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HomeMy Public PortalAboutAnnual Reports 1959-12-31Franklin S. Ytivrry, C'hainnan Board of Sclecimm Ricb., X. Adam, — rltace Board of pyblic `N -••�rd of .. yrnihh:�n A "'scssars 7 I ANNUAL REPORTS of the TO WN OfFMCERS of the Town of ORLEANS MASSq qGJ T� FOR THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1959 THE CAPE CODDER PRINTERY ORLEANS, MASSACHUSETTS Town Officers Moderator Kenrick A. Sparrow Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Selectmen Term expires March, 1961 Franklin S. Murray, Chairman Term expires March, 1960 Arthur R. Finlay Term expires March, 1961 Richard H. Adams Term expires March, 1962 Assessors Arthur R. Finlay, Chairman Term expires March, 1961 Franklin S. Murray Term expires March, 1960 Richard H. Adams Term expires March, 1962 Board of Health Franklin S. Murray, Chairman Term expires March, 1960 Arthur R. Finlay Term expires March, 1961 Richard H. Adams Term expires March, 1962 Board of Public Welfare Richard H. Adams, Chairman Term expires March, 1962 Franklin S. Murray Term expires March, 1960 Arthur R. Finlay Term expires March, 1961 School Committee Philip E. Martin Francis P. Burling, Resigned Term expires March, 1962 Frederick P. Rogers Charity M. Kidd Term expires March, 1960 Orin Tovrov Term expires March, 1961 Everett C. Winslow, Jr. Term expires March, 1961 Term expires March, 1960 Orleans Members of Regional District School Committee Winthrop A. Griffin, Chairman Term expires March, 1961 Kathleen M. Van Buskirk Term expires March, 1960 Charity Kidd, elected by Orleans School Committee '1 Town Clerk, Treasurer and Collector of Taxes Francis I. Rogers Louis H Carter S S H• Snow Stewart Brooks %��q�Y %rry George A. BiSSbnnette Term expires March, 1960 Trustees Snow Library clftlables Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1961 Term expires March, 1962 Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Surveyor of Highways 19 61 Frederick G. Mayo Term expires March' Emile A. 011ivier Tree Warden Term expires March' 1960 Park Commissioners 60 Clarence L. V" MMe, Chairman arch, 19 At"ir Wright Term expires M 1961 e+r�att tiigg,nM Term expires March, 62 Term expires March, 19 AltonAlton Planning Board Smith, Chairman ger Matonge E' $Farrow Albert M. Kaufman Term ex p ires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1962 Term expires March, 1963 Term expires March, 1964 Term exres March, 196 Omer P Prnest I' Chartran Recreation Commission L A. r) ni Resigned John DoPkins hamPs Moncriell MJCpchran 4 Term expires March, 196 Term expires March, 1962 Term expires March, 19 3 Term expires March, 196 Term expires March, 196 3. APPOINTED OFFICERS Town Counsel nson, Jr. Term expires March, 1960 Registrars of Voters Adelbert A. Childs, Chairman Term expires March, 1962 Catherine A. Smith Term expires March, 1960 Lloyd E. Stickney Term expires March, 1961 Clerical Staff Olive O. Cowen Term expires March, 1960 Mary Lou Delano Term expires March, 1960 Sealer of Weights and Measures Weigher of Beef, Grain and Hay Measurer of Wood and Bark Charles F. Moore (deceased) Term expires March, 1960 Warren W. Baker to fill unexpired term Field Drivers and Pound Keepers Charles O. Freeman Term expires March, 1960 Elmer L. Taylor Term expires March, 1960 Fence Viewers H. Bruce Mitchell Term expires March, 1960 Elmer L. Taylor Term expires March, 1960 Health Officer Dr. Fred L. Moore Term expires March, 1960 Physician to Boards of Health and Public Welfare Dr. Henry A. White Term expires March, 1960 Burial Agent Richard C. Nickerson Term expires March, 1960 Charles O. Thompson Inspector of Wires Term expires March, 1960 Custodian of Town Office Building and Recreation Hall Herbert L. Fuller Term expires March, 1960 5 Town CIerk, Treasurer and Collector of Taxes Francis I. Rogers Term expires March, 1960 Trustees Snow Library Louis H. Carter Harry H. Snow Term expires March, 1960 S. Stewart Brooks Term expires March, 1961 Term expires March, 1962 Constables Henry A. Perry George A. Bissonnette Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Frederick G. Mayo Surveyor of Highways Term expires March, 1961 Emile A. 011ivier Tree Warden Term expires March, 1960 Park Commissioners Clarence L. Vanasse, Chairman Alvin H* Wright Kendall R. Higgins Term Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1961 xpires March, 1962 Alton L. Smith, Planning Board Frederic Chairman Eldredge E. Sparrow g S arrow Tem expires March, 1960 Milton M. Gray, Jr. Term pires March, 1961 Albert M. Kaufman expires March, 1962 Term expires March, 1964 Recreation Ernest J. Cullum , Resigned Philip A, Deschamps John Hopkins D. W. Joy Moncrieff M. Cochran Coinrnission Term expires March, 1960 expires March Term expires March, 1962 Term exo ,.. March, 1963 i 64 APPOINTED OFFICERS Town Counsel Paul P. Henson, Jr. Term expires March, 1960 Registrars of Voters Adelbert A. Childs, Chairman Term expires March, 1962 Catherine A. Smith Term expires March, 1960 Lloyd E. Stickney Term expires March, 1961 Clerical Staff Olive O. Cowen Mary Lou Delano Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Sealer of Weights and Measures Weigher of Beef, Grain and Hay Measurer of Wood and Bark Charles F. Moore (deceased) Tenn expires March, 1960 Warren W. Baker to fill unexpired term Field Drivers and Pound Keepers Charles O. Freeman Term expires March, 1960 Elmer L. Taylor Term expires March, 1960 H. Bruce Mitchell Elmer L. Taylor Fence Viewers Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Health Officer Or. Fred L. Moore Term expires March, 1960 Physician to Boards of Health and Public Welfare Dr. Henry A. White Term expires March, 1960 Burial Agent Richard C. Nickerson Term expires March, 1960 Inspector of Wires Charles O. Thompson Term expires March, 1960 Custodian of Town Office Building and Recreation Hall Herbert L. Fuller Term expires March, 1960 5 Harry . Town Accountant ry Childs Term expires March, 1962 Insect Pest Control Superintendent Emile A. 011ivier Term expires March, 1960 Caretaker of "Perpetual Care" Lots Orleans Cemetery Association Term expires March, 1960 Inspector of Slaughtering and Animals Ralph R. Mayo Term expires March, 1 960 Lawrence L. Forest Warden Ellis Term expires March, 1960 Lawrence L. Ellis, Chief Fire Engineers C. Emery Soule Term expires April, 1960 Lloyd R. Ellis Term expires April, 1960 Joseph L. Rogers, Jr. Term expires April, 1960 Henry W. Hurley Term expires April' Term expires April, 1960 Chester A. Landers Dog Officer Term expires March, 1960 Arthur W. Harbormaster and Wharfinger Nickerson Term expires March, 1960 Arthur W, Nickerson Shellfish Constable Term expires March, 1960 Lawrence A. Baker Veterans' Agent Weighers of Coal Term expires March, 1960 Stanley H. Snow , Grain and Wood Frank Gallant Wilfred Gallant Harry H. Snow Charles O. Thompson Russell Cash Henry W. Hurley Georg obert W. Snow ge W. Cahoon, Jr. Theodore Caretaker of If Richard Watson A. Young g Brook Leslie W. Chase Caretaker of Town Dumpxptres March, 1960 Chester q Lande Police Term expires March, 1960 John C. Urbanski S Chief Russell L 13 Oyer Sgt Donald &Wlsh Albert L. Watson, Resigned 0 Term expres Term exipireS March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Special Police George Bissonnette Philip A. Deschamps Robley E. Fulcher, Jr. Russell G. McPhee Thomas S. Stewart Henry W. Landers (deceased) Richard H. Adams Elmer R. Darling Ernest A. Saulnier Philip P. Peterson Burton A. Kelley Leo Buck Richard Smith Albert Ducharme Auxiliary Police Police Matron Raymond H. Squire Walter M. Knowles Douglas N. MacArthur J. William Costello James G. Dolan Peter W. Taylor David E. Johnson Franklin L. Joy G. Frederick Livingston Robert E. Livingston David Fulcher John Joy Donald Clifton Evangeline Peterson Term expires March, 1960 Captain of Rescue Squad Leighton W. Ellis Term expires March, 1960 Town Nurses Marion 1. Chace, R.N. Term expires March, 1960 Doris A. Pond, R.N. Term expires March, 1960 Welfare Worker Eleanor S. Blake Term expires March, 1960 Civil Defense Director George F. Livingston, Resigned Deputy Tax Collector Henry A. Perry Term expires Dec. 31, 1960 Walter H. Mayo, Jr. Ann S. HammZ Katheryn B. Furman Reginald H. Sprague Joseph D. Whittemore Frederick F. Rockwell Eric G. Benedict Earle F. Dunham, Jr. Barbara S. Lovely Finance Committee Yl Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1961 Term expires March, 1961 Term expires March, 1961 Term expires March, 1962 Term expires March, 1962 Term expires March, 1962 H. Bruce Mitchell Building Inspector Term expires March, 1960 Reuben S. Hopkins Appeal Cecil R. Mao , Chairman Robert E. Livingston , Clerk Richard ivingston Clifford E. Nickerson, Associate Richard Soule, Associate Charles O. Freeman n Jean S. Water Safety Francis ForgeotI Chairman Louise A. Carpenter Constance Nickerson A. Ellis Katherine N. Hamilton Elementary Franklin S. Murray Richard H. Adams Frederick P. Rogers Orin Tovrov Board Term expires March, 1962 Term expires March, 1961 Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March' Tenn expires March, 1962 Term expires March, 1963 Tenn expires March, 1964 Committee Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March, 1960 Term expires March 1960 Term expires March' 1960 School Building expires March, 1960 wilding Committee Arthur R. Finlay Philip E. Martin Everett Charity M. Kidd Richard H. Ada Town Forest Co C. Winslow, Jr. ms 'nmitt¢¢ Emile A. 011ivier Albion H. Besse Elmer Darling Improvement R. Frederickrling Raddin COmilittee Paul P. Henson, Jr. Kenneth G. Huber Charles F. Richardson Willis S. Gould Jr Shellfish Advisory Board Richard , Thomas g. Fox Whitbread, Resigned Franklin S. MurrayNauset Beach Arthur R Gardner E. Munsey James Shriver Co unission Finlay Richard H. Adams In Memoriam CHARLES F. MOORS Sealer of Weights and Measures January, 1943 - May, 1959 Report of Selectmen To the Citizens of Orleans: Our Town continues to grow both residentially and commer- cially at a rate which is at the same time gratif in both growth comes the problems of both of these can and expanded services and nd ontrols, Orleans. must be provided for the best interest of ings on During year your Selectmen eld twenty -seven (27) hear - Many of these matters and Seashore. We meetings concerned the Proposed (63) meetings. Conrad Wirth and with the Director of Na it1l onal Cape Cod National on several his associates, with Con park Services, Mr. and Kennel occasions with representativesgressman Y and with the Hastings Keith we attended Selectmen oft °f Senators Saltonstall Town Hall, a Senate Sub - Committee he Lower Senator Saltonstale�nOveer hearin Cafe Towns. by Senator Frank I j° st of Utah twith hearing we filed a brief on behalf of the To part of the Senate Keith in attendance, at this the efforts of the record on the wn of Orleans [o become responsible Selectmen of the prOP°sed park We believe that and financed for economic survey °wer Cape Towns were largely more Meetings y National Park Serice this area now in we will attend. on this proposed park funds. There progress A draina a will be many last annual meet n survey , money m the months ahead, these y for which of Fay, SP9uate our Th°rnd kec It is by tappropriated at the how inade of the high cost Overall draina very com engineering firm range. of this type on age is at the plete and points out Your Selectmen work on r planning time. ust be long that our Town will Beare constantly aware of a Master Plan, faced Harbor municipal wa ei sun the future the many problems In these da d and drainage cons[Y further ex close Ys of ra a few of which are contact with our Pid change th rnction. P nsion at Rock boards on the Lo er ape he state le el l Inn ool Cour Men keep as r Of Select that Lower may affect us or BarnstablerCounty �n all Pending with other FRANKLIN g RICHARD H D MAY Board of Selectmen 10 Salaries Paid in 1959 Richard H. Adams, Selectman, etc. $4,400.00 Arthur R. Finlay, Selectman, etc. 4,416.50 Franklin S. Murray, Selectman, etc. 4,416.50 Francis 1. Rogers, T. C., Treasurer & Collector 4,500.00 Harry F. Childs, Town Accountant 3,220.00 Eleanor S. Blake, Welfare Worker 3,085.69 Olive O. Cowen, Secretary 2,781.00 Mary Lou Delano, Secretary 1,830.50 Adele V. Brown, Secretary (deceased) 375.00 Arthur W. Nickerson, Shellfish Constable & Harbormaster 3,600.00 Ruth L. Barnard, Librarian 1,500.00 Marion I. Chace, Town Nurse 4,100.00 Doris A. Pond, Town Nurse 3,900.00 Chester A. Landers, Chief of Police 5,075.00 John C. Urbanski, Police 4,500.00 Russell L. Boyer, Communications & Police 3,658.34 Donald B. Walsh, Police 2,697.34 James G. Dolan, Police 672.00 Walter M. Knowles, Police 582.00 Lawrence L. Ellis, Fire Chief 4,400.00 Paul E. Deschamps, Communications & Fire 533.00 Robert L. Deschamps, Communications 610.00 Mildred W. Kingsley, Communications 3,000.00 Lawrence A. Baker, Veterans' Agent 666.67 Leslie W. Chase, Dump Custodian 1,900.00 Warren W. Baker Sealer of Weights & Measures 230.16 Charles F. Moore, Sealer of Weights & Measures (deceased) 75.00 Gage Bailey, Jr., Park Department 637.75 George A. Bissonnette 50.00 Leo M. Buck, School Bus Driver 640.00 Earle C. Chase, Highway Department 2,072.25 Adelbert A. Childs, Registrar of Voters 667.51 James A. Doucette, Highway Department 3,068.25 C. Louise Fulcher, Cafeteria 960.00 Grace E. Fulcher, Cafeteria 1,320.00 John P. Fulcher, Highway Department 2,582.25 Herbert L. Fuller, Custodian - Town Hall & Rec. Hall 1,680.00 Lionel S. Gill, School Custodian 4,238.00 Mary L. Gray, School 1,300.00 Dunning Hamilton, School 1,470.00 Roger J. Herbert, Park Department 696.50 Paul P. Henson, Jr., Town Counsel 1,200.00 Kendall R. Higgins. Park Department 2,535.00 Pearl I. Hopkins, Cafeteria 720.00 Bruce Irving, Park Department 711.13 11 Gustaf A. Karlson, Park Department Vernon H. Landers, Park Department 636.00 Belmont P. Mayo, Fire & Communications 916.88 Frederick G. Mayo, Highway Department 579.00 Russell G. McPhee, Communications &police 4,400.00 Bertha Meads, Cafeteria 1,106.50 H. Bruce Mitchell, Building Inspector 840.00 James E. Nichols, Communications, Fire &School Custodian 1,096.00 John E. Nichols Park Department Charity M. Kidd, School Co 2,401.29 Everett C. Win] mmittee 945.75 Frederick P. Ro ers, School Committee 70.00 Catherine g School Committee 70.00 Orin Tovrov Smith, Registrar of Voters 70.00 phi E. Martin, School Committee 181.50 Emile . 011ivier, Tree Warden 70.00 Paul P. O]]ivier, Tree Warden 70.00 Mayne O. Parent H] 1,352.00 en Berthana Perry' C °n a Department 1,071.40 Elizabeth Gichardson, Cafeteria 2,547.00 Samuel C S Richardson Cafeteria 50.00 Kenrick S artI School Custodian 1,380.00 Thomas S. Stearrow Moderator 1,420.00 JohndE Stickneyrtjte °mmunications g 1,815.00 gustrar Police 50.00 Charles p Thos' Fark Departure ters `� Park 724.00 William S. Tree epson, Jr., gighwa 1,090.51 Clarence ., Pk D1) y Department 726.00 Albert L WatsonsspoPar k partment 1,457.50 David H. Wright par (tesgnedeItt 884.25 Theodore A l oU $igh De Dement) 715.50 Ralph R 1,372.20 Dorothea Mayo' In p ctor o ep °f menu 2,508.00 Rita C Abbott Animals rring Brook 697.50 S anted Blake Teacch r (1esirt°d 100.00 E• Bolton S• Stewart rt BOynto acher ) 2,166.64 M°ncriefr BrOoks Teacheier 2,823.72 Frederick hra 2,640.00 Coc Bernard D• Cole, Tea her eaoher 4,125.00 Elizabet FCollins Jr, T 5,333.36 Doroth Collins, Teacher 4,333.36 W Day M' Connors, T e eac er 3,133.36 Dons T. Eldredga, aac erer 3,733.36 er 2,400.00 2,346.72 3,333.36 12 704.50 Dorothy P. Eldredge, Teacher 5,600.00 Pearl L. Ellis, Teacher 4,066.72 Dorothy B. Evans, Teacher 2,626.72 Eleanor B. Fisher, Teacher 5,600.00 Dorothy M. Fulcher, Teacher 3,333.36 David A. Gates, Teacher 3,000.00 Armand A. Guarino, Principal (High School) 4,958.24 Frank B. James. Teacher 2,140.00 Marie E. Jones, Teacher 5,600.00 Bertha E. Keefe, Teacher 5,600.00 Albert G. Kolodzik, Teacher 4,833.36 Eugene M. Lavery, Teacher 3,055.06 Mary A. Leary, Teacher 4,333.36 Georgia R. Lowell, Teacher 2,800.00 Cora M. Mayo, Principal, (Elementary School) 6,700.00 Constance M. Newell, Teacher 4,587.96 Herbert F. Pettengill, Teacher 2,800.00 Sydney G. Pierce, School Superintendent 3,887.40 Ethel T. Reed, Teacher 1,108.50 Dulce W. Ryder, Teacher 2,140.00 Catherine M. Skinner, Teacher 5,600.00 Stanley E. Smith, Jr., Teacher 3,333.36 Edith P. Van Buren, Teacher 2,820.00 Barbara N. Wright, Teacher 3,266.72 Charles O. Thompson, Wire Inspector 276.00 Above salaries of $500.00 or over and to appointed or other elective officers. Non - reportable fees retained by the Town Clerk - - $421.00. Respectfully submitted, FRANCIS 1. ROGERS Treasurer SELECTMEN'S & DEPARTMENTAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR 1960 Moderator's Salary $ 50.00 Selectmen's Salaries 6,000.00 (Each member $2,000.00) Board of Public Welfare Salaries 1,200.00 (Each member $400.) Selectmen's expense and supplies Assessors' 1,000.00 salaries and expense Salaries (Each member $2,000.00) 6,000.00 13 Expense Assessors' Maps General Relief Old 2,500.00 Town Accountant's 1,130.00 Age Assistance 37,500.00 Solar Collector's Salary y and Expense 1,000.00 Aid to Dependent Children 6,500.00 Treasurer's Salary 3,900.00 Disability Assistance 3,000.00 Town Clerk's Salary Collector's, 1,700.00 Administration Charities Free Bed, Cape Cod Hospital 1,500.00 500.00 Treasurer's and 1oµ Finance Committee 's ease n Clerk's Exp, Elections, 2,000.00 800.00 Total Charities $51,500.00 Registrations Ex a Town ORice Maintenance Expense e 1,300.00 150.00 Veterans' Benefits $6,987.00 Clerical Expense Pair expense Tax Title 2,500.00 Total Veterans' Benefits $6,987.00 expense PI nnCounsel &Legal expense g Board 6,000.00 6.080.00 Schools: Elementary School Committee Salaries $115,578.00 350.00 A expense ppeals Board 200.00 Vocational Education 5,000.00 ex Engineeri ng (RoadeLayouts 3,125.00 350.00 Out of State Travel Snow Library 150.00 ,100.00 etc.) Police Total General Govern 250.00 ,500.00 School Lunch Account Eastham- Orleans- Wellfteet Regional School District g 1,000.00 173,966.06 rnment Constables' Salaries Fire De Rescue Squad 47,235.00 $25,690.00 Total Education Parks & Playgrounds $299,144.06 $17,333.00 E Civil Defensed Expense 100.00 Building Code ex Wire In ection expense 9,685.00 500.00 Total Parks & Playgrounds Center and Administration expense $17,333.00 $5,050.00 Se"Mu� cation Center Sealer of 1,875.00 1,600.00 Band Concerts Water Safety 900.00 875.00 Insect PesWe1ghts & Meas Tree Control ures Salary & expense Warden 8,055.00 Youth Athletics 1,400.00 xpense Dutch Elm Traffic 500.00 Total Recreation $8,225.00 Si signs 3,200.00 Cemeteries and Tomb $740.00 2,100.00 Soldiers' Monuments 650.00 Total Protection of Health, General Of InsPactio Parsons & Pro n 1,400.00 200.00 Total Cemeteries $1,390.00 $10,900.00 To Ins of Animals Tow D petty Gpector of Slau Dump) ghteting $55,205.00 Interest: Notes & Bonds Maturing Notes and Bonds: ieeulancegire Green Head $12,780.00 New Elementary School 21,000.00 Fly Control 100.00 25.00 Total Interest and Bonds $31,900.00 Total and Bighways Gen a al Sanitation 3,000.00 350.00 Insurance and Bonds Town Reports $9,000.00 1,200.00 Rem Buildi Oval n �__ Memorial and Veterans' Day 635.00 Street lions Machine $16,255.00 Herring Brook 75.00 3,250.00 Harbor Harbor Master's $47,250.00 Shellfish expense 5,000.00 Miscellaneous 500.00 Total Hi ghway Department 2,500.00 3,300.00 8,800.00 Total Unclassified Total Recommendations for 1960 $ 14,660.0 $616,684.06 6 14 $66,850.00 15 ANNUAL TOWN MEETING WARRANT The Barnstable, SS. Commonwealth of Massachusetts To either of the Constables of the Town of Orleans in the County Of Barnstable IN THE NAME OF THE GREETING. ACHUSETTS You are hereby OMMONWEALTH OF MASS - inhabitants of said Town, qualified rected to y and warn the affairs, to meet at the to vote notif said Orleans on Nauset Regional m elections and in Town in the evening, then day the 14th day of Marc School at Exit o'clock and there to act on the following And to meet o'clock in the forenoon on OFFICE 13 articles: — next, to elect all neceit WEDNESDAY 13U next, at 10:00 P.M. 'town Officers. the 16th day of March ARTICLE the may close at 6:30 Recommendations TO act upon the Committees and raise and Selectmen Annual Report and other P (including ARTICLE appLo appropriate mone Town Officers or Treasurer E h To see if the Y for the same. from tot the approval T8 le will authorize the Town Paaablemg[mmng JannarY 1, anticipation thectmen' to borrow money Y within one revenue of the financial be °n 17nChapter 44, d ofrlessnihan renew sany note or notes tasrma y General Laws Year, in accordance with Sec- ARTICLE 3: to sell, after lust To see if the To fourteeotice of sale nl somet�onvenii e and l Place oof glee Selectmen erty taken by the town at least before convenient and public Place Selectmen town under tax title ProCe r at Private ale, town reject an it u'hornsoever tive thereto.�d which they d they authorize toure, provided that the ARTICLE - adequate, or Gold such sale may or transfer from unappropriated see if the ke any action rela- sum of money for priated will Pero Town action relative Chapter 9 available rase and thereto, funds in the treasury appropriate Sum ARTICLE 5: 13�ghway Maintenance, or take any Or transfer from una To if the see ' of money for PPrOPriated av • °un will raise action relative thereto. 90 AighWaylCoua in the uptake any, 16 ARTICLE 6: To see if the Town will appropriate whatever money may be received from the Dog Tax of the previous year for the use of Snow Library, to be available to the Trustees for the purchase of books or any other lawful expense of the Library. ARTICLE 7: To see if the Town will assume liability in the manner provided by Section 29 of Chapter 91 of the General Laws, as amended, in accordance with Section 11 of Chapter 91 of the General Laws, and authorize the Selectmen to execute and deliver a bond of indemnity therefor to the Commonwealth. ARTICLE 8: To see if the Town will transfer from the Over- lay Surplus Account, the sum of Five Thousand (5,000.) Dollars, for the Reserve Fund for 1960. ARTICLE 9: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of One Thousand, One Hundred (1,100) Dollars, to pur- chase and equip a new auto cruiser for the Police Department and authorize the Selectmen to trade in as part of the purchase price, the present Chevrolet Cruiser. ARTICLE 10: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate a sum of money to be used with State monies to install an unloading dock at Rock Harbor. ARTICLE 11: To see if the Town will vote to use certain monies for capital cost of the Regional School District under the provisions of Chapter 34 of the Acts of 1959. ARTICLE 12: To see if the Town will accept the provisions of Chapter 493 of the Acts of 1959. ARTICLE 13: To see if the Town will vote to renew its option to lease for a period of five (5) years from June 1, 1960, the parking lot in the rear of the Besse Block, so called, to the north of the junction of Route #6 and Main Street, and to authorize the Selectmen to take all necessary action to renew said lease. ARTICLE 14: To see if the Town will authorize the Select- men to sell the present highway building lot located on Tonset Road. (Crusher Road) ARTICLE 15: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of Six Hundred (600.) Dollars to mark certain historical locations as recommended by the Orleans Historical Society. ARTICLE 16: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate a sum of money to pay 1959 bills, under provisions of Chapter 179, Acts of 1941. 