Town of Arlington annual report 1914, Part 4

Author: Arlington (Mass.)
Publication date: 1914
Publisher:
Number of Pages: 594


USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Arlington > Town of Arlington annual report 1914 > Part 4


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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1,720


100,000


1896


1936


1,192


52,000


1899


1939


225


15,000


1896


1946


1


43


1


TOWN RECORDS


Voted: That the sum of $75,700 now in the Sinking Fund be apportioned by the Sinking Fund Commissioners in the following amounts, to be applied to the following debts:


Apportionment


Debt


Date of Issue Notes or Bonds


Maturity


$55,440


$92,000


1892


1922


4,233


10,500


1903


1923


16,027


100,000


1896


1936


Voted: That there be appropriated from the income of the Water Department during the year 1914, $32,440 for maintenance and extensions, including Metropolitan Water Assessments; $11,060 for interest on the water debt; $5000 for the Sinking Fund; and $8500 for payment of water notes coming due in 1914.


Voted: That this meeting do now adjourn.


Meeting adjourned at 10.50 o'clock.


Number of citizens attending the meeting as determined by the Constables in charge of the turnstiles 367.


A true record of the meeting. Attest:


THOMAS J. ROBINSON, Town Clerk


Arlington, April 9, 1914.


Pursuant to adjournment, the citizens of Arlington, qualified to vote in elections and town affairs, met in the Town Hall, Thurs- day, April 9, 1914, at thirty minutes after seven o'clock in the evening and were called to order by the Moderator John G. Brackett.


On motion of Truman L. Quimby, Chairman of the Committee of Twenty-one, Article 3 was taken from the table.


Article 3. (Reports of Officials and Committees.)


Voted: That the reports of the various Town officers, as pre- sented in their annual reports, together with the addition of tables or statistics of the Assessors, and Committees heretofore appointed, be accepted.


Article 3 was then laid on the table.


Article 6 taken up. (Repairs on Highways, etc.)


Voted: That the Town ways, highways and bridges be repaired during the ensuing year, under the direction of the Board of Public Works.


1


44


ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT


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, to appear and defend suits and legal proceedings against or involving the interests of the Town, with power to employ counsel therein, and when necessary, in all other legal matters and business ap- pertaining to town affairs during the year commencing March 1, 1914.


Article 12 taken up. (Extension of Water Mains.)


Voted (by a two-thirds vote): That the sum of $12,000 be appropriated for the extension of water mains; that $2000 of said sum be raised by general tax in 1914; and for the purpose of raising the balance, $10,000, there be issued five notes, each for the sum of $2000, one payable in 1915 and one in each of the four succeeding years, said notes to be issued in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 616 of the Acts of 1910 and Amendments thereto, and to be designated on the face .thereof "Water Loan of 1914" and to bear interest at a rate not exceeding four per cent per annum payable semi-annually.


Article 19 taken up. (Authority of Collector of Taxes.)


Voted: That the Collector of Taxes be authorized to use all means of collecting taxes for the year 1914 which a Town Treasurer may use when appointed a Collector of Taxes.


Article 22 taken up. (Town Treasurer to borrow.)


Voted: On the recommendation of the Committee, that no action be taken under this article.


Article 33 taken up. (Lighting of private streets.)


Voted: On the recommendation of the Committee, that no action be taken under this article.


Article 3 taken from table.


Harold L. Frost, Chairman of the Committee appointed to nominate five citizens to serve on the Town Planning Board, made the report for the Committee and nominated the following citizens to serve on said Board and for the terms indicated; one for one year, two for two years and two for three years.


Henry S. Adams, Chairman, one year; Harry G. Porter, two years; James P. Parmenter, two years; Cyrus E. Dallin, three years; Robert W. Pond, three years.


The report of the Committee was received.


1


45


TOWN RECORDS


Article 3 was then laid on the table.


Article 31 taken up. (Election of Planning Board.)


Voted: That the meeting proceed to the election of a Planning Board in accordance with the recommendations of the Nominat- ing Committee.


