed in commission on June 12, using three thousand four hundred and forty-four (3,444) feet of wire to make connections. Police Box No. 23 on Mystic Street near Draper Avenue was moved to a point opposite Old Mystic Street. This box was put in commis- sion in new location on May 9, two thousand three hundred and seventy (2,370) feet of insulated iron wire and one thou- sand and sixty (1060) feet of cable wire being used. Police Box No. 31 at corner of Massachusetts Avenue and Mill Street was moved to corner of Massachusetts Avenue and Central Street on May 1, this box being placed on an under- ground iron terminal post, and all underground fire and police wires passing this point were looped into this terminal for a testing point.
INSPECTION OF WIRES IN BUILDINGS.
The following schedule of inspections, with lights and other electrical apparatus installed during the year 1913, is re- spectfully submitted.
TABULATION OF INTERIOR WIRING.
INSPECTIONS AND ELECTRICAL APPARATUS INSTALLED.
Contractors' applications received 551
Number of electrical contractors doing work
74
Number of inspections made 605
Incandescent lights wired for 5,533
Motors wired for 21
Total horse power of motors wired, 14 to 25 horse power 91
Electrical ranges wired for 2
Electrical water heaters wired for
2
Luminous radiators wired for
2
Wireless telegraph outfit wired for 1
434
ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT
Stereopticon arc lights wired for
3
Service permits issued to Edison Electric Illuminating Company for light, heat and power
671
Incandescent lights supplied with service, new and old installations 12,762
Horse power of motors installed
81
Electric ranges installed, total watts
9,680
Electric water heaters installed, total watts 3,960
1,750
Electric radiators installed, total watts Stereopticon arc lights installed, total watts 6,785
1,356
Wireless telegraph outfit, installed, total watts Mercury arc rectifier, installed, total watts
6,600
The duties of the Superintendent of Wires on Electrical Inspections are rapidly on the increase, owing to the many new buildings being built and the installation of many new classes of electrical appliances which are constantly being put on the market for sale. On the re-inspection of old buildings many dangerous defects are found on wires and electrical appliances where occupants have interfered with same. This practice is most emphatically discouraged by your inspector, and citizens are warned not to tamper with electric light or power wires. It is far better to employ the services of some competent electrician to make repairs than to have lights put temporarily out of commission or possibly have your building set on fire. Citizens are requested to communicate with the Wire Inspector before attaching any light fixture, heating device or other electrical appliances for which a permit has not been issued to the Edison Company to supply service. Fuses should never be replaced, when blown, unless they are of proper capacity to protect wires and fittings on the circuit where trouble occurs and care should be given to this most important sub- ject. The fuse is the safety valve of the electrical system, and upon a fuse depends the safety of each particular electrical installation from a fire standpoint.
RECOMMENDATIONS.
I respectfully make the following recommendations which have been carefully considered and which seem to be essential in view of the rapid growth of the Town. The underground wire system of both the Fire Alarm and Police Signal Systems
435
REPORT OF SUPERINTENDENT OF WIRES
should be extended this coming year on Massachusetts Avenue from Brattle Street to Appleton Street, and fire and police box iron posts should be installed for all signal boxes on the line of existing underground wires where these signal boxes are now attached to wood poles.
At the Fire Alarm Headquarters a punching register and time stamp should be installed for indicating exactly what signals are transmitted over the system and also to record the exact time of an alarm or other signals that may be sounded on the fire alarm system. New battery racks should be provided for the storage batteries at Fire Alarm Headquarters.
In the Heights section of the Town, on Hillside Avenue and a section of Wollaston Avenue the fire and police lines should be rebuilt using cable construction, as the open system of wiring now in use is liable to interference at any time owing to the large number of trees which these wires pass through. It would not appear that any additional fire alarm boxes should be required for the coming year as all sections of the Town are at present well covered with this service.
It is imperative that the Town provide suitable quarters for the Wire Department for storage of materials and tools necessary for the proper operation of this department and I would respectfully ask that basement room in old Town Hall building, now used as a meter testing room by the Water Department, be given to the Wire Department. A suitable wagon should be provided for the Wire Department, which should always be equipped for emergency service, and this wagon should be placed where a horse could be furnished at all times as required.
CONCLUSION.
In closing my report I wish to extend my thanks to your honorable board, also to Town Clerk Thomas J. Robinson and Superintendent of Public Works Robert W. Pond for the many courtesies shown and assistance given me in the discharge of the various duties which I have endeavored to perform to the best of my ability and to the satisfaction of all citizens of the Town.
Respectfully submitted,
REUBEN W. LE BARON, Superintendent of Wires.