17 Co A l mmisssionerEo7� To see if the Public Beaches and °fix labor on t gown will authorize the Park $1.50 per hour when the hourly wa Parks and Playgrounds and the Provisions of Sectio erf °rming sucheS of the Commissioners at By Request. n 4'A of Chapter labor, in accordance with General Laws. ARTICLE 18: Three Thousand One 1, see if the Tow equip one Hundred (3,100 n will raise and appropriate authorize the (1) 4 Wheel Drive Truck for)t Dollars to chase Reprice the Premm'sst°ners to trade Park Commission and quest sent Jeep Truck. in as Part of the pur- One Thousand 19' To see the Tennis Courts a I'luadaed i(It500.) Do ill raise and appropriate By ReQUes1[ion of the park Commissiop d work oto convert be doneeunder ARTICLE Commissioners too' TO see ' 48'00 Paeikin ore or less gaud the Parking own are will authorize the Park grad white and appropriate fines the atn, Nan et Pave, and clear saBeach paint Dollars to defray the u Seven Skaket P supervision of the kPense there hOUSand Tw Beaches, and raise Be Of ARTICLE 21. ar Coiniuissio a shand Road Surveyor. done under Fire De To by the Pt., the 4 see if the Fi ben fits and firemen s ReiDrive n° e s will accept as a gift for Firemen's Relief A, 1c eontribf Associatio al TYpe Jeep Purchased that 13YP. ba received bateon TnwnJo� headreturn f nudnds raised B Request. Y the a nt to the Orleans Purchase of taxes ARTICI Price of said March7 the Selec me 1960 To See if be ante 3,400 feet to thefile he `v. Own will acce Of feet to d pf k e do men aYout oft more with oU=1te TowU Clerk sags and chase ortaka k f the Town recOmmende to eo Old H n or before ole or the Laws U"iciPal t d °maiiten atdas a giftrepo o °f theRSele pt u said report, ° su 8jectT owa l pubis c of e General a he ARTICLE 23: To see if the Town will accept the doings and report of the Selectmen to be filed with the Town Clerk on or before March 7, 1960 relative to the laying out of Tonset Road (Crusher Road so called), a distance of 1,130 feet more or less, and to see if the Town will accept the layout of this road as re- commended in said report of the Selectmen on behalf of the Town, to accept as a gift, acquire by purchase or take by eminent domain under Chapter 79 of the General Laws, for the municipal purpose of a Town Way, in fee simple, the land described in said report, subject to all public rights. ARTICLE 24: To see if the Town will vote to lease to Har- old V. Seavey and his assigns the camp building and one acre of land on Nauset Beach, Orleans, Massachusetts (which property was formerly owned by Harold V. Seavey) and which property was taken by the Town on December 31, 1959, the lease to be for the term of fifteen years, or for the life of Harold V. Seavey, whichever term is the longer, for a rental of One (1.00) Dollar per year for such term payable on the date of delivery of such lease and on each succeeding anniversary thereof during such term, and upon such further provisions as the Board of Selectmen may prescribe. ARTICLE 25: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of Three Thousand (3,000.) Dollars for the purchase of one Bean M.T. spray machine, having tank capacity of 600 gallons with Willys Industrial Water cooled 4 cylinders 45 horsepower en- gine, with Rockford Disc type clutch, with a 60 gallon per minute Pump with pressure of 800 lbs. per sq. in., with 2 inch bore and 3 inch stroke, with multiple V belt driven. The present old Bean Sprayer to be turned in as a part of the total purchase price of $3,800 Dollars and to authorize the Moth Superintendent to take any and all action necessary thereto. By Request. ARTICLE 26: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of Six Thousand (6,000.) Dollars to be used by the School Committee toward the purchase of a new school bus, and to author- ize the School Committee to trade in the present school bus as part of the purchase price, and take any other action relative thereto. ARTICLE 27: To see if the Town will vote to appropriate the sum of $200,000, or any other sum, for the purpose of construct- ing and originally equipping and furnishing an addition to the Or- leans Elementary School Building and determine whether the money shall be provided for by taxation, by appropriation from available funds in the treasury, and by borrowing under authority of Chapter 44 of the General Laws, or take any action in relation thereto. 19 ARTICLE 28: To see if the Town By -Laws as adopted in Annual Town amended fro will amend the Protective "4. Parking.. tune to time by adding the following m 1954 and as A. wing to Section 5: of with eve be provided in same ]ishment doing bu is nretail business, connection with and on the at least with service, office or similar estab- ness fl000rnarea - street parkin customers Rents on the premises devoted to g space for or clients Other business each 75 square feet of busi- one offstreet ' cc orbr�anstOmerin r clients, and for every ed to be Parking space for g establishment at least mployed in the establish two Persons B. There ment at employed or intend - lot with every be provided in any one time. tourists rY hotel, motel, connectio parkin space ce gue-ts for' includ' or other comme n with and on the same g space !or every sleeg sleeping ro'ng houses ial accommodation for ARTICLE pmg r ° °m available for least one off- street a Laws as adopted in see if the TO guest occupancy. hued froth time me b Mal To ownMeeltamend the Protective and substitut' to time mg therefor the follow „g out Paragraph 1954 and as of Section 5 use, shalltbe NO buildings except g: vided Ih000 sgefteand hares den e d strio[ry buildings of accessory this by -la building ma rig a minima °n a lot containing less sq, ft. is adopted, eitherisected 01, ny lot which, if 120 ft.gB ARTICLE 3 pro- separately Owned or contains 5,000 0: and substitomaomeeaO toAnnual hTo°w'n will ame Provided that an therefor aerie striking omeeting in 95Protective shall conform t th a ere w Sectio 9 Para ph 9 4 and as cted and n to reads Section 3 A. No sign following restrict). tamed in a busines follows: "9t neon or fluores eof the type ns: Permitted, nt ]ightin or style e Pedesttrianoor9” shall Pro g or anY lighting] similar thereto flashing, b over a hicular lect more Public right wa than time ad pied - Ann To see Other Public Public, P ePebty the public nor th une by striking out I eip 6e e Town f Pa - Will ELM goal and anthe Ph 5 of Section 5. 20 ARTICLE 32: To see if the Town will amend the Building Code adopted by the Annual Town Meeting in 1951 and as amend- ed from time to time by adding the following paragraph to Section 4: 'No part of any structure erected upon any lot shall be nearer to the interior and rear lot lines than 10 feet, excepting signs erected in conformance with the Protective By -Law. ARTICLE 33. To see if the Town will vote to accept the provisions of General Laws Chapter 40, Section 8C, and all amend- ments thereof, relative to the establishment of a Conservation Com- mission, and raise and appropriate a sum of money for the establish- ing and maintaining such Conservation Commission as provided in General Laws Chapter 40, Section 5 (51). ARTICLE 34: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of Seven Hundred (700.) Dollars to continue work on the Herring Brook. ARTICLE 35: To see if the Town will vote to authorize the Board of Health to contract for the care of the Town Dump and to let a contract for a period not exceeding three years and to re- advertise for a new contract when necessary and raise and appropri- ate a sum of money for the first year's contract. ARTICLE 36: To see if the Town will vote to transfer from unappropriated available funds in the Treasury to the Stabilization Fund the sum of Fifteen Thousand (15,000.) Dollars. ARTICLE 37: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate Three Hundred Seventy -five (375.) Dollars to finish, grade and pave a portion of Twiss Road, a Town Way, connecting Twiss Road with Gilman Road, a Town Way, a distance of eighty -eight (88) feet more or less. By Request. ARTICLE 38: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of Four Thousand Three Hundred (4,300.) Dollars to grade and pave Pine Needle Way, a distance of eighteen hundred (1800') feet more or less. ARTICLE 39: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of Four Thousand Seven Hundred Ninety (4,790.) Dollars to grade and pave Ruggles Road, a distance of one thousand nine hundred eighty (1,980') feet more or less. ARTICLE 40: To see if the Town will transfer from the Highway Machinery Fund, the sum of Five Hundred and Ninety One (591.) Dollars, to purchase and equip a new Gravely Tractor for the Highway Department and authorize the Surveyor of High- ways to purchase same. 21 ARTICLE 41: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of One Thousand Twenty (1,020.) Dollars for six Band Orleans Band. given in the Town of Orleans during Orleans BY Request. g 1960 by the ARTICLE ofl0 a Hundr d° see if the Town will raise and appropriate the SUM for fireworks. D °liars to pay a deficit in the 1959 ARTICLE 43: To see if the Dollars, of wh.Thousand Three Hundred will raise appropriate Town fireworks, to pro Eight d a ro riate gltt Hundred (800 and Seventy -five (1,375.) money to be s entrlY celebrate Fourth oftj °Mars is to be used for BY Request`hePuPervision Orleans p the Seleost Day in an Legion approPri teCthe sum To see if the mrntS1p a of Chapter Of Five Hundredo(500 X11 vote to raise and with p�bumusement of aSPublic I ts of 1929 for) Dollars under the dren's Y raised funds, character Providing entertain - PartY in 1960, to furnish Chr1s°tn s used in connection fain ARTICLE 45: Display and Chil- account balances to° see tf the Town will v a urn oof 0 Thousand : T tseeExthes and DeficiencY Account. cer- the su 46: underlie nsupervision d rChapter j0pg') Dollartsl f Ise and appropriate under the BY Request. hereon. of the Board oft Seleectnsenf o9 9, or be spen a s� ARTICLE 47; T Construction money for o see if the By Re u 'he end land' ",9 facilities at a boatil r owl' Creek at n of arse and animicut Roane To ramp °ding on and ARTICLE 48: Waterwaof One To°san lee if the T the 1959 s ImProvemea d (I,000e Dow n will raise engineer in Annual MeetinCOmmittee Mars to be and appropriate BY Requesgt, survey and w'ate Co a ceps , ex et0e rock Article 31 of 22 ARTICLE 49: To see if the Town will authorize the Select- men on behalf of the Town, to accept as a gift, to acquire by pur- chase, or take by eminent domain under Chapter 79 of the General Laws, for the municipal purpose of a Town Landing and bathing beach, a parcel of land bounded: Northwesterly by Portanimicut Road; Northeasterly and Easterly by Eli's Creek and Little Pleasant Bay; and Southwesterly by land now or formerly of the estate of Stanley M. Smith, as shown on a plan filed in the Selectmen's office, and raise and appropriate a sum of money to defray the cost thereof, and authorize the Selectmen to take any action necessary thereto. By Request. ARTICLE 50: To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of Three Thousand (3,000.) Dollars for the purpose of advertising and promoting the advantages of the Town, and for the erection and maintenance of an information booth, said funds to be expended under the direction of the Selectmen and only if an equal matching sum has been deposited with the Town Treasurer prior to the expenditure of any said appropriation, under the pro- visions of Chapter 30, Acts of 1958. ARTICLE 51: To see if the Town will authorize the Board of Health to transfer the bulldozer, located at the Dump, to the Highway Department. ARTICLE 52: And to act upon any other business that may legally come before the meeting. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1960 To vote for the election of the following Town Officers: One Moderator for one year. One Selectman for three years. One Assessor for three years. One Member Board of Public Welfare for three years. One Member Board of Health for three years. One Town Clerk for three years. One Treasurer for three years. One Collector of Taxes for three years. Two Constables for one year. One Park Commissioner for three years. Two Members of School Committee for three years. One Member of Regional District School Committee for two years One Tree Warden for three years. One Trustee Snow Library for three years. One Member of Planning Board for five years. One Member of Recreation Commission for one year. One Member of Recreation Commission for five years. 23 Question: 1. "Shall chapter thirty_two any county, city, tow B insurance, grou n or district to the General Laws authorizing and group main laor blankethoS andrdismemberment group for certain persons or district and in the hospital surgical and their dependentsservtce of such insur- Arid attested d you are directe be accepted by this Town ?" Office copies thereof d to serve this at least and South Of Orleans post this by posting up before the ti POSt Office ffice, East Orleans Post with Your FAIL e O holding said m said Town Seven days of meeting as doings tress d , to the Towne due eetu n of this Warrant, Of ouGriven under our Clerk Lord hands at the time and place one thousand it, eshund a a dFebruary in the year ARTIjUR N S. MURRAY RIC ARD P A CMS f Orleans Report of the Assessors To the Orleans Tax Payers: The year 1959 produced the normal yearly increase in our total Real Estate and Personal Property valuations. This continued broad- ening of the tax base each year is important to the Town, represent- ing as it does increased tax revenue to offset at least partially the year by year increased appropriations voted at Town Meetings. Even more important than this increased revenue is the means by which this new revenue is created, that is, through the Building Trades, which play such a vital part in stabilizing our economy. Your Board of Assessors conscientiously works to deal fairly with all Tax Payers to the end that the distribution of the tax load is levied equitably among all property owners. Sales prices of shore areas in Orleans have in recent years advanced all out of proportion to the original values of land set up in 1954 throughout the Town. In order to keep an equitable spread of the tax, it will soon be necessary to make substantial increase in the shore values for tax purposes. As burdensome as it may seem to all of us, the Automobile Excise Tax is an extremely important source of revenue to the Town and all of it remains in the Town. The valuations which we use are set by the State. In 1959 the actual revenue from this source was approximately $46,000. If this Excise Tax income was non - existent, it would have been necessary for us to increase the Real Estate Tax rate in 1959 by approximately $3.50 per thousand additional - - making the rate $40.50 instead of $37.00. The following table of figures show the method by which we arrive at the Tax Rate each year. We welcome questions from Tax Payers at any time on the important matter of local taxes. Total appropriation to be 1958 1959 raised by taxation $548,842.00 $626,418.09 Total appropriation from available funds 34,562.87 50,675.29 583,404.87 677,093.38 Court Judgments 1,827.62 728.50 State Parks and Reservations 1,837.40 1,866.43 25 Mosquito Control State Audit County Tax Count Retirement 7,467.61 6,092.00 Overlay 48 ,225.62 1,191.17 50,763.81 Gross Amount unt to be 3 ,442.90 9,044.17 4,541.15 10,510.41 Total raised Estimated Receipts Available Funds & 655,655, p 753,386.85 Net amount to be raised by Taxation Polls and Property 233,390.85 ° 276,825.87 Assessed V Assessed aloe Real Value ° 421,859.34 476,560.98 Personal ate Total Estate Assessed Valuation 1958 $10'837.330 00 1,346,460.00 $11,424,985.00 124, School Ta x 12,183,790 1,413,220.00 Tot Tar Sch 01 Percentage DD 13.63 Per M $12,838,205.00 All ntage 20.87 16.48 Per M 34.50 >> 20.52 39,77 0 37.00 " " 60.33 �0 43.668 90 ESTIMATED 56.332 % Over ate Parksate °g Mosquito RECEIPTS 9uito Control In °o 0e ti I a °n x 1989 1959 Motor Veax hicle $20.39 Licenses &Trailer Excise Fines $26,555.47 ibr Lar ° 10817 16,195.47 y 43,943.00 42,458.60 G`alth and S n'ral Go anitati v on Charities ernment 7,363. S.00 55,706.71 9,394.00 Old q 46.0p 770.40 lnteresty Assist Old °n Ta ° Age es Age 802.00 2 892.00 4.00 105.00 986.00 lute Meal and Ass °n eal ax essments Street Light 4,87 00 26,235 00 2,396.34 6,747.39 Veteation Fu 8cho Serv' °d ices 1,625.00 1,243.05 22,329.39 1,736.86 Stat001 Trains ertatio n Protection 191 0 8, 0 O0 1,353.27 Pn 11 Sch 2,91 0�00 Farm ersons se and °PrOPe st uction 13 3,840.00 1,S00,0p 13,09550 3,991.73 29.71 1,500.00 26 29.71 Overestimate County Tax for 1957 Free Cash from Treasury Schools Total Deductions as Estimated Receipts and Available Funds Number of Polls Assessed Property Owners Assessed Acres of Land Assessed Number of Cars Assessed - Assessed Value of Cars Amount of Tax on Cars Population 1955 Census 2,719.58 34,562.87 34,309.00 $233,390.85 1958 755 1,712 6,690 Excise 2,402 $1,259,070.00 58,738.29 2,201 Respectfully submitted, 27 32.42 50,675.29 35,898.68 $276,825.87 1959 770 1,804 6,715 1,574 852,660.00 45,861.80 2,201 ARTHUR R. FINLAY FRANKLIN S. MURRAY RICHARD H. ADAMS Board of Assessors Report of the Collector r Abated 1958 Abated 10.87 772.77 ® T Taxes 1959 2,445.03 Uncollected 1958 Uncollected 1959 4,007.35 1959 Real Estate $58,063.82 Jan. Dr. 1, Balance due Polls 1956 Jan, 1, Balance due Dr. 1957 Jan. 1 Balance 1958 May 22, $ 1.16 1959 Warrant June 1, Warrant 1,024.84 Jan. 1, Balance due 1958 $ 2.00 1,540.00 ul Omitted 21,460.37 June 16, Warrant j Assessment Abatement Assessment ment 196,301.45 226,429.23 $1,542.00 after payment refunded 2 Cr. 60.69 530.75 Paid Treasurer, account 1958 $ 2.00 1,228.00 Paid Treasurer Paid Treasurer, account 1959 304.00 Paid Treasurer' account 195 Cr- C 7 $446,030.31 bated 1959 Uncollected 1959 8.00 Paid Treasurer account 1958 Abated 1956 'account 1959 $1,O1S.24 $1,542.00 Abated 1957 Tax Title Account 19,329.78 99,110.22 Farm Animal Excise Tax Title Wt 1957 1.16 Dr. Abated 1959 ount 1958 5.88 1959 Tax Title Account 1959 Uncollected 72 June 1, Warrant $29.88 1958 Uncollected .69 Cr. 1959 2,737.63 19.98 Paid Treasurer, account 1959 $29.88 2,129.90 Moth Assessment 21,676.11 Dr. Tangible Pers Jan 91 Balance Drhal Property $446,030.31 Jan.91, Balance due 1958 $61.50 Jan. 1 Balance due May 2' Warren ue 1958 Paid Treasurer, account 1958 Cr. $61.50 12 July 8,'p arrant $1,423.04 Motor Vehicle and Trailer Excise Abate 'Witted ment after `assess nrafunded 4,157.33 Dr. Payment, 20081.61 Jan.91, Balance due 1958 $7,950.62 5,943.34 Paid 68.29 124 87 May 1, Warrant June 19, Warrant 2,342.13 6,917.62 Paid Treasurer, accou 1957 Cr. Paid Treasurer' account — $58 063.82 July 1, Warrant JI Warrant 4,569.37 6,333.01 8 aCC°WWt 1959 Aug•2 2, 9,713.77 $1,423.04 Oct. 6, Warrant Oct. 19, Warrant 5,070.38 1,701.43 28 47,703.33 29 Nov. 16, Warrant Dec- eb. 10 , Warrant Feb. loe after Warrant (1958) payment, refunded Paid Treasurer account 1958 Cr. Paid Treasurer,aco Abated 1958 unt 1959 Abated 1959 Uncollected 1958 Uncollected 1959 Real Summary °f 1959 Real Estate January 1,11ecte Taxes 1958 personal Pro 1959 Perso pert 1959 Polls Personal Property 2,575.86 1,864.94 531.38 1,823.63 $55,636.05 $8,394.67 39,753.81 328.12 3,370.85 34.14 3,754.46 $55,636.05 $2,129.90 21,676.11 2,445.03 4,007.35 8.00 34.14 3,754.46 34,054.99 3RS of Taxes Report of the Finance Committee To the Honorable Board of Selectmen: . The following is the report of the Orleans Finance Committee for the year ending December 31, 1959: Reserve Fund $5,000.00 TRANSFERS June: 4 Pleasant Bay Dredging $486.00 August: 12 Selectmen's Expense 64.58 Harbormaster's Expense 414.71 31 Selectmen's Expense 28.00 Harbormaster's Expense 56.71 September: 28 Selectmen's Expense 118.35 Harbormaster's Expense 20.43 October: 14 Harbormaster's Expense 48.54 Selectmen's Expense 14.55 30 Selectmen's Expense 35.73 Elementary School Proposed Addition Preliminary Expense 1000.00 November: 10.05 13 Selectmen's Expense 42.05 Harbormaster's Expense 7.70 27 Dutch Elm Disease 18.30 Selectmen's Expense 32.48 Harbormaster's Expense 27.50 Interest on Notes and Bonds December: 32.15 14 Selectmen's Expense 201.13 Police Department 23.60 30 Harbormaster's Expense 36.37 Selectmen's Expense 412.45 Police Department 131.34 Fire Department 1.65 31 Selectmen's Expense 7'37 Parks & Playgrounds 2.63 Selectmen's Expense 1.66 Assessors' Expense $3276.03 December 31, 1959 Balance on Hand 1723.97 $500100 $5000.00 Respectfully submitted, W. HOWOrle MAY, Jr. Chairman leans Committee 31 Treasurer's Report 4n de GeneraRECEIPTS Accounts account Cape Cod Trust Co. Trust C' O. checking account -state Stt Five checking orYela 1959 Bank and in t treasury Cod 1959 Receipts usury Janu $181,999.07 989,886.19 1959 C*enerPATMENTS $1,171,885.26 Cn deposit Treasurer' Accounts Trust e Sepoud° Trust Co. checkin $983,266.48 Cents Savinaga Bank c Mate Street erative B oust' Cape Cod F treasury an k, Y i 6e0asu Cc - pn Consistin TRUST FUND David g got. Fund hlol`a W Young Fund wrl Baromn Sn w Fu it k ns Fund 188,618 78 $1,171,885.26 ACCpUNTS DePosite 1lyanuisln; Fiv Codums Co Opngs B gook Cafe Cod Ace ad I ae esttive Ban1c ve'tCape and Balance iu Fund January 1, 1960 32 $4,500.00 500.00 200.00 3,000 00 1�.00 $9,200.00 $9,200.00 2,428.91 $11,628.91 _1 Elizabeth Twiss Blake (Snow Library Trust Fund) Deposited in: Cape Cod Five Cents Savings Bank Accumulated Interest Balance in Fund January 1, 1960 Cemetery Perpetual Care Funds Consisting of: George Voss Fund $100.00 Benjamin C. Sparrow Fund 100.00 Henry C. Nickerson Fund 100.00 Franklin Freeman Fund 50.00 Samuel J. Coy Fund 200.00 Mark Snow Fund 100.00 Christopher Edwards Fund 50.00 William Swain Fund 100.00 Yates Rogers Fund 100.00 Capt. Samuel N. Smith Fund 100.00 John and Susanna Taylor Fund 50.00 Charles R. Smith Fund 200.00 Freeman S. Smith Fund 200.00 Joshua L. Northup Fund 200.00 Frank H. Snow Fund 250.00 Albert P. Smith Fund 2,000.00 $250.00 17.41 $267.41 $3,900.00 Deposited in: Cape Cod Trust Co., Savings Dept., Cape Cod Five Cents Savings Bank, Hyannis Co- Operative Bank and Invested in Hyannis Co- Operative Bank Shares $3,900.00 Accumulated Interest $396.60 Withdrawn 51.78 344.82 Balance in Fund January 1, 1960 $4'244'82 Clement Gould & Wife Fund Deposited in: Weymouth Savings Bank and Cape $5,000.00 Cod Five Cents Savings Bank 33 Accumulated Interest Withdrawn 2,142.63 200.00 Balance in Fund January 1, 1960 Deposited in: MarY Celia Crosby Fund Cape Cod Trust Co. Savings Dept, Accumulated Interest Balance in Fund January 1, 1960 Deposited ia; Rehabilitatio Cape Cod Trust Co n 'Fund Interest) Additional Interest - Savings Dept. Balance tr 1959 $818.35 ing pand b (erred to Hi 24.72 December 10,x1 59 9 Meeting achoa of Account closed . Deposited in. Cla3'lon Mayo Hyanni and d a 1'�Ypanrat ve Bank Test Shares Cod Co -pPe alive tBaoank Withdiawned Interest Stabilization Fund Deposited in: Hyannis Co- Operative Bank Cape Cod Co- Operative Bank $25,000.00 1,942.63 Accumulated Interest 288.12 $6,942.63 Balance in Fund January 1, 1960 $25,288.12 Respectfully submitted, FRANCIS I. ROGERS $5,000.00 Treasurer 1,638.96 $6,638.96 Report of Board of Paobk Wegare for 1959 To the Citizens of the Town of Orleans: The year 1959 did not present any unanticipated problems in the Public Welfare. Extensive hospital and medical expenses in the category of Old Age Assistance continued an up trend during Fund the year, and will probably continue during 1960. $1,382.06 $25,800.00 Balance 75.00 anc in Fund January 1 1960 1,107.06 Street Light D Cosited m., Fund Assigned $26,907.06 A We mil h Suavitt� Cuts B to the Tov� of Orleans Withdrawa Tntere$tank auk Balance in Fund January 1, 1960 $85-67 $2,517.61 Aid to Dependent Children seems to be stabilized, due in no small part to the efforts of several of our recipients to obtain em- ployment at least during the summer months. Disability Assistance seems, at the moment, to be leveled off. However, like the other categories, large medical bills presently unforeseen can upset the best budgetary plans. General Relief remains at a comparatively low level and there is every indication that this will remain so. Our various Trust Funds can be used if an unforeseen emergency should arise. The Town of Orleans is fortunate that our per case cost still remains below the State average in each category. Our welfare prob- lems are administered very carefully and in accordance with the rather stringent regulations set forth by the Federal government as Well as the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. To summarize for 1960 our various budget categories have been adjusted up or down as seems appropriate at this time, and the total increase is $1800. 