On the vote being taken the nominees of the Committee were unanimously elected for the terms recommended by the Nominat- ing Committee.


Article 38 taken from the table. (High School Site.)


Voted: That the following citizens: Clarence A. Moore, Nichols L. McKay, Carl N. Quimby, John W. Bailey, Nelson B. Crosby, Arthur Birch and Jacob Bitzer, be hereby appointed a Committee of Seven, to obtain working plans, specifications and estimate's for a High School building to accommodate not less than eight hundred pupils, and to include equipment, at a cost not to exceed one hundred seventy-five thousand (175,000) dollars, to be erected on the Schouler Court Site, the purchase of which the Selectmen were authorized to make by the vote of the Town at the Town Meeting held February 2, 1914, and that an appropriation of five hundred (500) dollars be made for the use of said Committee, said sum to be taken from the general tax levy of 1914. The said Committee shall have power to fill vacancies.


Article 3 taken from the table. (Reports of Committees.)


Edward W. Schwamb, of the Playground Committee, presented a report of said Committee, as voted at the meeting March 26, 1914. The report was received and ordered filed. Article 3 was then laid on the table.


Article 40 taken up. (Crosby School Playground.)


Voted (by a two-thirds vote): That the Board of Selectmen be authorized and empowered to acquire, in the name and behalf of the Town, by purchase or otherwise, and by good and sufficient deeds conveying the same, the following described parcel of land - beginning at a point on the northerly lines of Winter Street at the northeasterly corner of land owned by the Town of Arling- ton, known as the Crosby School lot, thence northwesterly by land of the Town of Arlington 272.7 feet, more or less, to land now or formerly of Helen M. Squire, thence northeasterly by land of said Squire 234 feet, more or less, to land now or formerly of John Barry, thence southeasterly by land of said Barry 123.4


46


ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT


feet, more or less, to the northerly line of Winter Street, thence southwesterly along said northerly line of Winter Street 220.4 feet, more or less, to the point of beginning, and containing 61,961 square feet, more or less, for a playground for the Crosby School District, and that a sum not exceeding $6000 be appro- priated for the purchase of the same, subject to the privilege of the owners to remove therefrom, at their own expense, the build- ings and foundations now standing on the above described lot of land within a period of four months from the date of the exe- cution and delivery of the deed thereof, and that the sum of $2000 be raised by general tax in 1914 and the balance, $4000, be raised by four serial notes of $1000 each, the first payable in 1915, and one each in the three succeeding years, said notes to be issued in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 616 of the Acts of 1910 and amendments thereto, and to be designated on the face thereof "Playground Loan of 1914" and to bear interest at a rate not exceeding four per cent per annum, payable semi-annually.


Article 42 taken up. (Town Grant.)


Voted: That the several amounts appropriated at this meeting for the purposes indicated by the various votes, and not otherwise provided for, amounting to $275,327.86 together with the sum of $2500 appropriated at the November Meeting of 1913, and the sum of $3000 appropriated at the February Meeting of 1914, making a total of $280,827.86, be raised by general tax the present year; and that all notes issued under the authority of any vote passed at this meeting shall be issued in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 616, Acts of 1910.


Article 32 taken up. (Bureau of Statistics - no action.)


Voted: On the recommendation of the Committee,


That no action be taken under this article.


Article 37 taken up. (Revenues of Town Hall.)


Voted: That all revenues derived from the receipts from rentals of Town Hall, piano and scenery, be turned into the Treasury of the Town and reappropriated for the maintenance of the Town Hall property.


Article 9 taken up. (Appointment of Committee of 21.)


Voted: That the Moderator of this meeting, together with the Chairman and Secretary of the present Committee, are hereby appointed a Committee to nominate and report to this meeting


47


TOWN RECORDS


a Committee of Twenty-one citizens, representing all sections of the Town, to serve until the end of the Annual Meeting of 1915; fourteen of the members to be selected from the present Committee of Twenty-one, provided they will serve; the other seven to be newly appointed. That no person holding an elective Town office shall be eligible to serve on said Committee.