REPORT OF TOWN CLERK.
ARLINGTON, December 31, 1913.
The report of this department for the year ending December ยท 31, 1913, is herewith submitted:
For reports of Town Meetings, Cemetery Commissioners, Registrars of Voters, Births, Deaths, Marriages, and Dog Licenses, all of which come under the work of this department, reference is made to those headings.
BIRTHS AND MARRIAGES REGISTERED DURING THE YEAR 1913.
Total number of births registered
304
Males
162
Females
142
304
Born in Arlington
270
Born in other places
34
The parentage of the children born was as follows:
Born in United States, both parties
319
Born in foreign countries, both parties
78
Born in United States, one parent
72
Born in foreign countries, one parent
72
Born in Arlington, both parents
12
Born in Arlington, one parent
46
MARRIAGES.
Whole number recorded
165
Resident of Arlington
196
Resident of other places
134
Solemnized in other places
67
Groom, first marriage of
149
Groom, second marriage of
14
Bride, first marriage of
154
Bride, second marriage of
11
436
REPORT OF TOWN CLERK
437
Age of oldest groom
66
19
61
17
DOGS REGISTERED. -
Whole number registered
277
234
Males and spayed females Females
43
277
Paid County Treasurer
$627.60
THOMAS J. ROBINSON, Town Clerk.
)
Age of youngest groom Age of oldest bride Age of youngest bride
438
ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT
BIRTHS REGISTERED DURING THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1913.
Date Name of Child
Parents
Jan. 1 William Lawrence Purcell. Edmund J. and Alice L. (Sullivan) Purcell
Jan. 2 John Gilbert Petterson
John A. and Ellen W. (Lindeborg) Petterson
Jan. 4 Geraldine Smith.
Joseph and Frances (Farrell) Smith
Jan. 4 Elizabeth Doyle Timothy and Margaret (Adams) Doyle
Jan. 4 Charles Crabino Stephen and Jennie (Casagrado) Crabino
Jan. 7 - Conahan
Henry and Louise (Mckenzie)
Conahan
Jan. 8 Edward Harris Merrill
Jan. 8 Brenda Marie Dissel
Jan. 8 Edith May Pratt ..
Jan. 8 Woodrow Wilson Fowler
Jan. 9 Evelyn Minerva Towers. Harold L. and Mary (Rajala) Towers Jan. 10 Arthur Lawrence Dahill. . Jeremiah and Catherine (O'Neil) Dahill Jan. 11 Alvist Charlotte Fairbanks. . Charles and Catherine (Boyle) Fair- banks
Jan. 12 William Charles McCarty .
Jan. 13 Joseph Quinn.
Jan. 13 Helen Margaret Tobin
Jan. 15 Mary Doyle.
Jan. 16 Ella Frances Lowell .
Jan. 17 Laurentine Cutcliffe.
Jan. 18 Weston Addison Ogilvie.
Jan. 18 Dorothy R. Nolan.
Joseph and Alice (Clifford) Cutcliffe Martin N. and Vesta V. (West) Ogilvie James H. and Rosina (Bradhurst) Nolan
Jan. 19 John Cloran Twins Joseph Cloran Robert and Mary (Peck) Cloran Jan. 19 - -Parsons Albert F. and Constance (Simpson) Parsons
Jan. 20 Mary Daley
Jan. 22 -Preston
Jan. 22 Horace Parker.
Jan. 23 Martha Wood
Jan. 24 Josina DeLaufa. Angelo and Lucia (Ferralla) DeLaufa James W. and Florence I. (Mitchell) Lowe
Jan. 25 Helen Genevieve Gilbert
Jan. 25 Abner Palmer Wyman.
Jan. 26 Edward Hall.
Jan. 27 Adeline Smith.
Jan. 29 Edward Roderick Long
Jan. 31 Helen Louise Duncon.