34 $2,517.61 35 J Of invalWO wish to uable assistance the many Town de partments v Breakdown dung the year wt of expenditures Old Age Assistance for 1959• ' Total payroll Charged to State Charged to Federal $55,970.2' Charged to Other 28,093.0: Towns Cost to Town 19,131.51 Aid to De P e ndent Child Total Payroll ren 900.2 7 ,845.52 Charged to State Charged to Federal 6,501.57 Cost to Town 2,167.17 Disabilit TotaAssistance ] 2,193.50 2,140.90 Charged ged to State Charged to Federal 4,664.02 Cost to Town 2,594.50 General Relief 913.00 Total Pa 1,156.52 Charged to Other To Institutions wnS 3,787,36 Paid from Trust F 763.35 ands 1,003.20 Administration Expense Salaries (including Bo Subject 442.71 to supplies planrd of p blaerWelRfae�bursem$4,295.57 Rents of Telephone 158.09 Purchase O of Space 116.72 Pment 584.61 271.08 State 245.65 Federal Re. rse 58.50 Cost Co Tow�ttbumegieat 5,730.22 78.51 Respectfully submitted, 2,644.64 3,007.07 RICRA ARTHUR R ' ADAMS, Chairman AN�IN S. MURRAY 36 Board of Public Welfare Report of the Planning Board To the Honorable Board of Selectmen and Citizens of the Town of Orleans: The continuing growth of the town in the year 1959 has pre- sented your Planning Board with new and varied problems. The Board held 25 meetings during the year and conducted 10 public hearings on new subdivision applications. The 10 subdivision plans submitted were approved creating 61 lots. In some cases the lots were just above the required size of 15,000 square feet, but on the whole well over the minimum. On April 7, 1959, the Board organized for the year. Alton L. Smith was elected chairman and Albert M. Kaufman was elected clerk. The Planning Board has attended several meetings relative to the proposed National Park. As a result of these attendances, the Board feels that in the event the park becomes a reality, a master plan should be adopted to safeguard the future growth of the town. The Board continues to feel the urgent need for protective measures in our business district concerning adequate parking, side lot line setbacks, lot sizes, signs and some measure of architectural control. To this end articles have been entered in the 1960 Town Warrant. On September 15, 1959, a discussion was held by the Board with the Selectmen relative to subdivision road requirements prior to town acceptance. As a result of this meeting, on November 3, 1959, the Board adopted additional subdivision regulations which have entered in the Rules and Regulations Booklet In the course of the Board's activity through the year, a grow- ing need for clerical assistance has been evident. To this end the Board, on December 1, 1959, voted to request an additional $100.00 to its regular budget. The Board is most appreciative of the cooperation it has re- ceived from the Town Officials and Boards and welcomes any suggestions or criticisms by the townspeople, whether by letter or attendance at our meetings. Your opinions are highly valued by the Board. Meetings are held the first and third Tuesdays of the month, 7:30 p.m. at the Town Office Building. Respectfully submitted, ALBERT M. KAUFMAN, Clerk ALTON L. SMITH, Chairman ELDREDGE E. SPARROW MILTON M. GRAY FREDERIC C. BERGER 37 Of inv lu ble to thank the Breakdown many Town departments who have been assistance during the year. Old q$e Assistance expenditures for 1959: Total payroll Charged to State Charged to $55,970.27 Charged to Federal 28,093.03 Cost to Town Towns 19,131.50 Aid to De n 900.22 Total Dependent Children 7,845.52 arged to State Charged t 6,501.57 Cost to To. deral 2,167.17 Disabih 2,193.50 Thal Payroll 2,140.90 Charged to State Charged to Federal 4,664.02 to Town 2,594.50 Generral Relief 913.00 1,156.52 Chargedayrou Institutions Other Towns 3,787.36 Paid from Trust F 763.35 Administr unds 1,003.20 ation Ex Travel �jncludinse Subject th 442.71 Supplies Benefigp acrd of P blaerWelfa Reimbursement 57 Rental of a Telephone 158.09 Purchase T'q�SPace 116.72 of 13 Pntent 584.61 271.08 State 245.65 Feder RetRmebursetneat 5g.50 i Cost to To�bursetneat 5,730.22 78.51 Respect 2,644.64 full 3,007.07 RlCRA gURRD H' AD Chairman man FRAM C SFINLAY Y 36 Board of Public Welfare Report of the Nanns ng Board To the Honorable Board of Selectmen and Citizens of the Town of Orleans: The continuing growth of the town in the year 1959 has pre- sented your Planning Board with new and varied problems. The Board held 25 meetings during the year and conducted 10 public hearings on new subdivision applications. The 10 subdivision plans submitted were approved creating 61 lots. In some cases the lots were just above the required size of 15,000 square feet, but on the whole well over the minimum. On April 7, 1959, the Board organized for the year. Alton L. Smith was elected chairman and Albert M. Kaufman was elected clerk. The Planning Board has attended several meetings relative to the proposed National Park. As a result of these attendances, the Board feels that in the event the park becomes a reality, a master plan should be adopted to safeguard the future growth of the town. The Board continues to feel the urgent need for protective measures in our business district concerning adequate parking, side lot line setbacks, lot sizes, signs and some measure of architectural control. To this end articles have been entered in the 1960 Town Warrant. On September 15, 1959, a discussion was held by the Board with the Selectmen relative to subdivision road requirements prior to town acceptance. As a result of this meeting, on November 3, 1959, the Board adopted additional subdivision regulations which have entered in the Rules and Regulations Booklet In the course of the Board's activity through the year, a grow- ing need for clerical assistance has been evident. To this end the Board, on December 1, 1959, voted to request an additional $100.00 to its regular budget. The Board is most appreciative of the cooperation it has re- ceived from the Town Officials and Boards and welcomes any suggestions or criticisms by the townspeople, whether by letter or attendance at our meetings. Your opinions are highly valued by the Board. Meetings are held the first and third Tuesdays of the month, 7:30 p.m. at the Town Office Building. Respectfully submitted, ALBERT M. KAUFMAN, Clerk ALTON L. SMITH, Chairman ELDREDGE E. SPARROW MILTON M. GRAY FREDERIC C. BERGER 37 i Report of Tree Warden To the Citizens of Orlean The first consideratio �I Fey be line the large 'lumber n should be conservation ma neede lshade existing trees. construction d 1° dte near °f really valuable shade trees which or co work. future and our el . el u anV fine trees phaveeto bebsacrificedrtoeclear this ' to We are care tltIseast will depends under streets lined the natural beauty of trees are upon our with trees. How long Y more than DePartw getting. modern progress, planning and are being is Planting gre ganu play an important Part These number of young trees, ducted. carefull Planned In keeping Orleansna will removed, The a trees either program of Y °°Proved by theirers W e dhtle Or 11, vde tree care is being con" of a weakened condition were ical ands Yearly mai slue and traffic safety was m healthsto im datna teuance of tre Y °ondition,gss were repaired; fertilizingrfor cd. theehan- cond ncwaze of ores in Your Ponsib allowing iexpe ens disea edsmOnly ally , themselves experts who ' More ha wdl a repj cengWireed ,at workmen do Your t tree rgood a r result tby complete e musteba p0n Ills for vthe t wp °img the growing season system the ost of etmoving t f en atic lover a Pei °care are lb winced that shade trey has died Years tray giving le than Respectfully submitted SMILE A. OLLIVIER Tree Warden Report of Insect Pest Superintendent To the Honorable Board of Selectmen: We are gradually slowing down the increase of Dutch Elm Disease by reducing the beetle population and keeping the elms healthy. We will not lose our elms if we continue to give them the care and attention they warrant. A preventive program is employed to keep Dutch Elm Disease at a minimum. 1st - Sanitation, to prevent breeding and feeding of bark beetles (carriers of D.E.D.) 2nd - Spraying, to kill bark beetles. 3rd - General care of elm trees to maintain their healthy con- dition. The above program is followed on al ltown -owned elm trees as presented by the Shade Tree Laboratory at the University of Massachusetts. There is no cheap or easy way to fight Dutch Elm Disease. Spraying alone will not take place of cutting out and destroying diseased wood. The gypsy moth scouting and trapping program was conducted as m years past. Eighteen male moths were found in six traps. This small outbreak an area of ten acres showing a 5% defoliation can be easily controlled by spraying. After several years of persistent spraying for the control of elm leaf beetle this insect has been eliminated to the point that it is no longer a nuisance. Man has never succeeded in destroying a single species of insects - all he can hope to do is control them. Several oaks infested with Orange Stripped Oak Worm, were found. These insects are easily killed with D.D.T. spray solution and can be kept under control. Japanese Beetles have been kept under control with a solution Of Chlordane and D.D.T. If neglected this insect can be very troublesome. Your superintendent is happy to report no serious outbreak of any insect in Orleans. Respectfully submitted, EMILE A. OLLIVIER 38 39 Insect Pest Supt. Report of the Tlovun Counse9 To Orleans, 0310 sack Il Lard of Selectmen, for the here submit my report of my activities as Town Counsel There are still three land land dama e case acquisition of damage cases Pending against the Ownership of ase has been settledaandle at Nauset Beach. One regadsaac he end of Beach et Beach aCea 1 Town has acquired fed Beach he entire acquisition of beach Road Negotiaziog south of the Public At he last and north of the are continuing as pate in tos.'s Annual Town Town Beach. t J0 g land Protection at S Meeting the ectivem owner a d the Beac Town voted to partici- on his sub is erected , the ° Cornmo h m conjunction with an Partment lest, will onsult pro- settled, w shout furthesuit osagainst o the the Town have been Assessors, FpubDepartmen d S School d have Regional School Wehare, Re 1 DePartadvised the Police De- ant, Appeals hellfi11 Warden Committee Treasu al Schoo merit, Board of Health, citize d the Re, 13do ing InspecTown Clerk, Town Account- and the To residents of the COmmissior' Planning Board Board Plan wn of Orte To n La n'Ag Board o wn in as well as numerous and Building the roPosedhav° work d to matters relating I have a mendni t very closely with the once and aPPeared in to the Protective By- attended atte d the One hae Prop hearings S"119 al eldCbyrThe once, the District Court P �hnicalihe he oWn du ease ark meetings on behalf of the Town the Nat. Pra hrtal P °mt Of eWWn fra mIrkle 4 u T Coot, oarrUail�bbe of great im- o undoubted) the Res Point Of view oaspwell asna pectfully submitted, PAUL P' HENSON, Jr. 4o Town Counsel Orleans Board of Trade The Orleans Information Booth, supported jointly by the Board of Trade and the Town of Orleans, is of real service to the com- munity. During the 1959 summer season the booth was staffed for 784 hours, and approximately 16,000 people stopped for informa- tion. On any day requests ran from the simplest directions to most complicated problems of locating strangers or finding specific types of accommodations. The booth was located at the corner of Route 6A and Eldredge Park Way, except for the week of August 14th through the 20th, when it was off the Orleans - Eastham Route 6 Rotary. During the week at the Rotary only 93 cars stopped, many of them directed from the center of town or the old booth location. During the pre- vious week at the 6A location 778 cars had stopped. While allow- ance must be made for the facts that the rotary area was not well marked and entrance was difficult, it seems established that potential Orleans' tourists tend to turn off the main highway at the Orleans exit, and those who do stop at the rotary are either lost or interested in knowing about the towns beyond Orleans. We note from staffing the booth that a number of things can be done to encourage tourist interest in Orleans. Better marking of historical sites and efforts to preserve our natural areas, plus more community activities for rainy and cool days, particularly for children, are two suggestions. We urge continued interest and town support to establish and maintain a more permanent booth. Respectfully submitted, RUTH FINLAY ELIZABETH BUCK Report o� the Park Commission To the Citizens of Orleans: We herewith submit the Annual Report of the Park Commis- sion for the year 1959. At Skaket Beach the enlarged Parking Area and extended Beach Area were used to capacity. However, at this time we feel that Parking and Bathing Areas are sufficient. Nauset Beach is ever increasing in people and cars using the 41 area, Th- of panting space.b0ut 700 to 800 cars were turned away for lack The Present building at now Using ea re too few- We OM facilities accommodate inadequate and Dress- ing Rooms beach in a single day. Of 287 250 aece records have have from 6000 to 9000 persons away i TheThis ;re A eas based oa and 27,948 using dressing dressing room at a Our Night Petro was filled 18 tim s and cars had to be turned minimum 1 is one Of our best assets stand in keeping vandalisBs ,n use Cep are attract' m dren returned ife C; a dslreporte avth °n larger crowds Yearly and the band Tick Report on Mani then amilie Persons o brought in, 14 missing chil Phone and sticke ses turned int r 250 Persons given First mg an incr a emofs $48139 Sma 0 tCa °un Treasurer is as follows: We and o her GIv tried$to clean0 °erg 958total of $12 504.39 pand show - Program next Year.under ou°pupeNmio a ad hottractive the Parks Stickers Stickersspayea (n0 charge) to Pe to continue tIil d °natAt this time ed (no charge) t OEa� aResidents 1445 n8 the we w m 1te s or the to'bank used at the like to than 115 using sam . cooperat on lganizaarld ar Mr. Folward Y. Neil for and We wish to give n cleaving aIId po an of our Grounds severalrocDeParttne special mg the areas after c0pperationa'°'dSFed°h',1al the for assisanRescue Squad, Police for his assrsDncea n ou ace their sfine Respectfully subruit ted, Clarence L. Kendall RW1�taClerkhairman 42 i 8 Report of the Surveyor of Highways To the Honorable Board of Selectmen and the Citizens of Orleans: I hereby submit my report of the Highway Department for the year 1959. Spring found the roads in unusually poor condition. This was due to the severe cold winter, with the freezing and thawing. I am aware that some of the older roads are beginning to show wear and tear, and for this reason I have allowed money in my 1960 budget for resurfacing them. The following roads were sealcoated: Briar Springs Road, Shore View Drive, Gilman Lane, Uncle Harvey's Lane, Meeting House Road, Harwich Road, Bridge Road, and part of Tonset and Pochet Roads. We have the plans for a new drainage system which includes all town roads, and I certainly hope that a part of this will be com- pleted each year. Herring Brook Way, Kescayongansett Road, and the area around the new loading dock at Rock Harbor, were graded and paved. A little over .7 of a mile of new roads were accepted for 1959. Next year by this time, it is hoped that the Highway Garage will be completed. This will enable better and proper care of town equipment. I wish to express m sincere thanks and appreciation to all the town departments for their fine co- operation during the past year. Respectfully submitted, 43 FREDERICK G. MAYO Surveyor of Highways Report of the Director of Civil Defense To the Citize - gether he N anal PI TOwn of Orleans: with th Which the OPe or at civil and Defense Mobilization" under State to- operation exists ' Orleans C. Plan', sPell out the regulations 0 her town depart wee" vital s P bbbcarvtal planinentstin theelo Civil De ease department land the licOWled HOWever there wledge and practice of these Of lit a et. a eve1d terest in theirspart very widespread lack of Just what to the that this to these vital plans. domes. All t kn°wd ge for look calls bUnle seeveryefami Y knows Tetudied befo ewledge'thatljok f °r tnf rmation after the attack it - littlePhletfhs ha a being has been ' The aCivil Will De Defense Office in unless has use has b ar emanY ideasn taken °t these P acesvaro�Tuesday morning and MT HTundthehomeaa�dusefula�sthshe 'HOmeoP Protection Book" G the last OrleanslME be useful.d not be considdeied something that BOLTER atO SPreadiDefense organi bra nucleme, t at $ to P epata ord'„ Then has limited itself in it is too late torsta°uld everfd TER toOtha ne. We'believeHat he needed. It acing rde alined omtupteseetfihe ke firs family survival In This vehicle was ay once - eral time$ f for ed y ei Gave mnent, has bee" obtain atimes of ]di be a valuable l on with stand by o genCY in which it is town departm °e will beer. Other 'dinner t �dea stRes Rescue Squad. I wish the aDedease Dire a ea'one the t the Ras ne g4uadoando other r the coOpeLatooetatt a en Mad uring my term as ReGectfully have ed had Pee 4e the faithful �EDERICK L 44 ivd DefeNIN T WO of Olrleans Building Inspector's Report To the Honorable Board of Selectmen and the Citizens of Orleans: The total value of building permits issued in the Town of Or- leans in 1959 was $926,470 against $899,947 in 1958 - an increase of about 3 %. One hundred thrity -seven permits were issued for all types of buildings. One Thousand Forty -four Dollars and Fifty Cents has been collected in fees and paid to the Town Treasurer. The following table shows the permits granted. Type Number Amount Dwellings 57 $678,500.00 Non - residents 18 $136,000.00 Alterations and repairs 62 $111,970.00 137 $926,470.00 Respectfullv submitted, H. BRUCE MITCHELL Building Inspector Report of Board of Health To the Citizens of Orleans: Your Board of Health is happy to report that the year 1959 has been one of good general health. The cases of Communicable Diseases reported were far below normal which shows that there were no epidemics of the usual children's diseases during the year. The Town and School nurses work loads seem to be fairly well distributed over the year so that there are no really slack periods in that department. With the opening of Nauset Regional High School in Septem- ber the number of pupils to be seen by the school nurses increased somewhat but with the efficient clinic room in the new school it is working into the program without any difficulties. This Board through the Building Inspector has issued 88 per- mits for cesspool and septic tank installations during the year. We 45 1 have lakeut cesspools ools numerous d seen that t aints of overflowing and improper - tion increases P and see and waterSp we have to be constanil re corrected. As our popu- and to those Supplies are properl Y alert to see that cesspools Althou a ad' JOanng pro a located in relation to each other in the best in we make every efto. quite satisfacctoanr�IIeWe aan Open disposal maintain never sTown Do be be let out to private 1eC0mmendin We wish to thank in the .mere t t the care of the dump car programs and the local doctors of better sanitation. crying out the functions of this I'll Departments tforotheir help m Board. P m Report of the Town Record of Cases Nur es al, 1959 to Jan ry 1 1960 FRANKLIN S. MURRAY ARTHUR R FINLAY RICHARD H ADAMS Board of Health Nursing Service Noll n Maternitmuu10able bjse Atttepartu as postpartu m With Ante Want cut Aniepanu Under Imo m Pre-s�h o Month Scho School 5 °112 4 Years A bt1 13 to I8 years A ulattce A uoe Cotutn culosis 46 307 931 25 Health Activities 2 Eye Clinic Salvation Army Fund 1 Veterans' Benefits Old Age Assistance Cases 11 81 Aid to Dependent Children Welfare Cases 1 1 Trips with Patients to Clinics 2 1 Crippled Children's Service 2 5 Disability Assistance 19 88 Summary: 16 Meetings Morbidity 307 931 369 2506 Health Service & Social Work 19 88 Pre - School Service 40 11 44 Receipts $1,021.05 Visits made after working hours 31 Pre - School Conferences Held: April 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 1959. Dr. Frederick P. Rogers was the examining Pediatrician. Mrs. Alice Dalzell, County Dental Hygienist, examined the teeth. 41 Children attended 25 Dipththeria, Pertussis, Tetanus (Booster Shots) 8 Smallpox Vaccinations Fluoride Clinics were held in July and August 1959. Mrs. Alice Dalzell was the Dental Hygienist giving Sodium Fluoride treatment. 30 Children registered 28 Completing series 11,4 Sodium Fluoride treatments administered Dr. Fred L. Moore, County Health Officer, conducted Polio Clinic held at the Elementary School November 16, 1959. Children receiving Salk Vaccine 4th dose 66 Diphtheria, Pertussis, Tetanus Clinic also held same day. 13 Children receiving Boosters 23 Diphtheria, Tetanus Children receiving Boosters During the month of May, 1959 two student nurses from Trues - dale Hospital spent a week each observing Public Health Nursing procedures. There seems to be some question of how to co tact t 117 nurses during the day. This may be done by calling Orleans 9 a.m. until 5 p,m. 47 Field Office Adm, Ret. Adm. Ret• 107 931 369 2 19 11 11 4 16 4 30 5 6 40 9 11 2 44 1 8 43 17 6 123 1118 114 5 175 1357 876 25 22 46 307 931 25 Health Activities 2 Eye Clinic Salvation Army Fund 1 Veterans' Benefits Old Age Assistance Cases 11 81 Aid to Dependent Children Welfare Cases 1 1 Trips with Patients to Clinics 2 1 Crippled Children's Service 2 5 Disability Assistance 19 88 Summary: 16 Meetings Morbidity 307 931 369 2506 Health Service & Social Work 19 88 Pre - School Service 40 11 44 Receipts $1,021.05 Visits made after working hours 31 Pre - School Conferences Held: April 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 1959. Dr. Frederick P. Rogers was the examining Pediatrician. Mrs. Alice Dalzell, County Dental Hygienist, examined the teeth. 41 Children attended 25 Dipththeria, Pertussis, Tetanus (Booster Shots) 8 Smallpox Vaccinations Fluoride Clinics were held in July and August 1959. Mrs. Alice Dalzell was the Dental Hygienist giving Sodium Fluoride treatment. 