To this Committee of Twenty-one are hereby referred all articles in any warrant for a Town Meeting 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, to the Town Meeting, with such recommendations 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 in accordance with the foregoing vote:


Abbot Allen


Market Gardener


299 Mass. Avenue 56 Gray Street


Louis B. Carr


Clarence H. Campbell


Real Estate


108 Broadway


Dennis J. Collins


Salesman


12 Schouler Court


Frederick W. Dickson William E. Dickson William C. Drouet John R. Foster Harold L. Frost


Salesman


Picture Frames


362 Mystic Street


Forester


26 Academy Street


Theodore P. Harding Walter K. Hutchinson Charles M. MacMillan Loren W. Marsh


Provisions


330 Mass. Avenue


Glass Manager


Printer


46 Magnolia Street


William I. Marsters W. Irving Middleton Clarence A. Moore Claude A. Palmer Herbert W. Reed


Electrical Engineer


Civil Engineer .


20 Freeman Street 81 Walnut Street 57 Wollaston Ave.


Salesman


11 Wellington St.


Teacher


36 Jason Street


Civil Engineer


15 Cliff Street


Farmer


1108 Mass. Avenue


Expressman


Printer


85 Brattle Street Park Av. Ext. Florence Ave.


Stock Broker


71 Bartlett Ave.


95 Jason Street


36 Norfolk Road


Manager


Walter A. Robinson Walter F. Robinson Howard S. Russell


Manufacturer


48


ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT


Voted: That there be appropriated from the income of the Water Department during the year 1914, $32,440 for maintenance and extensions, including Metropolitan Water Assessments; $11,060 for interest on the water debt; $5000 for the Sinking Fund and $8500 for payment of water notes coming due in 1914.


Voted: That the following appropriations be made for the pur- poses indicated:


Abatements .


Board of Health


$2,700


Board of Survey


500


Cemeteries (by transfer)


1,760


Fire Department


14,800


Health Department.


10,000


Incidentals, Selectmen


3,500


Assessors


1,000


Auditor


75


Collector


750


Town Clerk.


1,650


Treasurer .


325


Insurance .


1,700


Old Town House.


750


Park Commission


300


Police Department .


14,548


Premium for bonding


160


Soldiers' Relief


425


State Aid.


100


Military Aid .


150


Town House, revenues and maintenance.


4,000


Unpaid bills and new equipment, required by law


2,000


Tree Warden.


1,000


Wire Department


1,200


Reserve Fund.


3,000


Salaries for the year, beginning with the March election for" elective officers, and April 1 for appointive officers:


Selectmen .


$650


fees and 1,200


Town Clerk,


49


TOWN RECORDS


Treasurer


$700


Collector


1,400


Auditor.


1,000


Board of Public Works


650


Assessors .


2,000


Board of Health


400


Tree Warden .


100


Inspector of Buildings


750


Town Physician.


200


Registrars of Voters


225


Superintendent of Wires


1,000


Inspector of Animals.


150


Sealer of Weights and Measures.


200


Town Counsel


250


Ballot Clerk and Tellers.


250


Secretary, Committee of Twenty-one.


50


Town Engineer .


1,500


Inspector of Plumbing


750


Medical Inspector of Schools


300


Inspector of Milk.


300


Inspector of Slaughtering


500


The number of citizens attending the meeting, as determined by the Constables in charge of the turnstiles, was 234.


Voted: That this meeting do now adjourn. Meeting adjourned at forty-five minutes after nine o'clock.


A true record. Attest:


THOMAS J. ROBINSON, Town Clerk.


TOWN WARRANT.


COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS. MIDDLESEX, SS.


To either of the Constables 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, qualified as the Constitution requires, to vote in elections and town affairs, to assemble in the Town Hall, in said


50


ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT


Town, Thursday, the twenty-fifth day of June, 1914, at 7.30 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 committees hereto- fore appointed.