Feb. 1 McEvoy Feb. 3 Louise Donnelly
Feb. 4 Adelina Guarente
Henry E. and Lottie (Gordon) Merrill Theodore A. and Mary A. (Mulhern) Dissel
Harris P. and Marie C. (Wilson) Pratt William E. and Margaret J. (Wood) Fowler
.. William T. and Nellie (Johnson) McCarty
Thomas and Julia (Concannon) Quinn . Thomas and Agnes (Preston) Tobin James and Mary (Holmes) Doyle
Charles M. and Fanny A. (Primmer) Lowell
Daniel M. and Honora (Sullivan) Daley Edward and Mary (McCarthy) Preston Horace and Augusta (Lennon) Parker Ralph and Rachel (Norton) Wood
Jan. 24 Lowe \ Twins Lowe
. Walter and Alice (Bird) Gilbert Arthur and Helen (Kimball) Wyman Charles T. and Winifred (Henderson) Hall Fred A. and Mary (Ahern) Smith Charles and Robina (Lambie) Long Charles D. and Lillian M. (Murphy) Duncon Peter and Rose (Rourke) McEvoy Thomas J. and Mary A. . (Brow) Donnelly Raphael and Adelina (Vitagliano) Guarente
439
REPORT OF TOWN CLERK
Date Name of Child
Feb. 5 Lewis Cartullo
Raffaele and Carrie (Demaio) Cartullo
Feb. 5 James Hunzelman Ethel Hunzelman Twins .. . John B. and Alice (Rand) Hunzelman
Feb. 6 Leonard Hicks.
Feb. 10 Charles F. Keaney
Feb. 13 -Healey
Feb. 21 Richard Gilson Wilder
Feb. 21 Thomas Moran. .
Feb. 22 James Joseph Doolan James and Margaret (Mulcahy) Doolan
Feb. 22 Francis Michael Quinn.
Feb. 22 Virginia Davis
Feb. 24 Mary Nora Collins
Feb. 25 Frederick Egan .
Feb. 26 Henry C. Anderson.
Feb. 28 Ruth Pekins
George A. and Elizabeth (Sharp) Pekins Mar. 1 Arvid Theodore Liljekrantz .. Arvid and Sylvia (Anderson) Lil- jekrantz
Mar. 4 William Theodore Van Huysen Harry and Caroline (Lirens) Van Huysen Mar. 6 Pauline Snow Ernest A. and Frances (Dow) Snow Mar. 6 Ralph H. and Faith W. (Tenney) Houser - -Houser
Mar. 7 Alberta Baxter Dewhurst.
Mar. 7 Holt Potter Pilbury
Mar. 9 Louise Sophia Doughty
Mar. 10 Day
Mar. 10 Bernard Priest Rogers
Mar. 11 Norman Mills.
Mar. 11 Catherine Agnes Sugrue.
Mar. 12 Robert Graves Griffith
Mar. 13 Mary Cecelia Stingle.
Mar. 13 Whittemore
Mar. 13 Anna E. Woodbridge
Mar. 15 Mary Byrnes.
Mar. 16 Pauline Hyacinth Dwyer
Mar. 16 Palemira Feroli .
Mar. 16 Alvira Margaret Caterino .
Mar. 18 Carmela Carmene.
Mar. 19 T. Joseph Welch .
Mar. 19 Beatrice Temple .
Mar. 20 Paul Sencabaugh
Parents
Stephen J. and Mary (Breen) Hicks James D. and Catherine (Luddy) Keaney
Frank and Margaret (Grace) Healey :Fred G. and Ethel (Fessenden) Wilder John and Mary (Murphy) Moran
John T. and Hannah (Barry) Quinn Floyd S. and Stella M. (Pitcher) Davis John and Mary (Burns) Collins Henry Clifton and Helen C. (Donovan) Egan
Peter L. and Matilda (Johnson) Anderson
Robert and Dorothy (Baxter) Dew- hurst Clinton and - -Pilbury.
Edward F. and Blanche (Landers) Doughty
Pearl Day
Harold J. and Mary H. (Priest) Rogers William J. and Cecelia C. (McLaugh- lin) Mills
John Joseph and Nellie T. (Reardon) Sugrue
Jay C. and Nellie S. (Graves) Griffith William and Mary (O'Neil) Stingle Frank I. and Lucy F. (Hunting) Whittemore
Charles K. and Josephine (Kimball) Woodbridge
John and Mary (Fitzgerald) Byrnes Joseph L. and Marie (Hayes) Dwyer Joseph and Susie (Maderatz) Feroli Antonio and Antoinette (D'Auria) Caterino
Vance and Tonena (Marcello) Carmene Thomas and Annie (Golden) Welch Edward H., Jr., and Nellie B. (Lincoln) Temple
John P. and Annie E. (Campbell) Sencabaugh
440
ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT
Date
Name of Child
Parents
Mar. 21 Miriam Lois Snow. Herbert A. and Edith (Mann) Snow Mar. 22 Lawrence Graham Sweetser .. Theodore H. and Mary (Baldwin) Sweetser
Mar. 25 Ellen Mary Driscoll.
William F. and Ellen (Coughlin) Driscoll
Mar. 26 Theodore Augustus Brown .. . Albert and Katherine (House) Brown Mar. 28 Harry Loftus Lane.