30 Children registered 28 Completing series 11,4 Sodium Fluoride treatments administered Dr. Fred L. Moore, County Health Officer, conducted Polio Clinic held at the Elementary School November 16, 1959. Children receiving Salk Vaccine 4th dose 66 Diphtheria, Pertussis, Tetanus Clinic also held same day. 13 Children receiving Boosters 23 Diphtheria, Tetanus Children receiving Boosters During the month of May, 1959 two student nurses from Trues - dale Hospital spent a week each observing Public Health Nursing procedures. There seems to be some question of how to co tact t 117 nurses during the day. This may be done by calling Orleans 9 a.m. until 5 p,m. 47 bedside Wish to thank Mr. Everett Bonnell for his donation of We also merit for use in the Town of Orleans. given their time tot help all departments and volunteers who have P complete our Public Health Program. Respectfully submitted, MARION I. CHACE, R'N' DORIS A. POND, R.N. ryes - Town N Report of the Shellfish Constable To the Honorable Board of °f Selectmen the I d the Citizens of the Town year 1959 sury fah d upply of scallops my report Of the Shellfish Department for at prnt andgil ysehomtepof 9559 was poor due to a lack of seed Shellfish 1a hoped that 8'1959. seed Rock 1i s and Litr3ercially we1 saved for next aseason.f NuIDbe over _ Qamsaue (6 32284 bags) at $2,726.40 he sh of FammeP iallpe ihie�s) valuedvatued at 18,632•p0 River 14 sPlamedIts 6 runts issueds110165 320,00 Pleasant I, lauteaLittle Ne�ksant Ba 1'365.00 asant Ba fro see Y to Meetin d an season. Y 81 bu. of g ll Fish and bu. LargeoQuahaugs. b0i due k fishermen op Seed in an and Pleasant effort to save yt for Little to to oueeve- uccegtp rated had n another poor year out of Rock Sar d)ln closing in and theylart8 for fatnil Toyed °T ht0 the Ad repoirt f still in S od supply at9Mccting eir c f 8elec�me Board a Year °P era tion aUr pg the ee °blvI 1pn °feMarine Fisheries' Re y °at. ns and visitors of Orleans spectfully submitted ART R W. NICKERSOIe 48 Shellfish Constab Report of Snow Library To the Honorable Board of Selectmen and the Citizens of Orleans: During the year 1959 Snow Library purchased 153 new adult books and 108 Juvenile books, totaling 261. New books presented were 12 for adults and 87 for juveniles; totaling 99. This making a grand total of NEW books ... 360. Older books added were 211 for adults and 60 for juveniles totaling 271. Total of books added in 1959 made 631 bringing our collection on the shelves to 13,560. Many helpful suggestions for book purchase were made by patrons. Mrs. Pierre Fitzpatrick presented books in memory of her sons Stephen and Philip Allard. Memorial books from the Russell C. Johnson fund were the 13 volumes of the History of the United States Naval Operations in World War II. Mrs. Urban S. Livingston gave us new books for children. 87 of which have been catalogued to the end of the year. Persons using the Library made a total of 12,238 calls, which means your Librarian was busy. During summer Miss Shirley Mac - Intire assisted in shelving books, and I wish to thank her at this time. Story hour for children under 8 years, conducted by Miss Dor- othea Abbott had 788 present for the year. Summer being the low time for this. Grand total of calls to Library were 13,026. Twenty four books were borrowed from Division of Library Extension, books circulated were 22,111 making an all high of 22,125 books taken out. The all year use of the Library, contrary to some people's idea is far ahead of the summer per capita. Six books per capita is the total for all year residents and about 7 /9ths of a book is the total of the summer use, reckoning the summer residents as in ,000 Nickerson State Park campers also are patrons, especially p weather. All is All in all our year has been profitable as far as g to its proper con- cerned and the cataloging is being caught up rapidly P P spot. for The Trustees and Librarian have met decide on onssthat purchase of new books and are always op en to n would be helpful to the further growth of the Library. Respectfully submitted, L. BARNARD Librarian FE ORLEANS REPORT OF To the Citizens of Orleans RECREATION COIVIf�1SS0 ®f� Activity at the ReCr with Th'g °end b dJ - Or Dram aaMC Gtordon Argo in December, 1958 P0119, , Guild by the PTA• nunton tourna , French classes billiard, ping' PurchThe one hundred mens' also dancing classes sponsored are requestlocally so, amore are erY sturdy d in the 1959 budget were the During the sn m the 1960 bud get. and really comfortable. W to the W Cape Cod Jum!omer, nature classe of nation terA quad theni. 'a opened With Miss Martha Porter n for ion o A411 Om the COmmission Y of the youngsters for the many bou scivicartr d Our Ch handicapped by the redue Work he h affai hair an for many years, Mr Eell dope• as given to extend our sincere appreciation ed to rnest Cullum ° Recreation and a commendation serve until the , With C aonwctiviti, at th, C e] ctionereatio 4 -H Ho Cente p background, was appO1nt class. slid occorysballCtb jwiceCautno Stamp and Coin Club twtCc of the manastonal band Ts Weekly fib, Girl Scouts weekly, Cape sor of Nauset Requests to hearsals, e PTA sponsored dance Paul Henson for no We ae9h School Center opened illet He Attend MOne daY eve .acu]ty was , Mr. Leo NI i 'uWe t ce shs h and nmda Saturdays, , sup p s afte sheets Wed gs and Saturda s also N1rs• e have qq were d afternoons. dthis to b Peed Sid .erne theafenceard tttaPedhh a small attendance that Nlrs• Cent er nuniit ee hlY do two to° o e 1ec Is always greener on t d le as cancel s The HOP Committee fOUtl or o Now about. Ce]ed all gas in neatte °dance at the "Hops' dance else to ar s)Dl You Parents its scaeduled rec ' he disc the starteMr �J bn jjoely all ffie Oily o gams t suggestions? (on 14OPS e Goys bask 11,e ball the Nauss teen ages Can't be to attend "'g Pro 11 O thR�git S tHagh Sue ool Wit f Excerpts from his report: "for boys Grades 5 through 8, started learning the fundamentals of dribbling, passing and shooting. " .. senior members of the Nauset Regional basketball team assist- ing are Peter Soule, Jay Schofield, Bruce MacPherson and Dick Stevenson. "after fundamentals, four teams will be made up, one from each grade and games will be played against neighboring towns. Number of boys enrolled at present is 42." At the request of the Finance Committee and for better co- ordination of activities and budget, several recreation programs are being included in our 1960 budget. These include boys' baseball, boys' and girls' basketball water safety and band concerts. These athletic activities are under the Recreation Commission in all other towns on the Cape. With this in mind, money is being requested for a summer director to supervise and handle these activities and an expanded program. This will relieve the harried and hurried volunteers who have worked so hard under great difficulties during our busiest sea- son. Volunteers will still be needed however so please be available when the time comes! The budget also includes a part time director for the Center during the winter. Also renovating the kitchen is a "must" this year. At the end of 1959, the Commission received another blow with the resignation of Mr Philip Deschamps, whose term expires in 1961. Meetings by necessity are twice a month now, with special ones in between and Mr Deschamps' schedule forced his action. We are grateful for his help, especially these past few months when he had serious illness in his family; he was really acting chair- man at the time of his resignation. May I repeat from past reports: any group wishing to use Center may do so, on written application to the Commission, stating day and time desired, activity planned, room and equipment to be used and the person responsible for the group. Respectfully submitted, Lucy K. Hopkins, Secretary Moncrieff M. Cochran John D. W. Joy Ernest Cullum 51 Report of the Registrars of Voters To the 130norable Board of Selectmen and Citizens of he Town of Orleans: sessions og the year endjn Town Meetine�sterjng voters 31, 1959 the Registrars held eondd ttjon p pe°d El On OtheFebruary S 7 and 17, preceding the records ed other business absentee connected with ballot applications, and YearsT" $Ceat °st task d with correcting and filing age Omni ry, F b uanYrper� nsai aimed heir legalesiden ceJanuarwenin in 1 bore ' a r qu st, it necessa revisits were e1nelcessary many lid ed goy states arks but ede information, Most letters, contain- Mg es et en in Again the and 929 Women oval tabula[[ on am of the rep Maine to California outline and m Registrars w° r a tOtal of 1,711 legal Rre residents. trars before during which could like i° call as spots before Janua be ma attention to the saving leaving town grand Febr a if persons planning to be of 3g6�dog for Bo after arrival would heir notify the Regis - the winter vacation fern ale doge These includ f Assessors pre,£ of policed 3 kennel liCe 182 'nalethe Registrars found a total Pared by the Pee, furnish des' The $0 6 females, 108 spayed cause ofng 1959 29strars. lists o£ theadoOfaudetheir owner S to ree °f theh'age 4 Wen and 42 then Tot den enelse re-re re 11 v nersr h emneedfroern the voting B t. Total registration as °£ D and 16 Coen and d names Death Men en Rep 39 can, be 31' 1959, was as follows: 4 erars 492 19 Undeclared Total 886 16 252 35 29g 665 806 52 550 1,471 The Registrars wish to thank the Town Clerk especially for his fine year-round assistance with registration and other clerical work, and all other Town officials whose cooperation with the Registrars work is instrumental in helping Orleans to operate efficiently. Respectfully submitted, ADELBERT A. CHILDS, Chairman CATHERINE A. SMITH LLOYD E. STICKNEY Report of the Sealer of Weights and Measures To the Honorable Board of Selectmen: I herewith submit my report of the Sealer of Weights and Measures for the year 1959: Not* Con - Adjusted Sealed Sealed deenned No. 1 - Scales Scales over 10,000 lbs. Scales 5,000 to 10,000 lbs. Scales 100 to 5,000 lbs. Scales under 100 lbs. Scales - Total No. 2 - Weights. Total No. 3 - Capacity Measures Liquid, 1 gal. or under Liquid, over 1 gal. Dry Measures 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 28 2 0 20 41 0 0 33 70 2 0 4 122 0 0 11 23 p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 No. 5- Linear Measure 18 0 0 Capacity Measures, Total 0 No. 4 - Automatic Liquid Measuring Devices 3 46 0 0 Meters, inlet 1 in. or less 0 7 0 0 Meters, inlet more than 1 in. 0 19 0 0 Meters, oil, grease, kerosene Automatic Liquid Measuring 23 72 0 0 Devices - Total No. 5- Linear Measure 0 8 0 0 Yardsticks 53 Cloth Measuring Devices Linear Measure, Total 0 2 0 0 Grand Total 0 10 0 0 *Itenis I' Monies reported "Not Sealed" 60 292 2 0 received have "Not Sealed" tags attached. Seating aFeePaid to Tieasurer- nng and Repairs $140.70 Go0d 25.00 Repeated °line auto d 13 theasd g Peratio $165.70 measure mans pain nggestion t n has been received in 1959• P' Purch gallonAl�easnlihmeutl fbtheiedaat ahave scaled ?one fiVe -gall° twice a day t, stores r Pumps. Weekly Intervals for checking ance, proVY, that the having scale foreign matted the scoops ao 19 hand, or should see to it, at halt ofWkind of o ei st0rekee pans are kept lcleano ntd sclear dfro' au�g� ugst ha eastunngpiceo0r ruealer having in their ossession beginning Ogeatere same inn eeotn s tang device for the purPoor with beY I s1Y - entlYhtspand Me d es edhand act scaleduybyg e F, Mop passing of this rep and befo tested in his territory, at the measures' who served f °urtt oldat Orleansusing same. loss oearslas as my goo many Yeaisnd best -know experienced a grChat105 this el seams rant w °nnne t0 as Our sea sealer of weights citizens, and Teas TO all 0 g prosedur s,etc edaIn to work with him for taro hes-on to beget' ators of ir, as Me T o obtain some knowledge measuriq call uPohey are gasogne Moore ywas an expert in flood work do0 be ati h kindsh ckuThisg° rrectly,tpleaseodo n d Y our fo carry 0 applies also to scales an Respecou ezler.ytt tied, of my ability the w, Sealer of eights and Measure' 54 Report of the Police Department To the Honorable Board of Selectmen 10 and the citizens of the Town of Orleans: 20 I hereby submit my report for the Police Department for the year ending December 31, 1959. 1 Motor Vehicle Violations Motor Vehicle Accidents where there was Property Damage 279 in excess of $200 or there were personal injuries involved 270 Motor Vehicle Accidents of a minor nature 495 Permits for Motor Vehicle transfers 276 Investigations conducted 53,000 Miles traveled by cruiser 9 Sudden Deaths investigated 7 Commitments to State Institutions 2 ARRESTS AND COURT CASES I Felonious setting of a fire 47 Arrests 10 Y Summoned 20 Drunk Released under Chapter 272, Section 45 12 5 Larceny under $100.00 1 Non - Support Arrested on Out of Town Warrants 3 3 Disturbing the Peace 7 Malicious Destruction to Property 5 Assault and Battery 2 Providing liquor to a minor 3 Falsifying age to procure liquor a Minor 3 Contributing to the Delinquency of I Vagrancy 2 Grand Jury Indictments I Felonious setting of a fire I Preliminary Hearings 1 Speeding 1 Operating without a license I Failure to stop for a stop light 4 Operating so as to endanger 5 Operating under the influence 2 Failure to slow at an intersection 2 Leaving the scene of an accident Violation of Town By -Law (Disturbance) a change to in the prob- The past year has shown indications of lems usually dealt with by your police department. The opening of 55 the Eastha relief in traffic thro m� cut -back of Of uglt thehd Cape High resulted in a definite ter. Howev t00 ula Y week the Center of our town. an hours used to police This resulted In a in the the summer traffic in the cell' mornin arrivi used Mid- en morning to ng in town Your Police department Highway wasn'oovplth aai 'n Jail for a night fate t night orp3nn thence lyshoursnof the of t eieal dhthe deraioge °tU ad sturban a byl law and other crimes d Cape �cbeCaus� aue tat we can eI conducted during these arrests m�Y of the. the Express the completion f and more of this ha Pe cities °I new highways off does As then Ca a way d1nCBoston, the traveling ime between the c e Cap° and the Orleans has been reduced immensely rime klllersed a bank d the accident of Orleans continues to row, so Prod b �0uglttn the Cafe. Ube and full se unfortunately. The past Yeof tog anditra] Od den realities ofa'c-w short Years ago, but as weeare we aiePthis own POss blecin officer be exPoseds to asemuch school rd Ili As I h e 11, 9 free to the seen the evitas influx of crk, in w i h ;00i of hC II* h ckin a�mmer co ° last link of the Mid-Cape 9 with Pro t0ihingas h yeah t ge 1 YaI ha of icc departments along the 'Ile andbtllee re urned tolyvtetnporaryha elief tgaathem all in agreement cut Park afore p°� I feel this t Fact as b and t vCr1 few years, the stratfie th One golf ° ghe mee town should espeballykw highway Into onsid offst street allk every citizen Of of Select of the the POh °e Department 11 ring the ° d pentm °nd heatmand want to Res Past Year. Cooperation extended to Pectfully submitted CIIESTER A. LANDERS Chief of Police 56 Report of the Fire Department To the Honorable Board of Selectmen and Citizens of the Town of Orleans The Board of Fire Engineers respectfully submit the Annual Report of the Fire Department for the year 1959. Board of Engineers Lawrence L. Ellis, Chief Lloyd R. Ellis, Asst. Chief Henry W. Hurley, Capt. Lieut. Joseph L. Rogers Jr. Lieut. Clifford E. Soule Volunteer Firemen Ernest Borso George Cahoon Jr. Paul E. Deschamps George W. Doane Roger Dube Leighton W. Ellis Robert L. Freeman Lionel Gill John E. Hathorne Chester W. Higgins Francis A. Higgins Lawrence H. Hurley Robert O. Jordon George H. Landers William I. Livingston Belmont P. Mayo James E. Nichols Gaston L. Norgeot Paul 011ivier George E. Rogers Forrest R. Snider Otis Thompson Alfred Wittman Charles E. Young Jr. Auxiliary Firemen Richard Chipman Warren Quinn John Simmons John Hinkley Murray Savage Charles E. Jones Deputy Forest Wardens Emile A. 011ivier Henry A. Perry The calls during the year were as follows: 14 Fires by Alarm 54 Still Alarms 17 Investigations and others $12,000.00 Estimated Fire Loss for 1959 Permits issued: 85 Fuel Oil 61 Gas (Propane) Again in 1959 Orleans continued to be alarms compared to the thirty or forty of years p fire roves progress P has been made in Fire Prevention. 57 heartThe call firemen and association coo crate and se Y for the Fire Depa�uent. Man services without P and work whole - assigned to the Rescue Squad dons a their ,never called upon their Firemen ve invaluable services for this S uad which has Orleans i96pown by thee men 1SProved i self on want many to occasions- In ns- cannot tell but es we will have we e. .arnstab esCountt Plans fa a md t prepared and ready for whatevermaY time. Two of o Y Fire Train' take full advantage of the new Freeman went for regular am g School of which eertificat school this men Belmont we may use at any an ha ein lj'Yypeg PL firefighY�er tructors W bold Sour Instructors past our trainin can of °training grot�utdm hasgbeen Veactual fire conditions. In the train* Other's tom ,cry closet h °Id lbuilding tortfive gallon other Portable eq accu totu our me nw With f ouu aequipment or men we are Thanking in osiugmWe sae carry, the pumOwn igh4uipment is very Past ear. you all and We are read Pressure fog and Y all depart entqulorPey Your cooperation at your service th e Board of Fire Engineers L �l' RENCE L. ELLIS Chief Engineer Report of the Bo T° the C'B ens =f Appeals Of the Tovn of leans: 1959 The Board op A Or the Orlewelve of tesPPeals held tect. With i ganterheld Ve BY-La, held for mits5 Public g Per hearings s in ed and 2 app With from 10 Srante under the terms of RIC der, m the terms °and he Building. Code Respect full RICRAR R S EV BENS Y submitted ROBERT PLNIC$ERS N HOPgINS, Chinn ON CECIL CRARR• MAYO Clerk 58 CLIFFORD E SOU LE Report of the Harbor Master To the Honorable Board of Selectmen and Citizens of the Town of Orleans: I submit herewith my report of the Harbor Master for the year 1959. As in previous years, all the channel buoys have been taken care of and will be replaced in their proper positions in the spring. The thirteen Pleasant Bay buoys damaged have beetless red ners with rifles (one with twelve bullet holes) h n and it is hoped that the so -called sportsmen will remember that the buoys are placed for the protection of all who enjoy the pleasures of boating. I hope that those responsible for such destruction will remember that they may someday be glad to see these buoys in a time of need. Harbor in Two new range lights have been installed at Roc =oven their accordance with Coast Guard regulations and have p Worth to those using this facility. completed and The new dock and float at the Town Cove was comp Put in use during he 1959 season as voted in the Annual Town Meeting and it is hoped that the same can be done at Meeting House River during 1960. thanks to all the citizens and In closing, I wish to express my visitors for their co- operation during the past year. Respectfully submitted, W NICKERSON ARTHUR Harbor Master Report of the Barnstable County Health Department -1959 Board of Health Town of Orleans, Massachusetts Records in this office of cases of reportable communicable dis- eases occurring during the year have not shoaw�anc Pal poliomyelitis outbreaks during the year. There were two cases of p gince this disease is Ported, both cases being over 20 years of age. 59 commonly more the high protection by childhood, we may assume that grows , at le of vaccine y e The report ast in some part among the younger ag the court dinuted to all Boa l of Ph Needs in this stable County report of the Port was Editor of t Health in this county. Through gram of development's full by that ape Cod Standard - Times, this survey team, a contained , theprecommendations range Pro- m. This department has eady Mary S Mh reeM.Da CM as of Decetnberoltmplementtothenc� Anne P Hallia •N., B.S., M.p 31, 1959: Lucy E Fesel ch, R.S'S , PsYchi' Nursing Ed Education Director Alice M Fle N•, Ve arse Social Worker Alice A Ros blumM' Child pDfseaseEP dem ologist (1 /z time) George g Coll, Dental H' Clinical psaerist (Part time) RutEdward H' Tate siaa'S•> Sanitaist Y hologist (Part time) Edwina• Crocker, p , B.S., Sanity Inspector Wheeler, Jumo�� CleClerkrY Inspector and grapher y QED Lubmi MGORE, M.D., C.M., M.P•H' County Health Officer Board of Health `Town of Orleans Assessors' Re In 1959 port o added to She the drains `ap of Town revised dace re brought 20awh which the 17 and Year toerev s °mm nd a up to date US Makin map 9 8,gand Sheets additional info more ofn aPPro iwt9 11 Assessors' sheets rmatio °Chu °enr sheets of $1,000 for the coming n de RespectfullcOnveYances wheree us to obtain Y subynitied necessary. SAN °R R• INLAY, Chin- RICliAp_b S. MURRAY H 60 ADAMS Orleans Report of Veterans' Agent I would like to report a few facts not known to the average Veteran. The Office of Local Veterans Agent and Director of Veterans Service is divided into two categories as the titles imply. The Director of Veterans Services has to do with Veterans Administration functions in an advisory capacity. The Veterans Administration aids Veterans on the Federal level, involving pen- sions, compensation, hospital care, education, burials, etc., as admin- istered by the Federal Government. The local Veterans Agent operates on the state and local level. He receives applications for direct financial aid, after extensive investigation does or does not show a hardship and need. Aid may be given to Veterans Honorably Discharged from the military service of the United States, his dependent wife and chil- dren mother or father, or in some cases a guardian. The Veterans Agents duties are at times very complex and difficult (as to the rights of the Veteran he must investigate). Direct financial aid is given by the Town in which the Veteran is settled with participation by the State. The settlement of the Veteran must be determined by the Agent. of e fully l Board oper tedw with the e or which Selectmen to extend my sinceretanks; also to the other Town Officials connected with handling disburse- ments of money to the Veterans. I and World As time goes on and Veterans from World War $k War #2 grow older I believe more and more aid will be needed from the various towns. However, I have helped several Otis h el rans to secure pensions and more are becoming deserving p each year. Any resource a Veteran may get helps relieve an mere penditure of the Town's tax money and makes the self reliant. Respectfully submitted, LAWRENCE A. BAKER Veterans Agent DirVeterans Veterans ices urial Agent 61 �reyys Report of the Mileage: 078 ter- OYleans- Eastha a January 1, 1959 - approximate 65,228 Association, s-E m Ambulance 15,850 Inc. The ambulance is available for emergency use at any time, day or night. There is no charge for this service, other than oxygen, Brewster RECEIPTS but the Association is glad to receive donations to aid in meeting its Orleans expenses. Easth Donal $1,500.00 Respectfully submitted, Interest 3,000.00 R, FREDERICK RADDIN 1,500.00 President R pace t Janu Fnndceip s 1 . ¢ PRINCE Secretary-Treasurer HD j7 295.91 4:666.29 4,548.21 G 510.41 Drivers and Tires E $16, Meals xpENSES Repon of the inspector of Animals & Slaughtering Lauttd Repairs $ 646.65 —� ISns ago e t and Supplies 3,066:5 To the Honorable Board of Selectmen: Miscellane 72.49 I hereby submit my report as Inspector of Animals and Slau - ous 515. tering. 