ART. 3. To see if the Town will authorize the Selectmen to rent or lease for a term of years a part of the Old Town Hall Building, make such alterations as may be necessary, make an appropriation for the same, or take any action thereon.


ART. 4. To see if the Town will authorize the Selectmen to sell, remove, or otherwise dispose of the buildings on the Schouler Court property, recently purchased by the Town, or take any action thereon.


ART. 5. To see if the Town will make an additional appro- priation for the Selectmen's Incidentals, or take any action thereon.


ART. 6. To see if the Town will vote to rescind the vote taken under Article 23 at the Adjourned Town Meeting, held April 9, 1914, which vote was as follows:


Voted: That the Joint Board of Selectmen and Board of Public Works be authorized and empowered, in the name and behalf of the Town, to petition the County Commissioners to widen Massachusetts Avenue on the northerly side, between Water Street and Central Street; and the sum of forty-five hundred (4500) dollars is hereby appropriated to be expended under the direction of the Joint Board for the purpose of paying any land damages which may be awarded by the County Commissioners in the event of a decree being issued upon said petition or take any action thereon.


(Inserted at the request of O. W. Whittemore, et al.)


ART. 7. To see if the Town will make an appropriation for widening the north side of Massachusetts Avenue, between Water Street and Central Street, or take any action thereon.


(Inserted at the request of O. W. Whittemore, et al.)


ART. 8. To see if the Town will authorize the Joint Board of Selectmen and Board of Public Works to acquire by purchase or by eminent domain, land for the purpose of extending Summer Street, from Medford Street to the Lexington line, make an ap- propriation therefor, determine in what manner the money shall be raised, or take any action thereon.


51


TOWN RECORDS


ART. 9. To see if the Town will make an additional appropria- tion for the Health Department, the same to be expended under the direction of the Board of Health, or take any action thereon.


Hereof, fail not, and make due return of this Warrant, with your doings thereon, to the Town Clerk, on or before said day and hour of meeting.


Given under our hands at said Arlington, this eighth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fourteen.


FRANK V. NOYES, THOMAS J. DONNELLY, WILLIS B. HOWARD, Selectmen of the Town of Arlington.


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 Town, Thursday evening, June 25, 1914, at thirty minutes after seven o'clock, and were called to order 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, as follows:


CONSTABLE'S RETURN.


Arlington, June 25, 1914.


MIDDLESEX COUNTY.


By notice 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 of 'the same to be left at every dwelling house in the Town, and also by posting an attested copy of said Warrant at the doors of the Town Hall, in said Town, seven days at least before said day of meeting. A notice of the time, place and purpose of said meeting was pub- lished in the Arlington Advocate.


WILLIAM T. CANNIFF, Constable of Arlington.


52


ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT


Article 1 taken up. (Choice of Moderator.)


John G. Brackett was the unanimous choice of the citizens present for Moderator, and he was sworn to the faithful per- formance of his duties by the Town Clerk.


Article 2 taken up. (Reports of Committees.)


Voted, on motion of Louis B. Carr, Chairman of the Committee of Twenty-one: That the report of the Committee of Twenty-one be received.


Article 2 was then laid upon the table.


Voted: That the various articles in the warrant be now taken up and that the recommendations made by the Committee of Twenty-one under these articles, so far as they appear in the printed report, be now considered as before the meeting, to be voted on without further motion, separately and in the order in which they appear in said report.


Article 3 taken up. (Rent of part of Old Town Hall Building.)


Voted: That the Selectmen are hereby directed to advertise for rent such portions of the Old Town Hall Building as are not needed for Town purposes; and to rent or lease such portions, for a length of time, not to exceed three years, upon such terms as they may determine. And that $500 be hereby appropriated to be expended under the direction of the Selectmen, to make such alterations and changes as may be needed by reason of the renting or leasing of the said premises, this sum to be taken from the Old Town Hall rent account, now in the Town Treasury.


Article 4 taken up. (Disposition of buildings on Schouler Court.)


The Committee recommended and it was so voted, that no action be taken under this article.


Article 5 taken up. (Additional appropriation for Incidentals.)


