—— NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
eee 
Police Dept. maint. 8560. 
Board of Health dept. 1800. 
Depts. of General Government,— 
Legislative, 200. 
Selectmen’s, 1500. 
Accounting, 1150. 
Treas. and Collector’s, 2150. 
Assessors’, 2000. 
Town Clerk’s, 525. 
Law, 1000. 
Blection and registration 400. 
Town ball and Common, 4500. 
Certification of Town notes, 24. 
It was uderstood that the treas- 
urer was to pay his assistant $150 
extra this year and that $500 of the 
assessors’ appropriation was to lay 
the town out in a block system for 
purposes of assessing and taxing the 
more conveniently. 
Art. 24. R. E. Newman moved 
#7000 be appropriated for the sup- 
pression of moths. G. 8S. Sinnicks 
amended that this be $5000. It was 
stated $2000 of this was wanted to 
buy a new 10 h. p. spraying ma- 
ehine. William Till made a strong 
plea for this and Moth Supt. Shea- 
han made his maiden speech in sup- 
port of the measure. The motion 
to appropriate $7000 was carried 
by a large majority. 
#3500 was voted for special moth 
work on motion of E. 8. Knight. 
Art. 25. $400 voted for use in the 
street department. 
Art. 26. $1000 was voted for use 
in Forest Fire Warden’s dept. 
Other appropriations were made 
_ as follows: 
Support of poor-out, £1800. 
Support of poor-in 3000. 
State and Military Aid, 1500. 
Soldiers’ Relief, 100. 
Care of Tuck’s Pt., int. & 800. 
Street lights (%yr.), 4600. 
Care of clocks, 50. 
Care of floats, 100. 
Ringing of bells, 4. 
Care and maint. Cent. Pd. dam _ 30. 
Art. 45. Concrete sidewalk Pleas- 
ant street referred to selectmen. 
Art. 47 and 48, relating to Put- 
nam court sewer and reconstruction 
referred to sewer ‘commissioners 
and selectmen, respectively. 
Art. 50. $100 for maintenance of 
athletics in connection with high 
school referred to school committee. 
Arts. 51, 52, 53, 54 and 55, relat- 
ing to street lights, referred to 
selectmen. 
Art. 56. A committee of five, con- 
sisting of the three selectmen, C. C. 
Dodge and E. P. Stanley, chosen to 
represent the town in the matter of 
Annual Christmas Tree celebration. 
At 9.20 it was voted to adjourn 
___ to Tuesday evening, April 13. 
Civil Service Topics 
The third annual convention of 
the National Association of Civil 
Service Employees recently met in 
Washington, and one of the princial 
topics discussed related to retire- 
ment of the superannuated em- 
ployees of the Government. While 
private corporations like the Inter- 
national Harvester Company, the 
Ford automobile concern, and other 
national institutions have been mak- 
ing provision for the men who spend 
their lives in their service, the Fed- 
eral Government has not been able 
to arrive at any solution of the 
problem by which its old people are 
to be provided for. There are several 
hundred men and women of more 
than seventy years of age working 
in the departments at Washington, 
and they hang on because their pay 
stops entirely when they quit work. 
19 
ECONOMY IS 
W EALTH 
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ZO. Read 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
regularly during 
POLS 
is one of the best resolutions you 
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BEVERLY FARMS 
George A. Fogg died Wednesday 
night at his home, 348 [ale st., at 
the age of 70 years. Mr. Fogg was 
a gardener by occcupation and was 
in the employ of Franklin Dexter 
and had been employed on the Dex- 
ter place for 43 years, with four 
generations. 
Mr. Fogg was born in Industry, 
Maine, was a veteran of the Civil 
war, and a member of post 89, G. A. 
R., and of Bass River lodge of Odd 
Fellows, and also of the Dane Street 
church, He had been in poor health 
for some time, but was a most un- 
complaining sufferer. 