29.62 Balance Total gx 205.50 This year the animal inspection s were made thetownofound ReplaCern tit p aP, l9s 240.00 0 themmf ee and clear from any contagion anim 60 contagious disease. All barns where the animals are kept were found to have ample 4,940.36 light, ventilation and water supply K1� general call weres of clean- 4255.50 r , liness. There were seven cases of dog bites and all P 7,314.55 quarantine until released by the State Board of Health. ail aster tasst as ------ TRIps $16,510.41 Respectfully submitted, r m RALPH R. MAYO In of Animals and Slaughtering 45 103 44 10 62 202 63 Report of the Town Accountant To the Board of Selectmen Orleans, Massachusetts Gentlemen; The Dece mlreport of 31, 1959 a Accounting De Cash on hand Janua is as followsat ry 1, 1959 for the year ending Taxes: Personal Propert Real Estate y Poll Personal Pro Real Estate perty Personal propert Real Estate y M V E seExcise Moth Assessment On Deferre on Deposits Taxes On Street Light Fund I RECEIPTS 1957 1957 1958 1958 1958 1959 1959 1959 1959 1958 1959 1958 Interest 1,423,04 1,018.24 2.00 1,701.43 19,329.78 1,228.00 47,703.33 399,110.22 29.88 8,394.67 39,753,81 61.50 790.66 892.01 ,"come acam Meal Tat Tax n Tax aPterr7p)the ConuttonRealth Transport 20,969.49 atio 32,392 63 Aid for RetardedfCh jdolnPUpils 19,64747 64 12,897.14 Dog Licenses (Refunds )Fton, the Coturty_ 64 $181,999.07 519,755.90 1,768.34 88,337.95 675.29 Grants and Gifts From the Commonwealth Conservation of Shellfish 1,027.00 Vocational Education 927.07 Chapter 90 Maintenance 1,000.00 Elementary School Construction 3,991.73 Civil Defense 388.77 From the County Chapter 90 Maintenance 1,000.00 From Federal Government School Lunch 5,666.29 National Defense Education 381.39 Licenses and Permits Dog Anti Freeze Bicycle Registrations Bowling Alley Camp and Cabin Carry Firearms Cesspool Cleaning Common Victuallers Child Day Care Day Nursery Dealers Second Class Dealers Third Class Docking Frozen Desserts Funeral Directors Garbage and Rubbish Collection Gasoline, Fuel Oil, Kerosene Hawkers and Peddlers Inn Holders Intelligence Officer Junk Collector Liquor Lodging House Motel Pool and Bowling Machines Sell Firearms Shuffle Alley Soft Drinks Sunday Amusement Sunday Bowling Sunday Record Player 65 591.00 13.00 6.50 2.00 5.50 30.00 8.00 16.00 1.00 1.00 20.00 6.00 1,015.00 20.00 3.00 4.00 34.00 8.00 4.00 2.00 5.00 4,400.00 30.00 3.50 40.00 45.00 20.00 6.00 32.50 2.00 16.50 14,382.25 Sunday Sale Frozen Desserts Theatr rator B Beat Vendor Ds pool Planttm9 Board Revolver Shellfish Shellfish Grants Beach Parkin Co Park Dept 9 Tickets teral Telepho le, Concessio TReec eai an Bsmmissions g� o 9 Area Build' Rental hool RentalsRental S own Office B Lob Equip m cut R rentals School Books Nu Vendirt Di Patchecrvlee Machines Se4l, Tuitionsrce sell I R'ejghts Basketball c eria and Measures FrBenefits Commonwealth etens 20.00 9.00 5.00 2.00 100.00 956.50 88.00 20.00 120.00 8.00 1,638.00 65.00 Revenue 11,358.45 1,100.00 48.39 11.48 400.00 4.00 202.50 25.00 45.00 78.23 32.90 11.40 1,021.05 2,000.00 36,652.36 165.70 13,566.51 1,042.75 Benefits TeFront , Aid Chanties Aid tom )dies and n Tovvrls Prom Comm t Children th 9,422.00 67,765.72 2,885.56 2,885.56 369,20 163.20 66 2,221.74 From Federal Grants 2,002.00 Adm. Federal Grants 630.86 Old Age Assistance 74.50 From Commonwealth 27,840.70 From Cities and Towns 1,514.83 From Individuals 224.42 From Federal Grants 19,147.14 Adm. Federal Grants 1,801.32 Disability Assistance From Commonwealth 2746.81 Adm. Commonwealth 73 94 From Federal Grants 964.50 Adm. Federal Grants 147.89 Sales Highway Material 4.50 Town Maps 5.80 Scallop Bags .05 Voting Lists 144.00 Used School Refrigerator 70.00 Unclassified Court Fines 120.00 21.00 Municipal Lien Certificates 74.50 Advertising Hearings Advertising Tax Takings .45 Shellfish Grant Plan and Survey 4.00 4 2,000.00 Matching Funds for Advertising Town 150.00 Gifts (Charity Refund) Payments to Town in Error 2.45 Warrants and Demands 241.95 00 97, 97.00 Donations to Rescue Truck Fund Services of Dog Officer Highway Machinery Fund 156.75 Donations for Library Books 168.96 329.97 Insurance Dividends Insurance Refunds - Previous years 1 187,53 26 22 Employer's Reimbursement - State Tax 12,00 Hauling Buoys for Eastham 25.00 Petty Cash Return Insurance Refund in Error 259.38 67 59,848.55 102.35 4,910.16 Interest WithdrawnTru st and Investment Funds Cemetery Peld and Wife u nd Bonds oston Mayo Trust Care Fund Rehabi' Fund 200.00 51.78 Interest and - htation Fund for Reinvest, Withdrawn 275.00 opal 843.07 Inter est 10,559.66 Ttansfe O -� rre Trust Clayton Mant BOnds to and Snow Library Trust Fund Clayton A4 M Snow LibraYO Trust rustFu ad armed 11,929.51 Investment Funds 342.00 25.00 Bonds 1' Anticipation of Sale of Note, Revenue (Discounted) Ol Refun 367.00 3,000.00 1,000.00 4,000.00 149,272.50 1ns�ABe Assistance ds to FollotyuL g SchoojSCe and - Accounts Bonds 50.00 6,000.00 Sealer of PaL * ' ' ede aj and Measures 43.15 1,576.85 ,arks D and 26.30 Partmen�ounds 21.51 1,000.00 Town Accountant's Salary 47.16 Wict Federal Tax thholding from 1.54 Sa Blue .LOSS Deductions larl Co es Retire _ and Wages TeunTy che Teachers Retirern 33,303.97 u State Tax Group In ct. sur compensation 3,953.70 2(Less g of 622) InPloyer's 64 ,7.44 832.11 Elections and Registrations Town Offices Maint. & Repair 5524.78 , 149,272.50 1,728.69 2_ 52,734-42 6g 1,171,885.26 PAYMENTS Moderator's Salary Selectmen's Salaries 50.00 6,000.00 Selectmen's Expense Board of Public Welfare Salaries 1,112.36 1,200.00 Assessors' Salaries Assessors' Expense 6,000.00 1,001.66 Assessors' Expense - 1958 Assessors' Maps 21.51 1,000.00 Town Accountant's Salary 3,100.00 469.81 Town Accountant's Expense 1,700.00 Collector's Salary Treasurer's Salary 2,000.00 Town Clerk's Salary 800.00 Collector's, Treasurer's and Town Clerk's 297.86 1, Expense Finance Committee Expense 118.75 1,441.64 Elections and Registrations Town Offices Maint. & Repair 5524.78 , Clerical Expense 5 153.00 22.19 Tax Title Expense Town Counsel & Legal Expense 2 419.66 108.65 Appeal Board Expense Planning 179.51 Board Expense Recreation 3 544.35 Hall Expense Engineering 1,965.51 Police Depa rtment 24113.55 , 100.00 Constables' Salaries Traffic Signs 191.01 Uniforms for Police 398.92 1,050.00 New Cruiser for Police Fire Department 9,039.34 Communication Center 7,954.65 610.74 Rescue Truck Expense Boat, Trailer Motor for Rescue Squad 899,68 1 961.08 Civil Defense Building g Code Expense ,462.99 276.00 Wire Inspection Sealer of Weights and Measures 400.31 3'188.26 Insect Pest Control Tree Warden 2,088.22 Shade s 497.50 1,407.70 Dutch Elm Disease Health General 12'077.13 - Health Department Bulldozer 1'884 75 Red Cross Water Safety 330.40 Greenhead Fly Control 69 Inspection of Animals Land - Harry C. Bonnell 2,500.00 Ambulance 100.00 Drainage Engineering Survey 5'500.00 Highways - General Land - George W. Cummings Snow Removal 3,000.00 1,510.08 Beach & Meadow Land at Nauset Highway Machine 34,744.20 75.00 Care of Herring Brook Chap, 90 VO StmryonBu9ding 4,768.62 5.59 Chap. nce Herring Brook Improvement Grade 9pMmntena 1958 1,873.04 Shellfish Protection & Propagation 3,026.16 & Pave Doane Shellfish Projects 920.10 Herring Brook Way and ay 3,000.00 Interest -Notes &Bonds 7,300.00 ane Street Lights Kescayogansett 1'142'77 Retirement High School Bonds 1,000.00 Retirement Elem. Sch. Bonds & Notes 21,000.00 Harbor Master's Sala 3,388.57 Petty Cash Advance 25.00 Dock &FlOat at rl' & Expense 8 161.71 County Retirement 5,585.65 Channel Markers °wn COve Teachers Retirement 6,821.90 Public 3 138.52 Disab' welfare (Gene r 1,471.79 Blue Cross 3832.101 Aid to DeAssistance al Relief) 659.56 Teachers Group Insurance 2 217.74 Old pendent Children 3,814.70 State Tax Deductions 34,244.78 Adnu�sterAi tance 4,664.02 Federal Tax Deductions 2,45 Free Bed ati °n Charities 6,501.57 Overpayments to Collector 259.38 Veterans Benefi C 56,017.43 Insurance Refund in Error 586.25 schools is od Hospital 4,196.62 Dog Licenses for County Schools _ 8 500.00 Temporary Loans - Anticipation School 195 150,000.00 6,214,78 of Revenue 1,700.27 Vocationalmttee Sal 181,070.18 State Parks & Reservations 1,791.17 School LunEducatio arses State Audit 6,092.00 school Athletic, h n 337.10 Mosquito Control 350.00 47,593.90 Regional Scho 4,938.32 County Tax 4,541.15 Pre m• Plans .1 Dist 19,590.44 Retirement System 11,000.00 Party 1 ibr ry Elem S Oo 1,438.27 Court Judgments 165.00 & Pla ch l Addition 101,122.70 Clement Gould &Wife Fund 278.71 Aliscellaneouss Ounds 1,000.00 Clayton Mayo Trust Fund 10,559.66 ITnsurance & Bonds 2,696.73 Snow Library Trust Fund 51.78 U wn Reports 15,319.91 Cemetery Perpetual Care Fund 25,000.00 Me aid Btls °f 185 344.64 Stabilization Fund 324.62 8 9.887.14 Nat'l Defense - Education Program 780 OS 7ulmonal & Veterans D Donations for Library Books 45,20 Chi s4tmas D. ratio Day 1,193.33 Donations to Rescue Truck Fund 000.00 1'ubiic T n 107.39 4, Adv, Amusement & Party 435.45 Matured Bonds 241.95 Collector's Fees Bepairs to erate b. 476.50 Int. Transferred to Trust & 367.00 Naudto Pu he 4.54 eCOncerts ation Build Info, Boo 1 498 Investment Funds 537.31 t Beach tag 1300th 31 Real Estate Tax Refunds 124,87 Waterways I BU�din 3,906,45 Personal Property Tax Refunds 1 823.63 red DBeach par .TnproveInenCOthtnitt 67.47 Motor Vehicle Excise Refunds 983,266.48 emettee 8 Narrow s eas y t COolt4 ttee 226.00 -� 188 SoldiernM nTomb POnds 66400 Cash on Hand December 31 1,171,885.26 nments 3,121 82 1,733.00 71 673.75 70 643.75 rl Adv. Town & Operate Information Booth 93.55 Balances Tansfe Cemeteries &Tomb 6.25 r Soldiers Monuments Town Accountant's E �� tO Revenue Account 723.84 Collector's, Treasurer's &ense Shellfish Protection & Propagation Expense' n Clerks 105.19 14,008.78 Finance eos ommittee Expense 2.14 & Reestraions Clen'ca�ExPettsMe mte 31.25 Balances to 1900 Tax nance & Repair 258.36 Water Holes 496.07 Title Ex e 475.22 74.31 Town Counsel &e 489.00 Civil Defense 32,157.36 Appeal Board gal E e 177.81 Chap. 90 Construction - 1958 19 800.00 Chap. 90 Construction - 1959 107.23 Planning Board EXnSe nse 755.34 Grade & Pave Doane Way 43 TRecreaion Hall Expense 141.35 Herring Brook Way & Kescayogansett Rd. 100.00 . cSring Pense 70.19 Land Damage and /or Awards 8.77 246.88 Recreation Hall Expense - 1959 500.00 Cow s for Police 531.49 Fireworks Display 8,753.00 Rescue ruck ation Center 8.99 Dredging Narrows & Ponds 32g,18 Boat, Trailer, tPellSe 1.035 Beach Parking Areas 2250-00 Buil ' Shore Protection at Skaket Beach ense 335.59 Buil -og Code Ex a for Rescue quad 189.26 Waterways Improvement Committee Exp 334.50 Sealer of P nse S 32 Cove & Bay Launching Facilities 98,15 Insect P gilts & 137.01 Nauset Beach Building Committee 50.00 1 Tree Wardell °ntrol Measures 24.00 Historical Committee Expense 25,000.00 Shade Trees 105,99 Highway Garage Building 94.00 Health _ 11.74 Beach Land Nauset 3,618.02 Health D artM 11.78 Beach & Meadow Land at Nauset 80,02 'dater Safety Bulldo 2.50 Herring Brook - 1956 300.00 fnSPection y COmmitte zet 202.87 Herring Brook Improvement 2,700,00 0 ghwa °f Slau e Land - Frank Joy, Inc. 8,000.00 Snow e - Geuer ghterin9 106.52 School Addition - Plans, etc. 2,500.00 Ifigh., moval 1 139.25 Project #9 - Water Drainage System 617.68 Street Li Ma0>line 25.00 Shellfish Projects _� Dock & Float ry & Building 231.38 108,263.31 Veblice�elfaceersTo Cove ter 136.29 eOjSS Benefits 28.21 ESTIMATED RECEIPTS 15.44 Receipts VOCaioual I Mts nLibra ydueatioq ,215.30 M, V. Excise $a6,324.85 llanep 685,22 Estimated $226,077.70 Refunds) 24.88 fnsUt U3 (Less R To ante & 2,771.23 Animal Excise Farm 62 Me n Reports °nds 861.68 Moth Assessment 53,362.12 JulmOt & Ve 1,103.56 income Tax 19,795.47 36 Corporation Tax 1,647.64 pnb tmas Djbra ioanns Day 1,314.71 Meat Tax ho AmIts ement& PAY 239.55 133.50 73 25.46 72 1.69 High School Transpor- Transfer Salaries March ]0 Appro. 6,500.00 tation & Tuitions - to Selectmen's Commonwealth 12,897.14 Salaries 500.00 Licenses & Permits 81831.00 Arthur R. Finlay 2,000.00 Commercial Revenue 53,156.46 Franklin S. Murray 2,000.00 Veterans Benefits 2,885.56 Richard H. Adams 2,000.00 Charities 34,948.28 6,500.00 Sales 102.35 6,500.00 Interest 1,768,34 Balance chool Construction ce to Revenue Assessors' Expense 16447. Grant 3,991.73 March 1 OAppro• 1,000.00 ' 18 Unclassified 2 722.56 printing & Postage 78.79 1.66 `- Travel & Meetings 298.99 Transfer 242,524.88 Association Dues 29.00 CI ASS 242,524.88 Pypmg & Clerical 98.25 InCATION Photostats & Copies of Kenrick q Sparrow Moderator SOSa PAYMENTS Deeds, Plans, etc. 216.35 $50,00 1ary Binding Tax Sheets 34.45 March 10 Appro. $50.00 Dfftce Supplies 14.55 50.00 Searching Titles 31.28 50-00 Appraisal Service 200.00 Selectmen's 1,001.66 Franklin mthur R. Finlay Richard S, Murray 2,000.00 Sajanes 1,001.66 H• Adams 2,000.00 March 10 Appro's 5,500.00 _ 1958 2,000.00 Transfer from Assessors' Expense $21.51 Assessors' Salaries 500.00 Photostats of Deeds Jan. 1 Balance 6,000.00 $21.51 21.51 Selectmen's 6,000.00 Advertising Hearings 21.51 Pri cc & postage ;:11Se au ge 133,28 d SuPPlies TaVe1�Pp1i� 75000 Assessors' Maps 81,49 March 10 Appro. March 10 ApPro• 1 000 00 &• Meetings 48.73 rthur L. Sparrow Co. 1,000.00 Association Dues rs 362.36 1,000.00 ce Machines 3 58 p.0 BoXiPment 64.3p 1,000.00 Rent 223,38 3.60 Town Accountant's Salary ro 3,100.00 "112.36 Harry F. Childs 3,100-00 March 10 APP 3,100.00 FranklinR Flay Board of P 1 3,100.00 S ubIle Richard Ii. Aa msy 400.00 welfare Salaries Town Accountant's Expense 575.00 400.00 March 10 APpro. 1,200.011 Typing 63.00 March 10 ApPro• Dffice Machines 54.85 1,200,00 Supplies 55.52 74 1,200.00 75 Printing & postage Travel & Meetings 163.74 Association Dues 112.50 Window Shades 4.00 1,433.32 16.20 Balance to Revenue 469.81 199.56 105.19 394.15 575.00 Francis 1. Rogers Collector's Salary 1,700.00 March 10 Appro. 1,700.00 Francis I. Rogets Treasurer', "Salary Finance Committee Expense Association Dues $15.00 March 10 ApPro- Salary of Secretary 100.00 Minutes Book 3.75 118.75 Balance to Revenue 31.25 5 150.00 75.00 Elections and Registrations March 10 APPr°- Registrars' Payrolls Election Payrolls 1,700-00 Printing & Postage Travel 1,700-00 Supplies Janitor -Town Meetings Election Workers Meals 2,000.00 March 10 Appro. 21000.00 2,000.00 2,000.00 Francis I' R08ers Town Clerk's Salary 800.00 March 10 Appro. 800,00 800.00 Collector's 800.00 1'Mting & Postage and DpPl es &ollo tor's Fees 11012.80 Telt'n Clerk's Expense TYPin Binder Assoc atio - 112.00 March 10 Appro. 1,300.00 Oaths ce blachDess 48.75 y Box RentRPxpre's% etc. 68.00 Balance to Revenue 1,297-86 2.14 1,300.00 _ 76 1,300-00 Balance to Revenue $1,027.52 165.00 105.63 39.49 61.50 25.00 17.50 1,441.64 258.36 1,700.00 $150.00 150.00 1,700.00 1,700.00 Town Offices Maintenance and Repairs 6 000.00 Janitor &Assistant 1,238.25 March W ApP Telephone 674.45 Fuel 1,433.32 Electricity 415.15 Janitor's Supplies 199.56 Repairs 394.15 Electric Fans 93.90 Bulletin Boards 4.62 Vacuum Cleaner 46.95 Termite Control 25.00 improve Little League Field 399.26 Hall Lights 55.70 Radiators for Vaults 342.62 Water Heater 186.26 Christmas Lights 15.59 5._-- Balance to Revenue 475.22 6,000.00 6,000.00 77 plveep • Brown Clerical Expense Cowen Harry Lou elano 2,665.50 March 10 Appro. Mabel 1i. W lds 1,830.50 Repairs filer 103.50 601.50 Balance 178.50 Chairs to Revenue 5.1 0 107.95 Supplies, etc. 489.00 P LCpapng 5,642,00 Deed, eed, etc• TaX Tit g Recording Fees $4.00 0 EXPellse 15.15 March 10 Appro. Balance to Revenue Police Department 0000 3613.58 Chief's Salary 22.19 Payrolls I� Paul p T 200.00 Recordi Henson J °veil Co . ng r 1j°Sel 332.22 P & Fill Law 8g & Postang Fees 1,200 �d Legal °pks 0 Expense ge Title Drai Searches n$a 25,00 911 March 10 Appro. Civil Easeme Adverbs n'neer nt 42.50 960.00 Legal getyice 100.00 15.00 Balance to 13.95 Revenue 2>419.66 755 34 ZA,dvertising 3,1 p Ass$ °cia -3- Clerical on Dues Appeal B 60 9Oara E XAee Balance to Revenue 42.7 March 10 Appro. Ing.65 250.00 3 Travel & Meetings Printing & Postage 51642'00 Association Dues Clerical Advertising Office Supplies 5,642-" 200-00 3,175.00 250.00 78 250.01 Balance to Revenue Planning Board Expense 48.52 March 10 Appro 23.12 20.00 16.75 37.20 34.22 179.81 70.19 250.00 Recreation Ball Expense Janitor 480.00 March 10 Appro Fuel 880.12 Electricity 149.16 Telephone 56.23 Janitor's Supplies 23.80 Repairs 615.50 Supervision & Instruction 601.50 Cabinet - Desk 70.61 Chairs 495.00 Amplifier 107.95 Supplies, etc. 64.48 250.00 250.00 3,800.00 3,544.35 Carried to 1960 8.77 Balance to Revenue 246.88 3,800.00 3,800.00 Engineering 10 Appro. 2,500.00 Plans, Prints, etc. $588.01 March Locating Bounds, etc. 1,380.50 1,968.51 Balance to Revenue 531.49 2,500.00 2,500.00 Police Department 0000 3613.58 Chief's Salary 00000 March 10 Appro. . Transfers Payrolls 14,489.38 Telephone 332.22 79 Radio Repairs printing & March 10 Appro. postage r. 188.85 Ian uiP1, & Supplies range 3,254,72 & 266, On•Du� Assn. Dues Matron &' Prisoner, 303.32 93.34 Meals Bicycle si la es photos Plates, 8350 etc. 11.80 1,050.00 31.69 Henry A. George A pgisrynnette New Signs Balance to Revenue Uniforms Balance to Revenue Advertising Duarte o for Bids Motors, Inc. Chiers Sal Payrolls aD' Engines rs Radi Salaries APPa at ePairs Apparatus Supplies 24,113,58 Constables Salaries 50.00 100.00 24,113.58 March 10 Appro. 100.00 Traffic Signs 1.01 March 10 Appro. 200.00 U> 9� for police 100.00 200.p0 200 0 Gasoline, Oil, etc. Extinguishers Fuel Electricity Station Repairs Station Supplies Telephone Insurance Balance to 1960 Payrolls Supplies Radio Repairs Other Repairs Office Equipment Tools Printing & Postage Balance to Revenue 811.64 11.75 462.81 337.40 396.78 165.67 208.27 225.75 9,039.34 Water Holes 496.07 Jan. I Balance 496.07 Communication Center 7,385.00 March 10 Appro. 56.68 303.72 23.89 104.50 74.86 6.00 7,954.65 .35 7,955.00 Rescue Truck Expense March 10 APpro' Salary of Captain Oxygen & Supplies Gasoline, Oil, etc. Foul Weather Suits Printing Repairs Equipment Rescue patches Laundry First Aid Kits & Manuals Meals on 'Duty, etc. Balance to Revenue 100.00 148.67 53.18 39.55 13.50 29.89 20.60 110.00 11.30 68.00 16.05 610.74 189.26 800.00 80 81 9,039.34 496.07 496.07 7,955.00 7,955.00 800.00 800.00 March 10 Appro. 400.00 400.00 New polic e 004 00 2.25 1,047,75 Cruiser 1 0 5 March 10 Appro. 1,050.00 Fire De 1 $a,g0p.00 pent 863.00 190,0p Refun 10 Appro. 8,875.00 373.09 292.88 Tr aus a r 33.p0 131.34 Gasoline, Oil, etc. Extinguishers Fuel Electricity Station Repairs Station Supplies Telephone Insurance Balance to 1960 Payrolls Supplies Radio Repairs Other Repairs Office Equipment Tools Printing & Postage Balance to Revenue 811.64 11.75 462.81 337.40 396.78 165.67 208.27 225.75 9,039.34 Water Holes 496.07 Jan. I Balance 496.07 Communication Center 7,385.00 March 10 Appro. 56.68 303.72 23.89 104.50 74.86 6.00 7,954.65 .35 7,955.00 Rescue Truck Expense March 10 APpro' Salary of Captain Oxygen & Supplies Gasoline, Oil, etc. Foul Weather Suits Printing Repairs Equipment Rescue patches Laundry First Aid Kits & Manuals Meals on 'Duty, etc. Balance to Revenue 100.00 148.67 53.18 39.55 13.50 29.89 20.60 110.00 11.30 68.00 16.05 610.74 189.26 800.00 80 81 9,039.34 496.07 496.07 7,955.00 7,955.00 800.00 800.00 Added Equipment t0 Wire Inspection Pmen Tire Tubes t 11.50 eueUek I'' March 10 APP1O• 300.00 Fund Charles O. Thompson 276.00 33.70 Jan- 1 Balance 67'71 Balance to Revenue 24.00 Balance to 196 7959 Donations 97'00 300.00 0 45.20 300.00 119.51 Sealer of Weights and Measures Boat, -� March 10 Appro. 500.00 Boa, at, 1 Charles F. Moore 113.32 Add Trailer, Moto wader' Mot 164.7 Warren W. Baker 221.16 Refund 6.30 Service to Mo o't 5 etc. 787 9$ r for Rescue Squad 00 00 Use Travel Testing Equipment 21 00 A ro. 18.55 oh 10 pp 9 Supplies, etc. 19.83 Balance to Revenue 899-68 400.31 3 2 Balance to Revenue 105.99 506.30 900.00 506.30 Fire iuunieatiuns Ct ' 0099 .00 Insect Pest Control Rescue Police Defense Emile A. 011ivier $609.00 March 10 APprO• 3,200.00 6.0 Traraining &iF,dueati 419.49 Jan. 1 Balance 35.39 Payrolls 1,058.20 ra pOtt u on 769.42 Mar 00 Truck Hire 608.00 Tellfare 48 20 ch 10 Appro. 2,000. Equipment & Repairs 93.09 Print�One 259.0j Insecticides 279.11 8 Posts 17,1 Contract Spraying 469.61 ping & Re etc. 177.13 Gasoline, Oil, Pant 71.25 g Pairs 45,06 Ot&ce Supplies 111.68 3,188.26 47,24 Balance to Revenue 11.74 Bala 3p.73 3,200.00 Balance to 1960 1` 3,200.00 61.08 74,31 Tree Warden. ro. 2,100.00 Payrolls 743.80 March 10 APP k' Bruce B 2'035.39 Truck Hire, etc. 193.00 Travel psMitchell uildjn -� Travel & Meetings 28.00 Printing gPense 1 B Code E 2,035.39 Equipment & Supplies 59.98 Office 9 & postage 296.00 tense Fertilizer, Loam, Moss 361056 es 129.1p Weed March W Appro. 1,600.00 Red Maples 44100 Balance to Revenue 1� Posts P .. 70-00 462'99 2,088.22 137.01 Balance to Revenue 11'78 2,100.00 1, 2,100.00 82 1,600.00 83 Payrolls. Shade Trees Health Department Bulldozer 2,000.00 Truck Hire 99 Travel Expense 43.48 March 10 Appro. Strz�n- Cherry Trees Strapping 36.00 March 10 Appro. 500.00 F. H. Sargent & Son 1,850.00 352,80 1,893.48 9,00 Balance to Revenue 106.52 Balance Revenue ce to Rev 497.50 2,000.00 2,000.00 2.50 500.00 Water Safety Pa Payrolls 1) 500.00 Payrolls 682.00 March 10 Appro. 1,025.00 Track Hire 1 ch E� Disease Printing 6.75 etc Tree Climbi 806.70 Boat, Anchor, Rope 158.44 Removing Stg ° 400.00 March 10 A Appro. 1, 400.00 Use of P. A. System 15.00 ap 176,00 Transfer 7,70 Medals & Watermelons 23.56 25.00 885.75 1,407.70 Balance to Revenue 139.25 Nurses' Salaries Beal 1,407.70 �� 1,025.00 1,025.00 Teleph°ne°PPliey 81000.00 ' General ravelaEX 'nse 136.1g March 10 Appro. 12,280.00 Greenhead Fly Control Balance 330.40 Healt °Dues M�t1°8s 03 473.09 Commonwealth of Mass. 330.40 Jan. 1 Meals °n D 44'00 ,_� 330.40 Su rtisin uty Supplies, 91.76 330.40 e • Total 22•g5 22.54 Inspection of Animals 100.00 TractoWalChaNursin9 Ralph R. Mayo 100.00 March 10 Appro• Repairs r Ham ire $1,900.00 5,924.11 100.00 100.00 Rubb sh Dtl, etc Sand i C°lleetic 445.3p 73.00 Slang htering Poi °'place ° sOU, etc. 149.22 Inspection of March 1 0 APPro• 25.00 Total Cam 407.0 0 Balance to Revenue � 25.00 °f D uqP 58400 25.00 Bala Balance to Revetlue 3,153.02 Amb ulance Hire 10 APPro• 3,000.00 12'077.13 March Brewster, Orleans, Eastham 3,000.00 202-87 Ambulance Assn. Inc. 3,000.00 2 12 \ 80.00 3,000400 84 12,280.00 85 Transfer tog & D Anti -Rab u reatlnent 50.00 50,00 Jan, l Balance 50.00 50.00 1 Frederick G Payrolls 'kayo Asphalt St of. eetc. Casol� eat It k'hite Lin� e'c. Street Signs OUard ry & uces Su Y Disinf Hounds Pipe octant & Brooms Catch Ba 'as RepWin, Associatia Signs n Dues, etc. Balance to Revenue Payrolls Salt& kdcl'hre Gasoli ne, Gil etc Balance to Revenue lfighlvays - General $4,400.00 11,301,00 March 10 Appro. 8,556 '7s March 10 Appro. 7,004,38 283,58 1,250,40 988.21 221,42 47.60 60.45 121,28 354,65 62.96 81.50 10.22 3q'7 4 20 3q,750.00 It $ e 9)2 00 moval 1,83g9p March 10 Appro. 109,47 4,) z\ Equip,,, ent M1ghW 5'0po.00 Machine t Repairs ay Mac ctpm`ytarts & Supplies 610.12 and 8Ui Telephone 27.48 March I Pero. 161.)9 3,31 34,350.00 400.00 34 5,000.00 5,0� 1,875.00 Fuel 54.15 Insurance, etc. 81.36 1,873.04 Balance to Revenue 1.96 Advertising Truck Express Balance to 1960 Balance to 1960 1,875.00 Chapter 90 Construction - 1958 4.50 Jan. 1 Balance 51.01 55.51 32,157.36 32,212.87 Chapter 90 Construction - 1959 19,800.00 March 10 Appro. From E. & D. 19,800-00 Chapter 90 Maintenance Payrolls Equipment Hire Town -line Signs Asphalt, Stone, etc. Postage & Express Payrolls Equipment Hire Balance to 1960 $730.13 March 10 APPro- 614.00 From E. & D. 25.35 1,625.67 4.85 3,000.00 Grade and Pave Doane Way March 10 Appro. 204.00 938.77 1_� 107.23 1,250.00 87 1,875.00 32,212.87 32,212.87 4,800.00 15,000.00 19,800.00 1,000.00 2,000.00 3,000.00 1,250.00 1,250.00 Payrolls 8ertpg Brook way and Kescayogansett Road Asphalt, Hire 349.50 Harbor Master's Salary and ExPense Asphalt, Mix etc. 899,25 Jan, I Balance 3,389.00 W Nickerson $1,200.00 Appro. Highway Posts 1,879:82 Payrolls Transfers 76.50 Travel Allowance 300.00 Balance to 1960 3,388-57 Beacons Maintenance 270.43 43 Comfort Station Expense 108.14 Repair Docks Lights 42.05 � 3,389,00 New Range Lights 604.46 -� Water Pump 3,389.00 142.94 l�alld D Remove Sand Bar 150.00 atnage Replace Broken Piling 100.00 Balance to 1960 Depot $ and/or 'Equipment & Supplies 94.10 9na1e t0 West Painting, g 100,00 Road signs, ns, etc. 49.90 Jan. I Balance 00 100.00 ce 100. 3,138.52 100.00 Dock and Float at Town Cove Transfer toB, & D. Street Sidewalk Removing Old Dock 39.00 March 10 APPro. 88-29 Three Floats - Delivered 779.00 Ia Lumber, etc. 345.11 "' 1 Balance 88.29 Irons &Hardware 65.68 _i Construction 243.00 Damp Transfer 88.29 Transfer to g. & ruck for ) 1,471.79 D. 89.59 gl1way Dept Balance to Revenue 28.21 ` la "' 1 Balance 1,500.00 89,59 ce 89.59 San Channel Markers to ApP Solid 99,59 ro. Transfer to spread Buoys M E. & D. 49-64 °r Fli9111vaY Dept, Chains, Shackles, etc. 251.56 hairs 1a"' I Balance 49.64 Balance to Revenue 615.44 Cape & St 49.64 675.00 Baldric CoaeYard teat 'Aghts Balance to Revepue 8, Public Welfare March 10 APPro. 131'7j March 10 Cash Grants 1,424.1 Mar March 10 APPro. 8,250.00 Groceries & Provisions 451.88 8,29. 