Voted: That the sum of $2200 be appropriated for the Select- men's Incidentals, and that $200 of said sum be used for the purpose of making borings on the Schouler Court Site, so-called. That $2000 of this amount be taken from the interest account and $200 from sidewalk assessments account now in the Town Treasury.


Article 6 taken up. (Massachusetts Avenue widening vote.)


This article called for, and was recommended by the Committee of Twenty-one, the rescinding of the vote passed March 26, 1914, authorizing the Joint Board to petition the County Commissioners


53


TOWN RECORDS


to widen Massachusetts Avenue from Water Street to Central Street, and to make an appropriation of $4500 therefor.


The question of rescinding was discussed by Messrs. Carr, Hodgdon, Muller, Whittemore, Adams and Birch.


On the vote being called for, the Moderator declared that the motion to rescind had not been carried.


Article 7 taken up. (Relative to widening of Massachusetts Avenue.)


As the necessity for this article had been eliminated by the action under Article 6, it was recommended, and it was so voted


That no action be taken under this article.


Article 8 taken up. (Summer Street Extention.)


The Committee of Twenty-one recommended, in their printed report, that the sum of $22,500 be appropriated for the purpose of extending Summer Street, said sum to be borrowed and to extend over a period of ten years.


The question was discussed by Messrs. Adams, Carr, Birch and Hendrick. On a vote being called for and taken it was voted, that the subject matter of this article be indefinitely postponed. On the declaration of the vote, Mr. Carr asked for a reconsidera- tion and presented facts showing why such action should not be taken at this time.


On Mr. Carr's motion for reconsideration, the Moderator de- clared that the motion had been carried by the required two-thirds vote.


Mr. Birch then offered a motion calling for the appropriation of $1000 for the purposes indicated in the article. The Moderator declared this motion not carried.


Mr. Carr then presented the following motion, and it was


Voted: That no action be taken under this article and that the Selectmen be requested to call a special Town Meeting as soon after the establishment of the layout by the Joint Board of Selectmen and Board of Public Works, as the Selectmen deem expedient, and insert in the warrant of such meeting a suitable article for action by the Town.


Article 9 taken up. (Additional appropriation for Health Department.)


The Committee recommended and it was so


54


ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT


Voted: That the sum of two thousand (2000) dollars is hereby appropriated for the Health Department, the said sum to be expended under the direction of the Board of Health, and that this amount be taken from the following accounts now in the Town Treasury :


Small Pox money refunded by the Commonwealth of


Massachusetts .


$1,200.00


Betterment Assessments 633.85


Sidewalk Assessments. 166.15


$2,000.00


The number of citizens attending the meeting, as determined by the Constables in charge of the turnstiles, was one hundred eighty-eight (188).


All articles in the Warrant, calling the meeting, having been acted upon, it was


Voted: That this meeting do now adjourn. Meeting adjourned at ten minutes after ten o'clock.


A true record. Attest:


THOMAS J. ROBINSON, Town Clerk.


TOWN WARRANT.


COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS. MIDDLESEX, SS.


To either of the Constables 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, qualified as the Constitution requires, to vote in elections and town affairs, to assemble in the Town Hall, in said Town Friday, the eighteenth day of September, 1914, at 7.30 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 committees hereto- fore appointed.


ART. 3. To see if the Town will make an appropriation for


55


TOWN RECORDS


the purpose of erecting a High School building on the Schouler Court Site, so called, determine in what manner the money shall be raised and expended, or take any action thereon.


ART. 4. To see if the Town will make an appropriation for the equipping of a High School building which may be erected on the Schouler Court Site, so called, and for the grading of the lot, determine in what manner the money shall be raised and expended, or take any action thereon.


ART. 5. To see if the Town will authorize the Board of Select- men to remove or dispose of such buildings now standing upon the Schouler Court Site, so called, as may interfere with building operations on said site, or take any action thereon.