Harry and Agnes (Loftus) Lane
Mar. 28 Harold Gilletta . James and Margaret (Gilletta) Gilletta Mar. 29 Vincent Cicclo. Rosario and Catherine (Caliri) Cicclo Mar. 31 Edward Dale Eeles. Frank A. and Margaret (Dale) Eeles Apr. 5 Fessenden Woodman Teele. . Chesley W. and Edna May (Fessen- den) Teele
Apr. 5 Robert Samuel Camdry
Cecil B. and Bertha A. (Morash) Camdry
Apr. 6 John Finbar Kearney .
Timothy and Hannah (Callahan) Kearney
Apr. 8 Warren Wentworth Pearse .. . Fred E. and Jennie M. (Reid) Pearse
Apr. 10 Joseph Kelley Joseph and Mary (Drohan) Kelley Apr. 10 Margaret Marion Burns. Eugene and Julia (Haggerty) Burns Apr. 10 Robert Kimball Sewell. John Frost and Rubelle C. (Kimball) Sewell
Apr. 14 John Pickhardt Colman Jere and Edith (Pickhardt) Colman Apr. 14 Dorothy MacEachran. John S. and Bernice (Siver) Mac- Eachran
Apr. 17 William McDonald .
William and Margaret (Daley) Mc- Donald
Apr. 18 Catherine McCoy .
Apr. 22 Philip James Brosnahan. William and Annie (Thompson) Brosnahan
Apr. 22 Raymond John Ennis
William P. and Mary Ellen (White) Ennis
Apr. 23 Ruth Daisy Olinder
Robert B. and Daisy E. (Gowing) Olinder
Apr. 24 -Bosworth
Apr. 25 -Rawson
Herbert W. and Martha D. (Griffen) Rawson
Apr. 27 Mabel Hodder . Fred and Sara (Primer) Hodder Apr. 28 Elizabeth Helen Jacklin John J. and Anna L. (Dee) Jacklin Apr. 28 Alice Frances Lawrence. Walter Leslie and Sophia (Harrington) Lawrence Apr. 29 Spinea. Apr. 29 Eva Madaline Bryson William and Rosie (Lucile) Spinea George A. and Mary Jane (Sweeney) Bryson John and Claire (Fleming) Tucci
Apr. 29 Dolma Virginia Tucci.
May 1 Mary Brooks. John H. and Annie A. (Daley) Brooks
May 2 -Friedichs. . Valentine and Anna (Smiller) Friedichs
May 2 George Ross Montgomery, Jr. George R. and Elizabeth H. (Angus) Montgomery
May 3 Julia Cadagan John F. and Margaret (Calinan) Cadagan
May 3 Helen Regina Roos Fred and Mary (McFarland) Roos
May 4 Cyril Anthony Lange Alexander W. and Margaret (Crowley) Lange
May 9 Margaret Marie Hill. John J. and Mary (Moylan) Hill Gustave and Wilhelma (Foss) Sacht
May 10 Alice Thyra Sacht.
C. Frederick and Mabel M. (Lucas) Bosworth
441
REPORT OF TOWN CLERK
Date Name of Child
Parents
May 11 Corcoran Twins.
Michael F. and Winifred (Kenney)
John Corcoran Corcoran
May 14 Jane Marie Brogon.
.John and Christine (McKenna) Brogon
May 14 Dorris Jean Wheaton Willard P. and Mary (Fowler)
Wheaton
May 15 Aris Aurilla Ducharme. William F. and Ethel (Thompson) Ducharme
May 15 Flora Mae Bacon Harvey H. and Viola M. (Lannin) Bacon
May 17 Jessie Caroline Peirce
Warren A., Jr., and Jessie A. (Eldridge) Peirce
May 17 Marie Gertrude O'Donnell .. . Walter F. and Agnes I. (Cunningham) O'Donnell
May 18 Florma A. Lanzelotta. Joseph and Rosa (Gentilla) Lanzelotta May 19 Alma Katherine Chute. Harry H. and Emma C. (Deane) Chute Richard and Mary (Burke) Healey
May 21 Anna Mary Healey.
May 22 Margaret Elizabeth Kenney. James W. and Josephine (Gallant) Kenney
May 22 Helen Duggan James and Isabella (Grimshaw)
May 27 Roy Emerson McGregor
May 27 Gertrude Kelley William and Alice (Scanneil) Kelley
May 28 Margaret McGurl. William and Abbie (Mahoney) McGurl May 31 Harold Dexter Cushman, Jr. . Harold D. and Hilda (Hermes) Cush- man
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