48.00 Puel 145.20 8,298.00 Hospital & Medical 853.67 Staten" Care 300.00 88 8,298.00 Institutions 427.50 89 2,500.00 638.52 3.�- 1,500.00 1,500.00 675.00 675.00 5,000.00 M�Bancous Rehsceef by Other Towns 38.10 A.D.C. - Federal Grants 144.25 Cash Grants 1,501.57 Jan. I Balance 1,113.32 2,002.00 Balance to Revenue 3'784.70 Trans. to D. A. Fed. Trans, 900.00 Grants 1,215.30 to O. A. A. Fed. 450.00 5'000.00 � 5,000.00 Balance to 1960 2,851.57 263.75 Cash (;rants Disability A ssistance 3,115.32 3,115.32 3,000.Op Mar March 10 Appro. 3 O. A. A. - Federal Grants 1 327 a7 3,0 0 Cash Grants 20,974.28 Jan. 1 Balance 19,147.14 Cash Grants Aid t0 3,000.00 Grants Recovery 3.86 A7.16 Depend S.00 t Childrep 00 Refund Trans. from A. D. C' 450.00 _ 5,000.00 March 10 Appro. 5,000. 00 Balance to 1960 1.35 Fed. 20,975.63 Cash Grants 5,000-00 20,975.63 old A$e Assistance D. A. Administration - Federal Grants 204.76 $3s, IS 043, Eleanor S . Blake 257.14 Jan. 1 Balance 147.89 _ Mar Refu Appro. 35,043.05 Telephone Travel & 21.00 Grants 35,043.15 ds0 Meetings 24.15 Eleanor Tenting & P ske A�,1„„�,�' , v5aaoU -- 35,043'15 Balance to 1960 350.36 Telephone ta8e el n 899.99 C harities 352.65 qs h4eetin Gill lation ce 15.86 Mar March 10 Appro. 1,200.00 352.65 Grants ke rNuipDue, 3g 93 A. D. C. Administration ' Federal Balance 243.14 Supplies 36.00 128.24 Eleaaor S. Blake Telephoae 642.85 Jan, 1. Grants 630.86 23.58 Travel & Meetings 33.45 14.40 1,200.00 Supplies 1.87 Cash Bala Gr nce to 1960 D' A. •Federal - 1,200.00 Balance to 692.57 181.43 _ 1664.02 291.68 Grants 1960 874,00 Jan. I Grants 91.20 874.00 Federal Grants Trrans, from A. 964.50 O. A. A. Administration - 1 Balance 437.49 1,801.32 1�` 5.7p D. C 900.00 El Telephone S. Blake 1,285.71 Jan. ants _ 94.23 90 1,955.70 91 Travel & Meetings School committee Salaries Association Dues 110.55 Printing & Postage 30.00 Medical Advice 378.08 Equipment & Supplies 10.00 123.19 Balance to 1960 2,031.76 207.05 2,238.81 Sundry Persons Free Bed • Cape Co Cape Cod Hospital 359.35 d BosPital 140.65 March 10 Appro, 500,00 Lawrence A. Baker Ordi ary ABc a Expense Fuel wanes Medical & Hospi Groceries tal Balance to Revenue Veterans Benefits 666.67 31324.00 'March 10 Appro. 546.86 1,399.41 165.00 6,214.78 685.22 6,900.00 Expended Balance to Revenue 181,070 18 schools N. B. See Super"neudent's R P8� Opaque Repair Te9 lector High School T'aXSeBook March 10 Refunds APPro. schools ' 1958 3 9 3.89 1a °' 1 Balance 3 0 School committee Salaries Philip Martin 70.00 March 10 Appro. 350.00 Orin Tovrov 70.00 Frederick Rogers 70.00 Charity Kidd 70.00 Everett Winslow 70.00 �- 350.00 350.00 2,238'81 Vocational Education 51800.00 Bristol County Agricultural March 10 Appro. Schoo 1, 500.00 Town of Barnstable 923.20 500.00 Town of Provincetown 380.25 Town of Chatham 4.20 _ 500.00 Town of Harwich Transportation 18.00 2,112.67 4,938.32 Balance to Revenue 861.68 - 5,800.00 6,90000 5,800.00 School Lunch 2000.00 Food Supplies March 10 Appro. 2,000.00 2,000.00 00 2,000-00 6,900.00 School Lunch Fund 774.86 Payrolls Jan. 1 Balance 7,042.50 1959 Grants 5,666.29 13,566.51 183,802.00 Fund Supplies Equipment 10,048.49 Lunch Receipts 39.41 & Supplies Oas 152.93 109.80 183,841.41 Transportation Worker's Instruction 154.57 61.40 }Tice supplies Repairs 11.00 9.75 337.10 Balance to 1960 i 17,590.44 2,417.22 20,007.66 20,007.66 337.10 93 Game Oti'icials School Athletic Fund Balance ce to 1960 Travel Equipment Police 538.00 49-48 Jan. I Balance 403.53 Supplies 328.15 1959 Receipts 1,042.75 Repairs Janitors 45.00 235.21 3,125.00 Ruth L. Barnard Bus Driver 119.43 45.00 Assistant 33.00 42.00 78.00 171.87 Association Dues 1°surance, Transfer to E. & D. 1,438.27 18.60 Mel 340.35 8.01 Electricity 158.79 1,446.28 161.48 Easthatn> prleans Region al Assessment,, , w °wee t 233.25 1,446.28 Loan costs xpeases 17.76 $eglonal School District Printing, Postage, etc. 5 1,216,09 2,696.73 49,906,61 101,01, March 10 Appro March 10 51,216.09 0 gppro 49, 906.61 National D efeuse 3,800.29 101,122.70 scien"r to Schools 614.00 Educate on 780.08 Jan. 1 Balance 1959 Donations Public Law85 864 der 18.72 Federal 2.88 Balance to 3` Received in 1959 381.39 1960 343-34 381.39 Transfer to E. & D, NeW El a 381.39 256-97 °tary School FreuaWt Platt 2 6 Jan' 1 Balance 256.97 Smith & Selle w s for El 256.97 1,Op0p0emeht Addition 1,0 Deesehool Transfer Reserve Fund 1,000.00 94 1,000.00 Plans and Specifications - Elementary School Addition Balance ce to 1960 8,000.00 ec. 11 APPro• 81000.00 � 327.92 49.31 E`luipment g,000.00 Electricity 8,000.00 Telephone 262.80 Snow Library 3,125.00 Ruth L. Barnard 1,500.00 March 10 Appro• Dog Tax Refund 675.29 Assistant 33.00 42.00 Janitor 171.87 Association Dues 1°surance, Periodicals 35.00 18.60 Mel 340.35 Electricity 158.79 Repairs 161.48 Care of Grounds 233.25 Janitor's Supplies 17.76 Printing, Postage, etc. 45.23 2,696.73 Balance to Revenue 1,103.56 3,800.29 3,800.29 Snow Library • Donations for Books 614.00 Books 780.08 Jan. 1 Balance 1959 Donations 168.96 Balance to 1960 2.88 -_ 782.96 782.96 Parks and Playgrounds March 10 Appro. Refund Transfer Payrolls 11,865.75 Truck Expense General 361.53 Supplies Ol&ce Supplies 327.92 49.31 E`luipment 403.43 Electricity 140.97 Telephone 262.80 Repairs 315.00 Travel &Meetings Travel 116.55 in Supervision Printing, 253.10 192.15 Postage, Express Typing 42.00 Laundry 19.65 Association Dues 1°surance, 15.00 etc. 18.60 M 15.311.00 1.54 7.37 Brush, Stomp ,Removal New Mower Bulldozing at Skaket So. at Park Care Spraying, etc. Funeral Flowers Earens&eDisposal of Dogs of otes Demolit' N Rea oving and from °use Bo Ramp Adv. Final Dates, etc. Nat'l Aark Reports Balance to Revenue 124.00 472.00 200.00 50.00 90.15 15,319.91 Miseellane.us 20.00 24.00 4.84 187.00 50 '00 6.60 52,20 344.64 155,36 500.00 March 10 Appro. C suatlee r and Bonds: ompensation 80bds Collector's 1'591.04 Treasurer, "'are, Asst Treasure 318.70 Refunds 0 APpro. 9,625.00 Memorial and Ve' nlarcD to APPrO 675.00 Town Clerk,,, rs 173.60 1,576.85 Flowers, plants, etc. 180.45 De put 40,00 Orleans Band 225.00 Fire Insur CO Cllector's 10, Public Address System 30.00 Ric anc h 00 Sidneyd.1R1c 10.00 T. Sw 435.45 `I oo Fle vey xOnse 4-963-74 10,60 Balance to Revenue 239.55 675.00 is bility.Eldredg c 2 24g.51 675.00 Field 84.95 136.00 Reve nue 9,88 July 4th Celebr ti nh 10 Appro. 800.0 Balance to 7 14 Prizes 271.50 1 ,314.71 Printin g 5.00 1120 The Capetones 50.00 1'85 Construction Bonfire 200.00 Orleans Band 125.00 96 11,201.85 97 Town Reports Kendall Printing Co. 1,169.35 March 10 APpro. 1,200.00 Envelopes & Postage 15.98 Transportation Cost 8.00 - 1,193.33 15,319.91 Balance to Revenue 6.67 1,200.00 1.200.00 Unpaid Bills of 1958 10739 500.00 Public Welfare: March 10 APPro. Robert E. Dickson. D.M.D. 12.00 Police: Orleans Motors 46.20 Schools: Suburban Gas Corp. 7.35 Dorothy A. Gill 35.00 Science Research Assoc'+ 6.84 107.39 7301 9 Historical Committee Expee g0,00 500.00 March 10 APPrO' Balance to 1960 50.00 90.00 50.00 Public Address System 15.00 Balance to Revenue 666.50 133.50 800.00 800.00 Balance to 1960 Fueworks Display 500.00 March 10 Appro. 500.00 500.00 C 500.00 Electricity �hnas Display and Electrical work C Yule Scene gr m 24.29 luldrell S Party Lumber 8, Display 9 12000 March 10 Appro 500.00 tuber & Rspla Candy ror ds 100.00 Sant Children 28.25 Suit for Claus () 42'00 50.00 51.00 Balance to Revenue 474-54 25.46 500.00 Youth Youth Progam'supervisio Public Ara 500.00 Youth Progra Insurance 205.00 ht Little .,eaguem Siipplies 75.00 Marc Little Le Printing h 10 q Little Le g0e$upplie 7.15 Pero. 1,500.00 pony League Insur�rs 228.3 A. ague ance 30.00 A. C. UmPires PPlies 80.00 A. C. E9uiPt. 19.65 - Insuranc&e Supplies 242.00 527.68 Balance to Revenue 1,4' g 6.31 1.69 11500.00 98 1,500.00 Information Booth Advertise Town and Operate Public 2,000 Payrolls March 10 Appro. 943.50 Funds 2,000.00 Printin g &Postage 2,414.01 Matching Advertising for Bids 2.55 Electricity 13.01 Telephone 185.91 Bass Prizes 131.25 Clerical Hire 60.00 Sign at Rotary 98.48 Moving Booth 50.00 Orrice Supplies 7.74 3,906.45 Balance 1 0 Revenue 93.55 4,p00.00 4,000.00 Reserve Fund Transfer Dredging Narrows & Ponds Selectmen's 486.00 Expense Harbor Master's 362.36 638.52 Expense Dutch $lm Disease 7.70 Interest -Notes & Bonds Elem• 27.50 School Addition Police 1,000.00 Fire Department 613.58 131.34 Assessors' Expense 1.66 Parks & Playgrounds 7.37 Balance to Overlay Surplus 3.276.03 1,723.97 5.000.00 March 10 - lug 5,000.00 from Overlay Surf 99 5,000.00 67.47 900.00 900.00 Recreation Building Electrical Work Repairs to Balance Jan. 1 35.30 Carpenter Work 32,17 67.47 ,and Concerts 10 APPro. Orleans Band M arch 900.00 900.00 99 5,000.00 67.47 900.00 900.00 Plans & C,Nt a i atBeach Buil Plane Y 119 g Co 200.00 � ttee Expense 26.00 Jan. 1 Balance 284.15 Balance to 1960 226.00 58.15 TO 284.15 - Balance to 1960 Ove attd Pl 284.15 e 34.50 Bay Launching Facilities Jan. 1 Balance 334.50 Surveys RratergaYS 334.50 3_� Boat Hire prOyefielat Ativenp�'nts & perm 200.00 CO1nthittee - 1958 BUOY n8 for Bids Is Architect 195.00 Jan' 1 Balance 7.00 _500.00 66.50 3,65 677.02 Brush Cutting 15,00 Advertising 6.30 3,121.82 �, OtOPt;aYs SOO.00 LRuhbsrt I,awyer,s& Nails Irtt Dr VOfi01lt C 500.00 avel 105-65 °fit hltt0e March 10 APPrp' Balance to - 1959 'March 10 APPro. 2766 500.00. 1960 Pund ' Incom e N•t WjjjB 325.00 l6,4 from Tru st 3� 51.78 Balance ilo e re 500. 00 1.25 to 1960 1, loot 500.00 at 2250.00 SkMarc Beach 101 March Cons 2,2 O Prom E1 &APPro. b. 750.00 Sk StNethpk. Ar. latppOve $e S �P a 1,500.00 pkc Ar, Na 0 parlr:_ 2,250.00 °get Beach 2168.0 k ��s 105p0 March 10 Appro. 3,450.00 100 Payrolls 78.00 Equipment Hire 66.50 Asphalt 677.02 Brush Cutting 21.00 Advertising 6.30 3,121.82 Balance to 1960 328.18 3,450.00 and Tomb 3,450.00 Dredging Narrows and Ponds 10,000.00 Bacon n Construction Co. Balance , 733.00 March 10 APPro- Transfer 886.00 to 1960 8,753.00 50.00 10,486.00 10,486.00 47.91 20.09 Cemeteries and Tomb 675.00 tayrolls 293.38 March 10 APPrp' t'ertitizer. Lime, etc. Contract 55.37 Pund ' Incom e N•t WjjjB 325.00 Carl Perpetual Car from Tru st 673.75 51.78 Transfers balance to Revenue 1.25 51.78 675,00 675.00 101 i Soldiers iVlontunents 10 APPro' G5o.00 Payrolls 525.75 March PlagsMemorial Lots 50.00 t -itne 47.91 20.09 Balance to Revenue 64 6.25 6 056 00 Pund ' Incom e 51.78 Cemetery Carl Perpetual Car from Tru st Or leans Cemetery Assn. 51.78 Transfers 51.78 101 i Transfe Higil aY Garage Garay to ge Highway $Wilding Se Building 1958 _ 1959 3,000.00 Jan- 1 Balance 3,000.00 Balance to 1960 Land . Fra 2,700.00 Joy, Inc. 2,70o.00 Dec. 11 Appro. Harry C. Bonne Land u 2,500.00 Y C. golmell 250p Dec. 11 APPro Land - George W. Cunnings 3,000.00 George W. Cummings 500.00 March 10 APPrO• 500.00 3,000.00 Beach Land - Nauset Balance to 1960 94.00 Jan. 1 Balance 2,700.00 2,700.00 94.00 2500-00 Plans .00 Sun Sundry Persons Jan. 1 Balance 418.00 and SPecificati Balance to 1960 0 ns 200.00 2,500.00 117.08 8,OOO.(Io InentarY School 200.00 — Addition 1,510.08 Balance to 1960 8,000.00 . 11 Appro. 8,000.00 8ffighwaY Gar 8,000.00 age $101ding Balance to 1860 DRehabE 2S ,OOD,pO &rll' Sale Fnnd 19,343.27 843.07 Balance PrOlec 25 p 0 ofliR.'10" Art. 1j of 119 Sand 3,000.00 t0 1960 t NO• y - R ater 25,000.00 2 Drainage System Pay, S 2'SOB OB llec. 11 APPro. Inc. D °IfOrd g Th rad,�age Engine Bring S 5'000.00'OY March 10 5 °BOO.Op APPro 102 Beach and Meadow Land at Nauset Sun Sundry Persons Jan. 1 Balance 418.00 Title Search & Recordings 200.00 Survey, Plans, Prints 117.08 APPraisal Service Legal Services 200.00 575.00 1,510.08 Balance to 1960 3,618.02 5,128-10 Land - George B. Watts' et ux Transfer to E. & D. Theodore A. young 2,500.00 2,500.00 1- tunber 5,000.00 Balance to 1960 5,000.00 Jan. I Balance 28.00 28-00 BYOOk Care of Herring March 10 APPro. 75.00 75-00 500.00 500.00 94.00 94.00 5,128.10 5,128.111 28.00 28.00 75.00 Herring Brook 89,61 Jan Balance 5.59 � 8 80.02 5.61 85.61 103 Balance to Herring Brook 1960 B►tprovement Net Funded Debt Jan. 1 Balance 300.00 Elementary School Jan. 1 Balance 300.00 300.00 Light Fund 300.00 Arthur W. Nick hon Protection and Travel Allowance Allo ° 2,400.00 Propagation 85,67 an. J Balance J 1959 Payroll lumber, er, etc. 300,00 March 10 12.00 Appro. 3,750.00 Gasoline, Oil, etc. Outboard Motor 31.58 Wife Fund B9uipt. & RePairs 68,49 To Use For Charity 'Balance Jan. 1 Balance 200.00 X959 Interest 173.50 6,942.63 40.59 Balance to Revenue 3,026.16 723.84 3,750.00 Payroll Travel &Meeting Shellf>sh Projects 3,750.00 Chicken ° Wire, etc Sand for Clam Jan. 1 Balance g Clearing Sage � Dredging 50.1p 50.10 200.00 Grants 510.78 1,027.00 Seed Quahaugs 15 ().00 400.00 Balance to 1960 _ 920.10 617.68 1,51,5 Elementary S. Oft $ E6 th rh � l ul S hy ooes B oN T 20.()o and O 1,,537.78 N ts ofRm Mi 1,170.00 Monds arAPPrO• venue 10.00 Transfer 8000.00 7` 27.50 8,027.50 Feb. 25 _ 2nd Issue H. h SehOp] 8,027,50 0 Bonds 1 0 March 10 APPro, 1,000.00 104 11000.00 Retirement Elementary School 6Bondsand PNootes21000.00 May 29 - Notes 6,000.00 Aug. 15 - Ist Issue 10,000.00 Aug. 15 - 2nd Issue 5,000.00 -� 21.000.0C 21,000.00 To Use for Charity Balance to 1960 Balance to 1960 p1q" Clayton Mayo Trust Fund lance Jan. I 'a 275.00 1959 Int erest 26,907.06 27,182.06 Mary Celia Crosby Fund Jan. I Balance 1959 Interest 6,638.96 6,638.96 105 22,000.00 282,000.00 304,000.00 2,517.61 85.67 2,603.28 6,910.93 231.70 7,142.63 26,273.45 908.61 27, 6,443.21 195.75 6,638.96 Net Funded Debt Jan. 1 Balance 304,000.00 Retirement Balance to 1960: Elementary School 304,000.00 Investment and Trust Funds Light Fund Street Transfer to Town 85,67 an. J Balance J 1959 Balance to 1960 2,517.61 2� Wife Fund Clement Gould and To Use For Charity 'Balance Jan. 1 Balance 200.00 X959 Interest to 1960 6,942.63 7� To Use for Charity Balance to 1960 Balance to 1960 p1q" Clayton Mayo Trust Fund lance Jan. I 'a 275.00 1959 Int erest 26,907.06 27,182.06 Mary Celia Crosby Fund Jan. I Balance 1959 Interest 6,638.96 6,638.96 105 22,000.00 282,000.00 304,000.00 2,517.61 85.67 2,603.28 6,910.93 231.70 7,142.63 26,273.45 908.61 27, 6,443.21 195.75 6,638.96 S1Oa' Balance to 1960 Librar y Trust Fund REVENUE ACCOUNT 196,301.45 11,896.32 Jan. I Balance 11,623.10 March 10 Appropriations 626,418.09 May 22 - Real Tax 32208.69 Final Court judgements 728.50 Personal Tax 11,896-32 1959 Interest 273'22 State Parks & Reservations 1,866.43 June 1 - Real Tax 226,429.23 State Personal Tax 20,081.61 Ce Audit 1,791.17 077.70 To care of Lot, meter, P 11,896' Mosquito Control 6,092.00 June 10 - Esc• Receipts 226, 'Balance to 19 erPetual Care County Tax 50,763.81 Overestimates: 32.42 5,e7r Fund County Retirement 4,541.15 County Tax 20,07 4244.82 Jan. 1 ,,6 Overlay _ 1959 10,510.41 State Parks 20.39 19 Balance 4,157.- Mosquito Control Additions to Tax 19.98 1,540.00 4,296.60 59 Interest 139.34 June 16 - Poll Tax 221.82 To q Post July 2 - Omitted Real Tax H ghay Oar ben for war R'ehabilitati 4,296.6 July Propeomitted ty Tax Personal 68.28 Bldg. °n Fund Omitted Real Tax 60.69 Oct. 7 - 8g3.07 Ian' 1 Balance 818.35 Dec. 31 - Balances: 16447.18 ` 19S9 Interest 72 Est. Receipts 843.07 rest 24. Balance 702,731.54 Appropriations 14,008.78 c to E. & D. 30,786.77 -� Balance Stabtli 2at { °h 733,518.31 to 1960 843.07 733.518.31 Fun d 25,288.12 March 10 APpro. 5,000.00 25128_8-12_ 5.28 1959 Interest 288.12 EXCESS AND DEFICIENCY 25,288-12 Surplus Revenue 132,600.34 March 10 - Chap. 90 Jan. 1 - Balance 21.38 Maint. 2,000.00 Feb. 17 - Ins. Refund SUA, Chap. 90 Const. 15.000.00 March 10 - APPro' Balances: 90.00 Cash & Securities Ih� estate MA$Ii Stabilization Fund 25.000.00 Maitn S4 tSiderwa 89.59 84 ht a °d tQUket Shore Protec- 1 500.00 I-Iwy. Dump Truck eader 49.64 ,435.52 Fn Oct. 15 Tax 1.41 Hwy. Sand spreader 256.97 Stye nds Dec. 11 -Ele '-Elementary School New - G- 13, watts et ux 28.40 Street Lt� Refund Cl, jne °ht Fund Addition Y 8.000.00 Land - In 142. rtlon Cla 'Fond uuld & Wife '-'517.61 Land -Frank Joy, Inc. 2,700.00 April 90 Insurance Hlgh- 2000.00 Food Mayo T 6,942.63 and rust Hwy Garage Bldg. 19,343.27 April s 244.87 r L and -I;, C. Bunnell 2,500.00 �w Insurance Refund 741.72 Sun elia 26,907.06 project #9- Draina a 2,500.00 Oct. 2- Refund 754.50 W Libra Crosby, Fund 6,638.96 8 Nov. 5 - Insuranoss - 1958 C Fund ry Trust --� Dec. 22 -Ins. L Refund 37.16 78,544.68 Dec. 28 - Insurance o01 emetety Pe 11,896.32 Close Sch 8.01 8,41 StabiFZa on Fug al Care 4,244.82 Dec. Athlettic ced 30,7 Fund 25,288.12 Balance 10 1960 89,354.96 Revenue 167 899.64 106 -� 84,435.52 167 899.64 107 0 ME F a Y n O G 7 n X r d Zn rA C N O b 0 � w • o. a y � w n m` b r� y r1 y � r w I V .b b N 7 7 Qq d A w F+ OOOo �aw -3-3.3 myWW w C N m C a• n X i< X X iY ie X X X+ N nTfC"— H�?�oH• www �oc"dHNy N N ry+ j• �'a� 1C 4� !y ryw T y ti ply .ly I . I I l o �yy > d Hiwi'y�OOCw.nX. VJ��o�rgL lDn a.I �NO 'm a oaeru�y''i1H�Q ero'd`e :°•° k7 lrJ pow ��y0. " "ow< <X.0 . on <coro is rn� e w 'II G 0. a u b 00 i k C N N r N rn y ,•+ b N J-'j, .+A NNE � O4O NJ P� � 00 1 WNIn W JO NAW OOA-]OA ATII OO �O to oo OOCO ?.O A� -+I-+W ODD cb O OCn OA O%A CA 0 C W Oo N A Go � �NW— N NN wooTA O W.WN���-' A N AONOO �t�.1 a\ Aln O�wN 000 O00 1 oO ON GO GO w GO O 4A-4 � O �O O�OwO�OA N w ?Om as 0�0�10 Or, O W U�O—O tnAO cy, ray A N TOWN OF ORLEANS BALANCE SHEET — DECEMBER 31, 1959 GENERAL ACCOUNTS Assets Liabilities and Reserves Cash 188,618.78 Overlays Reserved for Abatement of Taxes: Levy of 1958 4,574.93 Levy of 1958: Levy of 1959 6,765.01 Personal Property 2,445. 3 11,339.94 Real Estate Overlay Surplus 8,956.16 4.574.93 Payroll Deductions: Levy of 1959: County Retirement System 478.41 Poll 8.00 Teachers' Retirement System 273.39 Personal Property 4,007.35 State Withholding Taxes 408.25 Real Estate 21,676.11 Federal Withholding Taxes 2,106.43 25,691.46 3,266.48 30,266.39 Proceeds of Dog Licenses 10.00 Motor Vehicle and Trailer Excise Tailings Account 92.66 Levy of 1958 34.14 3,754.46 Highway Machinery Fund 1,353.30 Levy of 1959 Overestimates in 1959: 3,788.60 State Parks and Reservations 166.16 Tax Titles 120.04 County Tax 3,169.91 Tax Possessions 737.40 3,336.07 Departmental: A.D.C. - Commonwealth 623.57 Trust Funds income: 10.00 O.A.A. - Mary I. Mayo 9,805.85 Mary Celia Crosby Fund 55.05 School Tuitions - Cities & Towns 1,329.60 Clement Gould and Wife Fund 12.13 School Building Rentals 82.50 Clayton Mayo Trust Fund 59.13 Services of School Nurse 433.33 Snow Library Trust Fund 12,274.85 136.31 F-� N General Accounts — Continued atenance: 1,000.00 1,000.00 2,000.00 11,000.00 Federal Grants Liabilities and Reserves D.A. Administration 50.36 Disability Assistance 291.68 A.D.C. Administration 181.43 Aid to Dependent Children 263.75 O.A.A. Administration 207.05 Old Age Assistance 1.35 i Beach Parking Areas 995.62 National Defense Education —P.L. 85 -864 38.05 School Lunch Program Waterways Improvement Committee 335.59 2,417.22 Revenue Reserved until Collected: i Motor Vehicle and Trailer Excise 3,788.60 Tax Title and Tax Possession 857.44 j Departmental 12,274.85 Aid to Highways 2,000.00 Beach Land — Nauset 18,920.89 Snow Library— Donations for Books Beach & Meadow Land at Nauset 2.88 Donations for Rescue Squad Expense Herring Brook 119.51 r Recoveries —Old Age Assistance Land —Frank Joy, Inc. 202.70 !' Excess and Deficiency 89,354.96 Appropriation Balances: Project #9 —Water Drainage Water Holes 496.07 h Civil Defense 74.31 Shellfish Projects Chapter 90 Construction -1958 32,157.36 248,806.06 Chapter 90 Construction -1959 19,800.00 DEBT ACCOUNTS genera! Accounts — Continued Grade and Pave Doane Way 107.23 Herring Brook Way and 43 Kescayogansett Road Land Damage and /or Awards 100.00 Recreation Hall Expense -1959 500.00 Fireworks Display Dredging Narrows and Ponds 8,3233.1000 Beach Parking Areas Shore Protection at Skaket Beach 2,250.00 Waterways Improvement Committee 335.59 Town Cove and Pleasant Bay Launching Facilities 334.50 Nauset Beach Building Committee 58.15 Historical Committee Expense 50.00 Highway Garage Building 25,000.00 Beach Land — Nauset 94.00 Beach & Meadow Land at Nauset 3,680.02 Herring Brook Land —Frank Joy, Inc. 2,700.00 Plans and Specifications — Addition to Elementary School 8,000.00 Project #9 —Water Drainage 2,500.00 107,645.63 Shellfish Projects 617.68 248,806.06 248,806.06 DEBT ACCOUNTS Net Funded of Fixed Debt 282,000.00 Elementary School Building Loan 282,000.00 282,000.00 282,000.00 'C 0 U +2 R lei d m O U a F. W W Q ti j 9 y Z M a c a v a N 1pbpgm ryN ry %6 I a a N pp w,� k vyW0.0 �tOE"4? w � ,U a a,U � a � OU�4 t 0 N. m m yUy h V h m 0 v c h U 112 Town Clerk's Report In response to a legally posted Warrant, the Inhabitants of the Town of Orleans, qualified to vote in elections and the 9th dayirsI in town of met at the High School Auditorium, on Monday, March (1959) at 6:30 P.M. then and there to act on the following articles:- And to meet at the Town Office Building at 10 to0electoall in the forenoon on Wednesday the 11th day of March, A necessary lose Office P.M. p•polls to be open at 10:00 o clock . and may The meeting was called to order at 6:40 P.M- by the Moder- ator, Kenrick A. Sparrow. Prayer was offered by the Rev. Lewis B. Sheen of the Church Of the Holy Spirit of Orleans. . Elmer R. Darling and Harry F. Childs were appointed sworn as Tellers by the Moderator. arrant Voted, voice vote, to dispense with the reading of the W except the preamble, conclusion and attestation thereof, and the (fficer's return of service thereon. The Moderator read the War - rantin accordance with the vote taken. uorum of A standing count of Registered Voters disclosed a q 258 A be ansamendment to designate not more than $500. carred by the School Budget for out of state travel excPmes s carriedote a Voice vote; an amendment was made and ed by 00 00 to a total the Highways General Repairs be increased e $ 84 337.70• of $34,350 00, so the total of Article t shall Including Re ARTICLE 1. To act upon the Annual Report or Corn- ARTICLE Town commendations) of the Selectmen and other the same• mittees and raise and appropriate money fOr Report of that the Annual 1958 for Oted bee Seleetm ny andcothereTownnofficers and I) pamm ptal Commit- accepted and that the Selectmen's the Finan aised trie and ce ae'texctept as amended and 9that the sumdo y$5m4ore th O be u. 00 nd appropriated for the same, and that ' for expenses of Of ate travel. Budget thereof be design 113 Moderator's Sal General Government Selectmen' ary nment (Each Salary Selectmen' member $1,500.00) Assessors' Expense xesePplies Pd Epn Assessors' Ma (Salary) Board of Public (Expense) Tow($40000 . QaWelf" Salaries h Town Accountant's Salary Treasure r °f Taxes nts Expense Town Clerk, Salary Collector' k s Sala Financ "pensreas °rer s & Town Clerks Election COmmitte, Town pM Registrationpense CleriExpens Maintenance aapense Taxitle Sal ax d Repairs Appeal Counsel use Boar Le jS Plaun ion lad Expense %pence Engineering (Ro "pens, & GPer ation ad Layouts, etc. Total C�eQeral GOyernmenr F°rnstables, Protection of person RescDepartra aries s Civil DTr"ck nt We gfCoe Cperat n E n -o Comn;�spectoExpens "pence Sealer 111catiop e Of lnsecS Lary e his enter Tree Wardenoptrol peMaasures $ 50.00 4,500.00 750.00 6,500.00 1,000.00 1,000.00 1,200.00 3,100.00 575.00 1,700.00 2,000.00 800.00 1,300.00 150.00 1,700.00 6,000.00 5,642.00 200.00 3,175.00 250.00 3,800.00 250.00 2,500.00 $48,14200 & property $23,500.00 100.00 8,875.00 800.00 2,000.00 1,600.00 300.00 7,955.00 500.00 3,200.00 0.00 Dutch Elm Disease 1,400.00 Total Protection of Persons & Property $52,330.00 Health and Sanitation Health, General (Incl. Town Dump) $12,280.00 Inspection of Animals 100.00 Inspection of Slaughtering 25.00 3,000.00 Ambulance Hire $15,405.00 Total Health &Sanitation Highway Department General Repairs $34,350.00 Snow' Removal 5,000.00 T alding & Machinery 1'200.00 fiic Sings Street Li ht, 8250-00 , 500.00 H 2,arbor Master's Expense � Total Highway Dep artment $52,175.00 Charities Old $5,000.00 eral Relief 35,000.00 g 5,000.00 Aid 1), toDependent Children 3,000.00 "ability Assistance 1,200.00 Adminis on Free Bed, Cape Cod Hospital 5__� ,00 $49,700 Total Charities Veterans' Benefits Veterans' Benefits $6 900.00 � $6,900.00 Total Veterans' Benefits Education Schools (Not more than $500.00 for out $183350.00 Of state travel) School Committee Salaries 5800-00 CVOcattonal Education 3,125-00 OW Library 2 000.00 pool Lunch Account 115 Eastham - Orleans - W 011 fleet Regional School District Parks & Playgrounds Cemeteries ol , and T Morino omb s ents .I Operating 51,216.09 Loan Costs 49,906.61 Total Education $296,199.70 Recreation $15,311.00 Total Recreation — $15,3] I.00 Cemeteries $675.00 650.00 Total Cemeteries -- interest . N Interest and Maturing Notes and Bond 1Katari ng Debt d fonds (nigh Scho $8 ,000.00 school) 1,000.00 I Totat Interest & Ma u ing Debt 21 nsuran � TO ce $en Rep On ds Zlnclassified Mmoo rial & fnhVe teraShellElBrook ns' D y $9625.00 ,0Water M Safety 1 675.00 7.00 3,750.00 Recommendations Total 500.00 1,025.00 Un $1,375•p0 $30,000.00 ARTIC E for 1959 elassi fled f o asurer, wq 2' To Grand T $16,850.00 see begin g 0 timehut approvaltf the T °tal $584,33770 Yable with. nua antic' of w 17 Period a er' ne Year 9 a "n of the elec hlta authorize the Town Chapter 44 General than ore renew an ➢an ote foth the therefor, S. ear, in acre or Section 116 Voted voice vote, unanimous, that the Town authorize the Town Treasurer, with the approval of the Selectmen, to borrow Money from time to time in anticipation cial year of the revenue of the finan- beginnin January 1959 and to issue a note or notes therefor, payable within one year, and to renew any note or notes with may 17 Chapterr44, General Lawsne year, m accordance ARTICLE 3. To see if the Town will authorize the Selectmen Suc ell, after first giving notice of time and place of sale by posting ert tent�(14) days at least before convenient uch sale ,porbat private ale, p P Stile taken by the town under tax tattle procedure, provided that the reject any bid which they deemyinade authorize uate, o� take an such action r 1a e thereto. q Y belecVoted, voice vote, unanimous, that the Town authorize the y Pomen to sell, after first giving notice of time and place of lace in the to n 9 such fourteentc 14 of dal s in at least before the sale, or at private riivate sale may he Selectmen or whomsoever n her tautholrizerto hold such vsale, Y reject any bid which they deem inadequate. or trART ARTICLE 4. To see if the Town will raise and appropriate snm of m unappropriated available funds in theotreasury, ny action relative oe thereto. Chapter 90 Highway Maintenance, priat Voted, voice vote unanimous that the Town raise and appro- erred Mai ntenanCe and $1,000.00 additiontthe sumo of $25000 00 be trans- Count from available funds in the treasury to meet the State's and County s share of the work, the reimbursements from the State and treasurYto be restored upon their receipt to available funds in the ('approved by the Finance Committee) trarsf RTICLE 5. To see if the Town will raise and appropriate or 'ter a sum f ,not,, in unappropriated available funds in the treasury, action relative he °1 Chapter 90 Highway Construction, or take any sunt Voted thereto vote, that the Town raise and appropriate the the of 800. the treasury Constrm of $1000000rtosmeetr�heaTownse hares of Chaptfrom avail uct�on and that the sum of $3,000.