ART. 6. To see if the Town will authorize the Board of Select- men in the name and behalf of the Town, to purchase by good and sufficient deeds conveying the same, a certain strip of land adjoining the Schouler Court Site, so called, known as the Ben- jamin Hall estate and containing about 9358 square feet, make an appropriation therefor, determine in what manner the money shall be raised, or take any action thereon.


ART. 7. To see if the Town will authorize the Town Treasurer, under the direction of the Selectmen, to borrow money, for any necessary purpose, in anticipation of taxes or revenues for the year 1914, the same to be repaid directly from the proceeds of said taxes or revenues.


ART. 8. To see if the Town will consent to the laying out of a way or street over the land of the Mt. Pleasant Cemetery adjoining lower Mystic Lake, or take any action thereon.


ART. 9. To see if the Town will accept and establish as a Town way the way known as Summer Street and Summer Street extension as laid out, relocated and widened by the Joint Board of Selectmen and Board of Public Works, extending from Mystic Street to the Lexington line, under the provisions of law authoriz- ing the assessment of betterments; make an appropriation for the same and determine in what manner the money shall be raised. Such way as laid out, relocated and widened is described as follows:


Beginning at a point on the westerly side of Mystic Street at a distance of 70.35 feet southeasterly from a stone bound measured along said westerly side of Mystic Street, thence on a curve to


56


ARLINGTON TOWN REPORT


the left with a radius of 22.52 feet a distance of 32.71 feet, thence south 78 degrees, 25 minutes and 25 seconds west, a distance of 223.21 feet, thence on a curve to the right with a radius of 272.04 feet, a distance of 87.34 feet, thence north 83 degrees, 10 minutes, 55 seconds west, a distance of 210.76 feet, thence on a curve to the right with a radius of 501.90 feet, a distance of 125.63 feet, thence on a curve to the left with a radius of 494.29 feet, a distance of 175.15 feet, thence north 89 degrees, 8 minutes, 35 seconds west, a distance of 549.06 feet to the bound on the easterly side line of Mill Street, thence northwesterly a distance of 50.5 feet to the westerly line of Mill Street, thence north 56 degrees, 4 minutes, 30 seconds west, a distance of 392.93 feet, thence north 57 degrees, 32 minutes, 15 seconds west, a distance of 257.33 feet, thence on a curve to the right with a radius of 1370.4 feet, a dis- tance of 202.97 feet, thence on a curve to the right with a radius of 552.35 feet, a distance of 242.33 feet, thence north 23 degrees, 54 minutes, 50 seconds west, a distance of 368.65 feet, thence on a curve to the left with a radius of 822.16 feet, a distance of 241.58 feet, thence north 40 degrees, 45 minutes west, a distance of 605.06 feet, thence true north 52 degrees, 50 minutes, 8.9 seconds west, a distance of 35.5 feet, thence on a curve to the left with a radius of 776.91 feet, a distance of 55.5 feet, thence true north, 56 degrees, 55 minutes, 42.8 seconds west, a distance of 81.78 feet, thence on a curve to the left with a radius of 107.42 feet, a distance of 93.60 feet to a point on the southerly line of Brattle Street, thence true south 73 degrees, 8 minutes, 57.9 seconds west along said southerly line of Brattle Street, a distance of 111.53 feet, thence true north 16 degrees, 51 minutes, 2.1 seconds west, a distance of 40 feet to northerly side line of Brattle Street, thence on a curve to the left with a radius of 25.7 feet, a distance of 71.65 feet, thence true north 86 degrees, 35 minutes, 42.5 seconds west, a distance of 257.6 feet, thence on a curve to the right with a radius of 669.71 feet, a distance of 374.29 feet, thence true north 54 degrees, 34 minutes, 24.4 seconds west, a distance of 263.45 feet, thence on a curve to the left with a radius of 2336.55 feet, a distance of 390.32 feet, thence on a curve to the right with a radius of 1663.56 feet, a distance of 564.13 feet thence true north 44 degrees, 35 minutes, 36.9 seconds west, a distance of 946.81 feet, thence on a curve to the left with a radius




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