()0, be transferred share Of thebW funds in the treasury m meet the States and County's to be restored 'Irk, the reimbursements from the State and County Upon (Approved it the receipt inance ailable funds in the treasury ARTICLE 6, To see money may be re the use Of the ceived fromfthee Town will appropriate whatever the purchase or boow Library, to Dog Tax of the previous year {0C Voted voice vote ° -halt other awful expense oof the L'brary.for 29, being the Do he Snow Library o Tax received gown appropriate the sum of $675'e t the Year 1958, for the use of th ooksARTnyothorja�fU1lexpensethe Trustees for the purchase of To as am ICLE b see of the Library. bond eral L ' Inaaccor accord with Of Chape Chapter will of the Geenral Laws, Vot demnity therefor uthorize the Select n 1 1 or Chapter 91 of the the i ty ill the ire nneeunaiilmeus °inmOnw althecute and deliver a xecute 911 the as amende Provide by that the Town vote to a 91 of Laws wealth. and delive =General Ld' in accordance with it Chapter 11 °f lay Su AR Of 8 a bond of indemnity therrize o SSelComn1On the Rv lire pUnant Tti°tesSO the Town will transfer from the r p's rl ted, vos a for 1 Un9• of Five Thousand (5,000) Dollars, (A peoved rve punt, t emom +o at the 1 own transfer from the got, =A RTICLE by the F.Or 1959, f Five Thousand (5,000) Dot $card of gssctmen ato See if the and8 pp =o °f public at $2'��0.0p owl' will set the salary of the elfar, To �esto J dY apPr811 in oft, $400 0 member and then sala ytlof Of of w l 0t vein nt.'p 9S9d tO put th,0p each member, and to with ect of p UssorS art $2,at , thatltbacco dance With r the nCommittee ton e lee pnate the Welfai"000 000 each Town se mary I 1 Ate moof $j 0 0000 each member, the Salary of the Board ttee 1959 i putt t alary of the B° rd (An Townaec0 =dary ew to sed to Irt and Lary of the Bo {0, A pprOVed Bove =nine with ties intogether with raise monies prOyisiors OfL h 10, the Finance e iecOjnmenretroactive ions of the CJail oal'. apt 0° see if COminittee) Se the ...... to accept tile -aws of Mas achusetts, which reads: "A city or town which accepts this section may appropriate money for the purchase of uniforms for members of its Police and Fire Departments." Voted, voice vote, unanimous, that the Town accept the pro- visions of Chapter 40, Section 6B of the Geenral Laws of Mass- achusetts, which reads: "A city or town which accepts this section may appropriate money for the purchase of uniforms for members of its Police and Fire Departments," and that the sum of $400.00 be raised and appropriated for the purchase of police uniforms. (Approved by the Finance Committee) ARTICLE 1 I. To see if the Tocm will adopt as an official name for that section of Tonset Road Extension, so called, which runs from Route 28 to Route 6, the name of Eldredge Park Way or take any action thereon. that Voted, voice vote, that the Town adopt as an official name for Rg o Rou e 6, the name of Eldredge Park called, runs from oute 2 ARTICLE 12. To see if the Town will increase the s0ary ra the Surveyor of Highways Four Hundred (400) Dollars Dollaaro'larsdfo� raise and appropriate the sum of Four Hundred the same, being etroactive to January 1 1959. By Request salarVoted, voice vote, unanimous, that the Town increase ollarrs and y of the Surveyor of Highways Four Hundred (400) Dollars for theisame being �etroacive to January 1,11959red ('approved by the Finance Committee) 1 provisions of Chapter 136, Section 7sandf8lof the Genelral Laws of Massachu setts, or take any action relative thereto and act fio�isionrof Chap ter 136tSetcons 7 andh8tofethe General Laws Massachusetts gndsthe relative to the Sale of Certain Articles on the Lords Day ` licensing of such businesses. Chap eRTISLE 14. To see if the Town will adopt tl1eofrMassachuf setts, Or take any ection 11 General Laws fully,th ofChap ter Voted, voice vote that the Town adopt the p of i Massachusetts relative, Section 1, 2 and 3 of the Geenral bUlfdings, apleals an abatement the such nuisances. or dangerous on A will purchase from Clayton P RTICLE 15. To see if the Town about sand of ant, ART a tract of Registered Land containing other by Clayton P Eldrorth Northerly by pine Roa rand of he Town (T °vin 119 Disposal Area) and Westerly by Lot's Hollow Road for the erection of a Highway Gara e of Tw Thousand g Building, and raise and appropriate the sine expenses thereof a dtvauHundred (2 °500) Dollars to defray lion necessary thereto, the ac Voted Selectmen to take all d qa red a ac �o e g t�Ot , 199 yes, 114 No the motion lost as it bounded tract °f Registered Town Purchase from Clayton P and P. Eldredge °rtherly by pine Land containing about 8 acres, ton Area) ' Southerly b Road Easterly by other land of Clay al and Highway Westerly b Y other land of the Town (Town Disp { a Two Thousarage BuddinLot s H011ow Road, for the erectlon ° of thereof and auth�oi�zeuthared (2,500) Doi ARTICLE defrae the expense and rai thereto, Selectmen to take all action necessary action ARTICLE 16. under ars fop oprlate the rtdesI I of the Town will vote to rescind 158 age Buildie PurPOse ofur of TWente Annual Town Meeting Of Dol- be transfn9, and the construcen y-Five Thousand (25,0p0) 60f- erred 000.00 be taketo the Purposes of $3'0p0.00 rae equipping er aid Ar icla,' Laid °u thef r0m available undts in article treasury. sum °f $ (Approved table erat Meeting recess the Finance r at 9'23 P Med at 900 p Committee) hfpd' stabilpat�0, f - 17 Qu °rUm stilll , Recalled to order by the ' If the funds S' t.0) Laws and a Pr°visio TOwn will vote to estabter q0 Vota a tr as llars toPPr priat0 the f Section 5B of ChaPTboo�e Ch a Stal; rising vro for this taken from m of Twenty-Five 40 izatiort te, yes Purpose• unappropriated P, va 1(A fonds j Se000 d aw under an hen Provisions that of tile Sectionn 5tr cyf 62, ull pProved b the tre Dollars toaPPrOPriate the sum Of Thated be taken ARTI help a of Gd T . t TO see Milan corn Purpose. om unapProP to Sc w ho e ' the a Chevrolelmen auto tCruiSfTd Fifty ( 1Town will raise and aPPrOPrand ate °led voice, ade in aSr the p io ) Dollars, to purchaseorize and equip a wog votte, unanpart of the Purchase nt and 3 Presen o' w auto ser f d hlery the T raise all pUr�n , 120 police Department and an ue the Selectmen to trade in as part of the purchase price, the pres- ent Chevrolet Cruiser. (Approved by the Finance Committee) ARTICLE 19. To see if the Town will vote to transfer certain account balances to the Excess and Deficiency account. AVoted, voice vote unanimous, that the Town transfer certain nount balances to the Excess and Deficiency account as follows: $49, for Truck Rabic H gh ay Treatment ept $89 9 Main and Spreader for Highway Dept. Watts4etux $28.00. ntary School $256.97, and Land - George B. (Approved by the Finance Committee) the ARTICLE 20. To see if the Town will raise and appropriate trees u Of Five Hundred (500) Dollars for the planting of shade direct- Pon the Town Ways, said sum to be expended under the BY re...1 11 the Tree Warden. of Fiv oted, voice vote, that the Town raise and appropriate the sum the ro Hundreeyd (500) Dollars for the planting of shade trees upon th0 Tr Warden said sum to be expended under the direction of (Approved by the Finance Committee) repOrARTICLE 21. To see if the Town will accept the doings and lvlarchof the Selectmen to be filed with the Town Clerk on or before Of 110 2' 1959 relative to the laying out of Seaview Road, a distance out Of Ohfset more or less and to see if the Town will accept the lay - behalf road as recommended in said report of the Selectmen on take b °f the Town, to accept t as a ft, to acquire by purchase for the eminent domain under Chapter 79 of the General the land in fee descried U11 said l report subject Purpose ubject to all public rights. finitely postponed. repo ARTICLE 22. To see if the Town will accept the doings fore arch 11980 2'119 9elelative to be he ]la outtoftRuggles Roladka on distance out °f thisfeet, more or less, and to see if the Town will accept the lay 6 Qof f he Tow recommended in said report 9 a be P lectmen on be- t. purchase or take 4' till nt domain underChapterfr79 of the General Laws, for the �n said r Purpose of a Town Way, in fee simple, the land described awas er a mot olncto orec all ons der ostponement, it that the Town 4Q Was the dvpted,ast report ofethe Selectmen filed with the Town 121 Clerk on March 2 a distance of � 1959 relative to the lam out of Ruggles Rp °di menson be f f s8road as More or less, and that the Town will Select' P b a or takef Of the Towncorr[mended in said report of the b put' Y em the land dascgytun palt PImam u der Ch pter t79aof the simple, ofthco deed oredee said report of a Town Way, in fee 00d a°( Me n attd Highwit the road ish n taking subject 1 accepted r e behalf ART ay Surveyor a condition acceptable to th repo Need e Z' 1959 c men tOSbe if the Town will accept the dIi095 fore . to see Way Extelative to t filed with.the Town Clerk on °r pine if electmeahe TOwn twill a d Stance layout of Pine Needle Way jess, ene emun t dto ac eft report Pt t the laY u�0 s feet ecommended bob, of as m aid Pr PorrPose oferaChfa, 0 acquire by purchase, Or to foredid doitt Voted . subjects Town wa79 of the General Laws escribe lviargs and, rising vOteto all Pu Iy' in fee simple, the land t the IS * ntd tat dle W relative a Select m NOg40, that the Town aCletknpd th ay 13 a gift port rep r 1 11 Iec to the laying ou with Pine Needle oaf lend Toapteo�equeathe 8elet the Iatstance of 1,800 feet m°re send to vn r 9 If by etme °Hoot of this road as recpPr ceps er be all Ily Pubficin f eesG ne aseaor to behalf of the Town, to din Oif n ti epAbledo lights h osa)Fdof that nonpdescribed in municipal report' 01:001 ` Sit °RrICL elect Tow Tow deed or deeds on this takerlej of cast of give 24 T n and HiuntiI the road is in a c e r0� eta. , a Piettdresee i f the ghw ay Surveyor. roPri �e frog print, r sin ec Of Prop �) Dollars will raise and oPP C) f p5e fort CPurg w Unr oe' Yes rty oil HOPkinP Lane for the P' Q nd 'Pos (qPp rived f ua rnin 219 le 11 ° 2, that the Town r°nr°l to sathro'l 'CLE 2y the raid age Piece (500) (500) Property on Dollars kilts L vtsioas f thy foCUna p° se - COmnlitteo l if I] e aster 91 ore °fprotece�rav To fop will raise and aPp1�pt9rp, the Cenoral Sk set Beach uriderr tlje p lZ2 Voted, voice vote, unanimous, that the Town raise and appro- Priate the sum of $750.00 and take from available funds the sum of $1,500.00 for the County's share, to be used with State and Private monies for shore rotection work at Skaket Beach. The County's share to be returned to available funds in the treasury upon their receipt. (Approved by the Finance Committee) ARTICLE 26. To see if the Town will raise and appropriate the sum of Two Thousand (2,000.) Dollars to overhaul the Hcalth Department Bulldozer. Voted voice vote, that the Town raise and appropriate the sum Of He Two Thousand (2,000.) Dollars to repair or trade the present h Department Bulldozer and authorize the Selectmen to either repair or trade, as seems to them most advisable. (Approved by the Finance Committee) ARTICLE 27. To see if the Town will vote to raise and ap- propriate the sum of Five Hundred (500.) Dollars under the pro - vls For providing entertainment 1On °f Chapter 158, Acts of 1929, or amusement of a public character, to be used in connection with Publicly raised funds, to furnish Christmas Display and Children's Party in 1959. 13y request. Voted, voice vote , that the Town raise and appropriate the romPio$Sd00.00nfertainmentr orsannu. ementP °fra Publictcharact r, to Ch is use Din connection with publicly Party in raised funds, to furnish (Approved by the Finance Committee) do sum ARTICLE of Three eBThousand i (3,000.) Dollarsafor and appropriate $of °a the in! P Pohl- loe slnformatl nv Booths aid tile funds`Vto be a pendedminder has direction of the Selectmen and only if an equal matching enditure Act deposited ° sa<d appropriation, riat onV under the provisions of the of Chapter 30, $y ref 1958. P quest Pri VO �d, voice vote, unanimous, that the Town raise the as in- sageseof the sum of $2,000.00 for the purpose utitadInformation $O1nd airl Town and the operation of a P of Selectmen Treysu an qualematchingsum direction doposited d aPPrt °prla�on, under the Provisions of Caper 30, Acts Of 1958. (APprovecl by the Finance Committee) 123 ARTIC To the la ot m reed eon ThOU and F.�I the Town will raise and aP>iro I stop to m the re erete cov a Hundred (2,500. ) Dollars yflooq take all rear of the er over the ( wn P. b lion Fire fire cistern at the to to Y req., necessary theta and authorize the Fire En@° finite] (Disappr v pdostponed. the su RTICLE by the Finance Committee to Rescue T aile °e Hundioesee if the Town will raise and aPProe910 take eal] act' ' a aotan[ to be900.a Dollars to purchase and polio Priate °tetl voice neeessary thac the Fire the Departments eto. nd au°horSto °f $90, Unanimo d appfor neces�grY thetbhOe Fie tithe QPUr rasa and equip raise Boue S9oflo fromToWnrOVed by t Id Police Departments tooetakeca] acn the tab Clerk, s Not Financ b b te, e e ) to I aP re aPPointLE 31 Was losthby a°Con wasemade to take Artdl Pensepriate t a wale To see if voice vote. ntpf By re9 °said Coma o api Imp ove own will instruct the N40iser0 Of FpPond voice inittee, ve Hund edn( 00.)mDollarsnfotatpe e iv a Vote t o eXPe (App said C 00 iUPOveae own instruct the Moderaeoso e y AR° vE ed by th itteee. s be ra semmittee, n that, for th u T C F d and appropriate s m I L e to de f O 3Z ce dred rand Pa ne Th TO s COntmittee $Y re wenty f e the re— 11. deT if the ,r ) igto Of $I�Ole feet aPprzinde� o Hunareu will raise and app olja[ t�ce'of S•Op t Ice vole imatelyf Doane red distance' istan a)oD five nU (qP 2p feetide , that t 17 feet b Oreaod Pave TOwn i e 5n5i mast° RTIt Y the less the retr raise and appropriate Ilia di TOu'n Covinstal 33 inane° C 'under of Doane WaY' e and new nO see if Oininntee) he �, even]° na07C) n chi will authorize the 140f 10) iO �24n FleasaumBay r and rake nfl appropriate the sum of Six Hundred Seventy -Five (675.) Dollars therefore request. Voted, voice vote, that the Town raise and appropriate the sum of $675,00 to install new nun and can channel markers, 10 in Town Cove and 17 in Pleasant Bay, the work to be done under the supervision of the Harbormaster. (Approved by the Finance Committee) ARTICLE 34. To see if the Town will authorize the Select - dorl to acquire by purchase, accept as a gift, or take by eminent main, an easement over the property of Charles M. and Dorothy w Campbell for Highway drainage purposes from Main Street to Me 1inghouse Pond, and to raise and appropriate Twelve Thousand 000.) Dollars for construction of a highway drainage system nst 'l Y ain Street, Beach and Barley Neck Road g Y s over the same, to be B tilled under the direction of the Surveyors of Hi hwa s. Y request. aourn at 10:45 P.M •Mntil the following n ghteat t6:30hP.M. atntheds M ame place,, on arch 10, 1959. Tuesday, March 10, 1959 raw u at te6t45 recalled A standingbeount o Moderator, registered voters disclosed um of 157 to be present. the ARTICLE 40. To see if the Town will raise and appropriate of ihak,n of Five Thousand 5,000.) Dollars for the pure $electr8a drainage survey of the town under the direction of the Of Voted, voice vote, unanimous, that Article 40 be taken up out and equence at this time. As motion under Article 4 . as motion to Seeconded much discussion followed which ended in vote, Yes 1 ,I No Ibate being made which carried by a standing of $SIt vas then voted that the Town raise and appropi veering sur- veY Of 0 he Town under thesdirrec on of the Selectmen. ( APproved by the Finance Committee) ARTICLE 34. Indefinite postponement. raise and ap- ProPriARTICLE 35. To see if the Town will vote to roperly celebrate the Fourth of Eight uly date nCe 1959. This to be spent 125 bision of the°S Post #308 American Legion, Inc., under tile, sop", BY request. Selectmen. voted d appropriate the vote, unanimous rats al id his money 10 800.00 to celebrate the the of Julym ty (Appro�ie•' under hespent by the Orleans Post #3p8 A ARTIC ed by the Fie Supervision of the Sclectmen display to co t the of FI °e li if the Town will vote to false �yoro blsi °o �rleans postthe July 4thdeeldebca�on. Tlus money or a fibe SP f, quest, ctme American e to sUPer' the #308 $Y rvo Sele n. A Legion, Inc., under aPProprjate, rising vote sad lea aas po July athum of $SOOI77, No 39, that the Town rats can' the Selectu *3p8 AmeriCatn L Thi� money reworks to be spet display tts�a �rf, 0 (Approved giO11 Inc., under the supery a suin TILE 3j the Finance Committee the sum of $250 00) to f I le to P orOPue iing Po 1958 bills,eu�t°leiiprovisions of rid ChPPtep1,9 visions at he Su r 1 e and ( Appro rhaPterf1 107-39 t' 0, that the Town rB gridet the Su RTItOv d by the 9, Acts of ]9uj Paid bills of 195 , 4nde c natt, eel, To see ice Committee) date S Ing these uperv.. e Chad ( if I �gp� own will raise and a1? cilteat °f Fifte ted, voic ou of thee$O rd Of Selectmen, leAtmenf for do 10 or Lie ctaU} qUest iature n Ilunde vote the "'Derv. Non the Town the Soto G (APpro n of thr IS8 of Dollars raise and appropriates P, del the sARTICved by th$card of Se Acts °ofentertainment Dt UO Be urn of LE 39 Pill electme 1929, to be spell aidc08 alld0 g C housansee if t COiltutee) date Beaehp Pro P ?ice °ote itt e,(1'0p0.j 0 1 will raise and aPPr�jaUSet (D uildi11 the s11 the Dollars for use by the 5e, 1SapPrOVed by thee- mef $1,OO� vas lost that the To"Vrl005et to be used by the Flnaice Committee) 126 Merithas to dEpose of asrefrige refrigerator for which vthe School Depart- the ° further use. he Sele ' voice vote, unanimous, that the Town vote to instruct FartMentth s noofurther use a refrigerator for which the School de- the sum afCLE 42. To see if the Town will raise and appropriate epistructionOne Thousand Five Hundred (1,500.) Dollars for the the Ares arid erection of a new dock and float at the Town Cove, at River it dock to be salvaged and combined with the present dock gy re a [thereto id authorize the Harbormaster to take all action quest 11 thed v ° ' ice vote, unanimous that the Town raise and appro- auth ck and float at he Town Cove, the present dock to be of autho and combined with the present dock at River Road, and (Approved d bormaster to take all necessary action thereto. at g;A PtiM. recessed at 81:02 P.M. Meeting brought back to order t ART Ii SUM f TS 43• To see if the Town will raise and appropriate Are y,N Prows aiTdhousand (10,000.) Dollars to dredge Pleasant 11 prove aw wail the entrances to Lonnie's (Kescayogansett), Y r �i stn[ Comm' teee, to takeoallsaction t anecessary the theetoerways Pleas °prate' the written ballot, yes 157 No 80, that the Town raise and eerk'ay Ar y, paw °krf and the entrances to0Lon Dollars ayogan a bis ppMe bC m itt e tto take all acti authorize hallo C S� °thlvvere sworn byfftheMode ator for ythe bone written TC an'0(JO'SRsSton rs to To see if the Town will authorize the Park d Fifraisel °oat 11II moreg r less, and grade, pavetand clear Bthe same, be d (3 4 d ap' Parking areas at Nauset and Skaket Beaches, and ad SUUl d r t,}t °p to defray of the expenses thereof, the work rto QuestYOr. of the Park Commissioners and the 127 Park Coote� voice vote, unanimous, that the Town aath°rl lee h a by 23,000 m]ssioners to et e same, an se uare feet, morerge the parking area at and clear d to bed ddpifty (3,450 and aPProlptjateng yeas at Naus ceand Sk poufo�afK the d One R ad Su11 Y re th Dollars uPcrvisiodefray of the expenses thereoeis and the (Approved n of the Park Commisslon by the of park TICLE 4S Finance Committee) 8 td S v�nn' and toeSs10nar ogee if the Town will authofiz l Ssan equi kundred raise ant purchase a used four wheel you eo1. By egent and (1,700,) appropriate the sum of Qtle the uest ]ndefi' maintenance alnd otherdadditional exPensee el A isappro ed bPoned. Pub - lsssTonelE 46, YThe Finance Committee) the Po d to Per si nsBeWhen and fix ho slabor on the Parks and Playg {0n� d$lo BY re9aes . lone4 °rmlog rsu� wages of the Commissions h the P a °dkP ommiS °jce vO of Chapter 41, General Laws. w e �f the proslPer �a hessao P rfoem rus, that the Town apl y8ro0 � or on the Parks arl A pPtoveaftiec a hPerform n rly wages of the Co dame �i -rl Pro Br^ a li the 47 t To se ncce ConPm?t4e)oGeneralcl a`"s�d o� $Y reoll f blod fromS48.00 the Town e of Voest. Pkins Lthe reside maintain two (2) to eel lµ` to e 84(AOpa,vmee oteane. donee of Mr. Richard Ails ilri o v PProvea]ntai that e5 11 z duri 00f QLd by he street TOwrl raise and appropriate th 11% 1 Pill 8Y reRu s59sok 11 - To seanclegCOm oil Brick Hill Road' tiplf for sVOtecj the pConeerif the To ) aPPr°ieen Vo. 1 gS9 b8Q'nd Ice vot leans Band be given in the T wn of 0 0 o e (AP P o etlall s that the T 9P0 00 d by' o lid a giv ra m the Town of Orleans dill nance Committee) 128 ame ARTICLE 49. To see if the Town will adopt the following Klassach to the Protective By-Law for the Town of Orleans, of the usetts in accordance with the rovisions of Chapter 40A fully thGe e al Laws, or take any action relative thereto and act Section I. Establishment of Districts. Of Districtsd Section 1, Paragraph 1, which now reads: •'1. Classes Map Td he Town of Orleans is hereby ivided as shown on the Zoning d"O classes October 1, 1953 and filed with the Town Clerk, into southeast of districts;" so that all that area of the Town lying Northw of the Old Colon Railroad, Southwest of West Road, Of the grt Of County Road (Route #6 and #6A) and Northeast By requesi ster Town line shall be included in a Business District. follow rated, rising vote, yes 195, No 4, that the Town adopt the arle g amendment to the Protective By -Law of the Town of ans 4OA oil theaGenera ttS in accordance with the provision of Chapter Section 1. Establishment of Districts. irletsAThed Section 1, Paragraph 1, to read: "l. Classes of Dis- in o t1aP dated Own Of Mar Orleans 1i959,rebnddfilede with l�e TownhClerk, Nan aot °ofsthe f districts;" so that all that area of the Town lying Of the of Old Colony Railroad, Southwest of West Road, he Brewster Town Rlinedshaalll be included in a Business District. Qmendme 1CLE 50 To see if the Town will adopt the following CC orrd ke arly the P ovisions of Chapter a143 ofa the P General Laws, Sectio action relative thereto and act full thereon. Para graph S. General Provisions Applicable to All Buildings. be Amend Ph 4 Footings. Po ed c Y,' to ead gqj footinhscmust be masonry, excepts where Po eddWall re tare installed�folorin stmamore be omitted provided hhe Paragra s at least to" in thickness throughout. 'rags belete ph 5_ Foundations. tale may be ub- paragraph 6, which reads "One story frame build - gir er P1er built on cement piers provided that the distance be- 4 ders,' s " within the limits of the maximum spans for wood PeterMit and at all buildings hereafter erected in the town requiring gY r rater fo er the provisions of this code shall have a continuous equest undat'Or' of concrete, brick or stone. ]ndefinite]y Postponed. 1 P471 ARTICLE 51. To see if the en hi a historical a Committee Town will instruct the Seleetmng historical sites i to investigate marld Meeting with t In he Town g the cost of suitably ° sum of $50recommendations at the next Annual T the Voted , V , cover the committee ex ensesand approPnate e loci to marking histPPoint a °unanimous, that the Town instruct the S Town Meetin8 .sites in mitt'' to investigate the cost of Sal taual ate thAPPro f $SO,p to recommendations report nd raise and x PPr Pn accept s CLE 52 the Finance ommittee)penses. a gift . To se pose fYdraiMatioceta a by'e f the Town will vote toentrn�tt°ss or taka tbd voig D o of gee' er., and Ruth A. Quinn for the Pur Maurice Y eminent e' unani and Main Street. ft 1. ing Dq it ornain , and Ruth uueasetnenteacross the accept rOPer<fa�f abuttem 'I'd 53 Maui Street' Quinn for the purpose of d a To andfo�UmerlyY by Beach R l nd kilo I °w,n will vote to convey of n6 et ux anerly b ald E °p Westerlas the "Old Clay Pit, 110`9 sary the d author land now r f er Y and Northerly by la et tl%' orillerl bounded o, aicert ote, Yeectmen toy take any Norman actions tje es, s et a an"ruerlytofyBeachf9a¢d ° p' that the Town convPitt° actiokins et u sterly b °nald ROnd, WnOwit as the "Old Clay Land le ART recess ry th athod now ol0hert and Norman Northerly N°nkNt Sally come b1? 54 t° a the g lectmeeny to take Not 1111 be accepted. °risiug'"tten1ee�ingt upon any other business that tray Q he as uu i h o uhh�eir�ean� and wn of an moos, that the following Resolutt n cheerfu real Orl welfarehtess ,those of cans has 1006 "Ile of he other she faces who lost one of its most va B o he f a new of r h o k c' wilding °rkersshase of °hrsitYhhe mired her efficiency' the sow well said n, thesfact that she WToo the sunshine of the 130 to appoint ARTf E 5 CL historical i es on he Tow nvestigate the cost of suitably em TaW Meeti sit sum of $50 00 t it recommendations at the and next appropriafe die lest Voted, voice voter the committee expenses. a $e Melt To ni 1 histoq�al sues ommn tee to nvesth ate he cost Of s� tnuai ate th �f�eting with t �n the Town and report at the next AO ri accept Prof d by heF nancecommiittee expenses, e and aPProp Cept as7a E 52 Committee) base, Poseerty of Mat °r take °bee if the Town will vote to Purcoss yoaraining De N. Lee J inent domain, an casement Pur, or to d, voi pot g and Ruth A. Quinn for the Map rice N. eminent d, unanimoind Main Street. as a pof g Depot fee Jr. °main, that the Town accept abutters andaMain St A. Quinnnfor the pulrposeoof dt in n,a 53. ed fmmecl lY by Bea ct of Land the Town will vote to convey oa11ae of arld sa11)", asteddY b Doinidd E°lU 1111$ erly the nd Northerly y yitlanetno1' rY theretouthorze tnow °r in=er and Norman M. H Pkinso Kit's bcivabti teas rising vote Selectm n to ta Of ke kesan and all action Ileces nded ace y Y to et ux r f° mererlY by Bracts f la' NO 0, that the Town cony pit,', 2ictio ills a Easte l Doeach Roadd known as the "Old ei b 155 action neces arY by I utand °ow ul here and Norman hlvl,yHan�Njl or fo legally come 6e 5i�eret° h0rize the S lectmeen to take any mnd a be ace cited, r fore the nd to a a9 �Vpled. icing cite, uPon anY other business that rn Public Ser as as the aTOwn nnanim0us that the following Resoblu che, Whereas 1 and of Crlea oed onefare ofss 1 Lose of ns has lost one of its most val D of he Others a facns who t he pica 13U ltl ng °rkttsshn eof hr itwyhh admired her efficienfor as as so htinior er constant concern as, well Said, and the fact that She, `the sunshine of the 130 Now, Therefore do we, assembled in the annual Town Meet - for of Orleans hereby solemnly resolve that our respect and affection °? Adele V. Brown be voted and recorded upon the minutes of lys meeting and that a copy of this resolution be given to her fam- ily. So Moved, this Tenth day of March, 1959. Voted, voice vote thanks the Committee o unanimous, that the Town discharge with n Town Government. Voted, voice vote, that the meeting adjourn at 10:00 P.M. Attest: FRANCIS I. ROGER Town Clerk Total Appropriations and Selectmen's and Oepartmental Recommendations for 1959 Article Article Article Article Article Article Article Article Article Artcile Article Article Article Article Article Article `article Article Article Article Article Article Article 10 12 18 20 24 25 26 27 28 30 31 32 33 35 36 37 3g 40 42 Article 43 $584,337.70 Chapter 90 Maintenance 1,000.00 Chapter 90 Construction 4800.00 Selectmen Assessors, Board of Public Welfare Salary Increase Uniforms - Police Department Salary Increase - Surveyor of Highways New Cruiser for Police Department Shade Trees Lard - George W. Cummings Shore Protection - Skaket Beach Health Department Bulldozer Christmas Display and Children's Party Public Information Booth Boat, Trailer, Motor for Rescue Squad Waterways Improvement Committee Exp ense Grade and Pave Remainder of Doane Way Channel Markers (Town Cove & Pleasant Bay) July 4th Celebration Fireworks Display Unpaid Bills for 1958 Public Amusement Drainage Engineering Survey Construction and Erection Dock & Float at Town Cove • 's 1,000.00 400.00 400.00 1,050.00 500.00 500.00 750.00 2,000.00 500.00 2,000.00 900.00 500.00 1,250.00 675.00 800.00 500.00 107.39 1,500.00 5,000.00 1,500.00 Dredging Pleasant Bay Narrows, Lonnie , 10,000.00 A1ey's, Paw Wall and Quanset Ponds 131 Article 44 Parkin Coating Area at Skaket Beach & Seal Article 47 Beaches Parking Areas at Skaket & Nauset 3, 4500 A 48 Street Article 51 "istoricancer ;mittBeccExpense lRoad 9500 Total $616,4j8p9 To vote f° Wednesday, March 11, 1959 Ile One Sele erator for on ° Of the following Town Officers: Ile Assessoan for three ear. Me for thre Years. Two C !uber B °ard of public Welfare for three years. ptiee ParksColes for One ealth for three ears. 0 Memb mmissio Year y One Member Member of School Comm,ttee for one year. One Member of School Committee for three ears. One M stee SnoReg;onal S mittee for three years. ears• One ember an Lib chOOI Committee for two y Fran b aw. obe0 cr at1onoaodrforrfive years. Clerk kreF S e off ay °Ars,aa alh. mmissio for live years* Select51'0 Cl se Mu m March raucis IDePuty Sur R. FdaY at 1 I :10 A.M• by 6,dama� Olivia W0 ijts' for'the awrence R Richard Gardenier and T xer6ert Lh Puller Spring Term. tax ase Juro rs Spring Term Attest: FRANCIS I. R061v y' Cletl' t4eeti ed 'n at 9.3 fogo alled 'lay, o w; o Mar h $ CaPpuERel by latt P owolli P Ta°wnlC1er95910.p0e softy 13 'Cl rank,. Clerk nd ballot clerks we r Ole ark, G a, Mur ra ,cis I. Rogers•. s, fop ey, ertrnde EY Selloy, be la Chi' go Ke1 Ruth G. Finlay, Katherine Lai, Irene M. McCoubrey and Special Officer, Walter M. Knowles. After reading of the list of officers to be filled, the ballot box was examined, set at zero, the polls were declared open by the Mod- erator, Kcnrick A. Sparrow. At 11:00 A.M. fifty (50) ballots were removed from the bal- lot box for counting by Election officer, Franklin S. Murray, in the Presence of Special Officer, Walter M. Knowles, and Town Clerk, Francis I. Rogers. fro At 12:45 P.M. one hundred fifty (150) ballots were removed Murray, ballot box for counting by Election Officers, Franklin S t . M y. Arthur R. Finlay in the presence of Officer John C. Urban - fro At 2:07 P.M. one hundred fifty (150) ballots were removed urray, and Art m the ballot box for counting b Election Officers, Franklin S. Walter M* Know es and Town Clerk, Francis L Rogers. Officer, At 3:30 P.M. one hundred (100) ballots were removed from the ballot box for counting by Election Officers, Franklin S. Murray and Arthur ernowles, Teller Harry Ft Chpresence lds and Town Clerk, Officer, I. R M. s th At 4:30 P.M., one hundred (100) ballots were removed from e ballot box for counting b Election Officer, Franklin S. Murray and Teller Harry F. Childs, in presence of Officer John C. Urbanskt and Town Clerk, Francis 1. Rogers. fro At 5:30 P.M., one hundred fifty (150) ballots Were removed Franklin S in th Mu aY andlArthur R. Finlantin by Election Special ci Officer, Walter M. Knowles and Town Clerk, Francis I. Rogers. kenrAt :3 P.M. the Polls were declared closed by the Moderator then of ballots cast of were 8otg t, ;ca8absentee ballots were cast, making AI] re the ballot box for °puntin remaining ballots were removed from Teller Harr F. Childs filing by Election Officer, Franklin S. Murray, Kenk A* Presence of all other Election Officers, Teller, and Officer Sparrow Town Clerk, Francis I. Rogers, John C• Urbanski. All ballots were sealed in their proper containers. Meeting adjourned at 9:00 P.M- 133 School Committee for One Year 639 RESULT C. Winslow Jr., Six hundred thirty -nine 227 ULT OF BALLOTING AS FOLLOWS: Robert W. Cole, Two hundred twenty -seven 60 Planks Sixty 926 Kenrick Moderator for O Year 11S Blanks A' S One Parrow, Seven hundred seven[ five 139 At Others Twelve ed thirty -nine y 1� 726 Orin School Committee far Two Years 198 Clue 2g Blanks Seven hundred twenty -six All ks One hundred ninety -eight 2 others Two 926 Select Ric Health en' Assessors, Member Boards of Bja�ap ,.Ada,,, & Public u undred ninety-five Three Years 4l9 Planks School en committee u for Three Years 166 Fo Jl Philip E. Martin, Seven hundred fifty -nine 166 Blanks' Four hundred tweve � All others hundred sixty -six One 926 George A• s TWO Constables for One Year ank A. pees Onnette Three hundred u enredutwend twenty-five " nks Kendall S: "iggin C El raissiorter for Three Years "'Y-Six ght hundred sixty tl nks ORauf alan"tng Board for Five Years ne hundred sever, hu dred thirty -one B a�ksieff M Recreation Eighty fiVeran Eighmhundred fo ive ears 25 1 p1 1 866 6 134 9 881 84 916 8 atni P e�0nal District School Committee 19 ks 4 ne hif�n, Sev or TWo Tears tidr °d thinyhfi ncdred ninety -one 91 134 Trustee Snow Library for Three Years 857 S• Stewart Brooks, Eight hundred fifty -seven 69 Planks Sixty -nine 926 Attest: Town Clerk FRANCIS I. ROGER 1959_Committee Appointed by the Moderator Finance Committee: Term three years Reappointed —Eric G. Benedict Jr• Earle F• Do ovely Barbara S• L 1959—Committee Appointed by theimproyement Committee: Under Article 31— WaterwaYs Elmer R• Darlin jr. Paul P• 14ensHuber. gennethen k Raddin rdson R. Frederic -s Richa Charles Martin Philip F- Jame S• L• Kidd 135 BY -Lave Amendment Advertised COMMON�ALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS BY -Law Ame Town of Orleans 10, 11, 1959nV ent adopted March 9' adopt the Voted rising t Annual Town Meeting T°WO the Town Of of Owing 4 that By-Laweo�,si °n Massachusetts in accordance with the P section 1. Est b of the General Amend Sectioablishment of Laws. I• Classes of D stiMs. h1, t °t read : vided as show f th To Clerk -ailing tg ap at dOwn ro of Or and hereby lad `vtea and No Rad,1NOhh tl eastf of asses °f districts;" so that allsoutltWe <t Busi rtheast of the est the Old Colony Railroad, 6A� Hess District. Erewster °'roe (Route be included to a A true copy attest: FRANCIS I. ROGERS ClerK Town The foregoing regoing a ]Boston' n' Ma is.' May 11, 1959 roved. (21 -29-4j o ?oning by-law is hereby aPPck Jr Edward J. McCorrnGeneral Attorney braw. Orleans '119 of j for th 1LawMn caYland MdC this d tember 8, 1959 ect[pei) Fall Ter R.r, rthurR Fmla tit 10;25 A.M• by OfiDOPfs, Wynan n1er an' d Town in Clerk, presence rancis I- Carl Carl S. Anderson Fa1lv Ter Jurors, Attest: st FRANCIS 1. ROGERS ClerK Town 136 Orleans, Mass., October 15, 1959 she. by SPICCt of additionat Traverse man Franklin S. Murry juror the pre. presence D P is e uty Sheriff Lawrence H. Gardenier and Town Clerk, Francis L Rogers, for the Fall Term. Sylvia S. Bonnell Traverse Juror Fall Term Attest: S FRANCIS I. ROToown Clcrk Special Town Meeting December 101 1959 of the We inhabitants TOV n In of Orleans, qualified ual'ified to posted in lectilons and to on "thursdaY he jp t Nauset Regional High School Audde evening then there he to act onday of December at 7:30 o'clock in the N4oder- followin articles: The meeting was called to order at 7:40 P'M Y appoint and at °r Kenrick A. Sparrow. were app sworn as Tellers Childs y the Moderators- Opdcrbeck °f the Warrant e Voted, voice vote, to dispense with the reads thereof an ant exec and OffiCer's return ofslervice thereon. The Moderattor read 'he 9 run' in aCArdstanding with couthe nt of Reg st red Voters disclosed sfer {ropy Prese to trap pars Of 290. ART CLE 1. To see if the Town will vote no 'ttee available funds the sum of Eight Th° ecifiaationchorI C r roit- thp C procuring plans and Specific' the II butldio sfer the rpose of further s Inc' Board of Selecmmen beaauthorized to a °r thereto• own tr ollars tee, and to take any and all action 11 s Y the Tf r ofida'' No 43, that on 0 or C mol, from Otedl standing fnd vote, Yes °f Eight '00 the ollooding co to °n the o therElementary Sch °bepu °in de aritthereto• e and Board of Selectmen action fiittee, and to take any and all 137 report RTIC 3e t To see if the Town will accept the doings 30, rep of the fro 9 relative men filed with the Town Clerk on November in& m Main Street a laying out as a Town Road, a road exten a distance t about ,lso elicit Square see if the Town will sacc trace layout of this road 'IS 4 y t the and gift authorize recall' in said report of the Scl rcpt as a Cha tee' to acquire b Selectmen on behalf of the Town to ac dcr 79 o allteWaY n fee General take bmunicipal t Purp sobJcc ury, the burr aghts, and to the land described in said report' tress' and /or awards of One gundreansfer from available funds to tilentugas vote After a Motion therewith Dollars, to pay land Yes 140 es 88 8, No 205 °definitely postpone was lost by ? staballo ders erator t LyI liti 7. Speclal Tell 2 was oan then lost by hster A, od' a written r t° countm p• Quinn Tellers J parrow, A4 FrankRT1CLEt3e ballots under thpoarti deand sworn by the Dar 0 of business -nc., a Male sea if the Town will vote to purchug1 place land; n Orleans a ar Itts Corporation having an usualparcd de$crr1 as follns' c° t nin able County, Massachusetts, ed o °tai SCASTEp s: 9 about (3) acres, and bound ReservoIt350 LY by f bright of way 480 feet more or less; 805 and WESTER�y morelor leaf Frank Joy, Inc., and S" et 5; less. NORTHERLY land of Frank Joy, Inc., 335 feet more °r fey or Sur erecting l' an a by land of Frank Joy, Inc., 320 feet nj0re Two Tho °f lgh°f a High 3 acres more 0f too f nenee the and Se eys, and �a Garage 13uilding and the us Sufi �' scary thef and a� fiundre take frOm available funds the the 00 fro PlaeeFta k standin thor'Ze tha S I corn' [a take -any Band all actase andad if °blan - In atf1'sa u 289 ' No 0, that the Town lan u to, EAr'hed asn Orlo r eans'c Bar setts Corporation having cPus dcci Resery�iUTHER foil by a rs containing about C3) acre mass, and b0un 1 less' and TERieeYMore land °ofway 480 feet more or less; ket 80r Y by lan r less. rank Joy, Inc., and Ska e of Of Frank Joy, Inc., 335 feet fi0 r 138 less NORTHERLY by land of Frank Joy, Inc., 320 feet more or F0i he erec ion of aeHighwayrGarage building and the use of the surveyor of Two pens ThousandtgSevensHu and drede(2c700.)vDollars to defray the eAf Pens es thereof and authorize the Selectmen to take any and all action neee$sary thereto. action Rken LE 4. To see if the Town will vote to rescind 958 and under Article I 1 of the Annual Town Meet 0000.) Dol- lars fopthe Purpose of clonstructintyand equipping a(Highway Gar - rased underr said the rticle Robe transferred to the purposel°flth s article and the sum of Twenty -two (22,000.) Dollars be taken from available funds in the treasury. take under Article I1 of the AnnualtTlown Meeting Of 1958 and thptOPriate the sum of Twenty-five Thousand (25,000.) agelBuild- Gar Under and transfer°the um of Three ttThousand Highway Dollars rZahree he surn 00 (843.07)aDollarssf omfthe�gRehabiltation d 661100 (1 m Of One Thousand Eight Hundred Thirteen and 27/ um 813.66) Dollars from the Sale of Real Estate Fund and the 09 343 27) Thousand Dollars fromr available funds Three an treasury to the Purpose of this article. filar ARTICLE S. To see if the Town will vote to Puhu[trng Ian alrery BOnnell about 2 acres of land at Rock Harbofr m available fundafor this pby the Town and appropriate moniesTown purmase ore fro oted, standin vote, Yes 241, No 0, that the 2 acres land or es and bounded West parcel South Wan and North d Norlthea f w. W own by the Jaters0 of Rock Cre� k (ti at), S°utheasYerblY land a Merrill sterl DVe hits, and) Southwester1 tyand South east rIY by r I is to f °ode an �rneofsTvventy- -fiver Hundred (z 5 Oall acts nee °ess p isto .e 11 r th s d dARTICLEl6. To see if the Iowa i rs °to 1Wn by F y Spcf arm °f Twenty -five Hundred (2,500. de for the T° cordance with a drainage survey ma 139 totedford & Thomdike. The money to be taken from available fu uds S Voted god take from ' Voicele ote, uanimous, that the Town apP�OPrHuudred Of'Surf, Dollars funds the sum of Two Thousand FjVe e ort by Surf, WatertDrai nag, It ion of project #9 as shown of p leffgs ° Work to be one band Thondike, Inc., edirOctober 13 ,rv9loP AR�ghway Sury yo Highway Department under the suP to file to aCLE 7 To see if the Town will authorize the Sea C, of, vance to To Of Publi Provide for With the United States of America for ter°ts the pla and Whe0 560 he ruling 8f rd Conge$ of thebUnitedrStutesaas 11 eteN CotPoration a lnhab'talntsing resolution in connection tlunjcip. after [hnweatuly establish e f the Town of Orleans, aBarustapt arid thorough dassachusetts� herein County of f`APPIobJem u °f certaiavailable data at h of the various aspects of the pr strueo Inateel brainagPublic Wshas hereby determined that the c Sarf�e3 tile,. tan °n Spystem" deSenerally described as Parts ofpt °jessP' lac, is de Dctoberrface Wateignated Project I , Project Zns Nlff ge, tare thatstrable arid 1959" pre Drainage System of Orlea1h°rD es- takeu immedA el m- Publicinterc F ands ooffoad ri� it�oeKg be ti as a Whereas lately. ' and D to the construction of said . advea l , the rider the 0051 .0,07 cifie ndarohit Plibb StatestoP f Public Law 560, 83rd l e run r' co ations eclat bodies America has authorize engi e' e cost Of atttactio11 optheraasurveys ti id signs,fi Plans w rking dra` In9orstPe Act Whereas Public Works. irttinarYto and in to arati° oil and s t e � oche belle APPI Applicant Bred sP�1d r actiofiirt to file ant consides examined and duly considerest file Toµ Now Therefore e ect]OPnlicationtunder said the Acttpublic and to aurbo Of said f Orlca , therewith; { a I APPIie alit asTowil Resolved B The Inhabitant'n5 beds ". is to th the follows; etin9 Assembled, the g°vern to coust ep emhm aytioPae beerest ofotj1eOf said public works is es that` e5 r' diately ;preliihinaiy to the COMP l �uctas thereofebe Lunde tffK 140 bell cre Y That authorized to lilt inibehalBofttl e App lectuun a Orleans (in for licant an application Act) foi 'zed by the United States and in conformity' with said ant an advance to be made by the United States to the APP des abed in defraying the cost of plan preparation for the above of c Public works. Such plan preparation shalt consist generally andnotheinng surveys, final designs and final plans, specification works herein eforeydes contract documents for building the public 3 vide or to hek do c.esary a range rients to provide Applicant s PPri funds! in l addition PreParation of such may be required to defray the cost of the plan hercb ' The said Chairman of the Board of Selectmen of Orleans is acgo l authorized to furnish such information and take such other advances may be necessary to enable the Applicant to qualifY for the is ltereh ' That the officer designated in the preceding paragraph I for thl designated as the authorized representative of thnforniation, data arid of furnishing to the United States such an advance is may be documents pertaining to the application a rese alive ore APPlcantdintconne connection this application- ed P St thQ• That certified copies of this resolution be mtoahe not d sates aridlauth n f Oi an advance to be su y mind all action neees tY theeto, authorize the Selectmen to take an be indefinitely Pest phew ' voice vote, unanimous, that Article 'ay legally R' ICLE 8. And to act upon any other business that " me before the meeting. ltfeeting adjourned at 10:20 P-M' Attest: FRANCIS I• F 1 v"o Clerk 141 Date Naoie of Child 1955 October: 6 Stanley Arthur Wilcox 1956 January: I Wayne Peter Taylor 1958 July: 23 Janet Loring Woodland 26 Joseph Anthony Zarba 1959 u ,p January: 14 Nancy Kathleen Gilmore IS Nancy Ann Spear 21 Karen Ann White February: 10 Wayne Scott Ellis 22 Thomas Dominic Avellar March: 15 Anne Grainger May: 6 Brenda Marie DnChacme 2\ Margo flood. Bocti 3�oc, 6 9cenJa Sean floc \ay 9 llo`oect Cat\ Socaav Births Recorded for Year 7959 in Orleans rV'aare or Tather Lloyd Stanley Wilcox Peter Wolcott Taylor Richard Allen Woodland Joseph Anthony Zarba David Ailing Gilmore William Robert Spear, Jr Paul Lester White Lawrence Leroy Ellis John Bradshaw Avellar Maurice John Grainger Albert loseph DUChartne, IT Stephen Goo \a 9uck \.awcence HerSed Hnr\ey Ogu�ao Robed locaan June., 10 Annette Avis Daniels 11 Kenneth Allen Taylor 16 James Alan Doucette 16 Clint Newcomb 23 Thomas Whitney Caswell, Jr. July: 8 David Philip Deschamps 10 Carl William Landers 10 Kenneth Charles Fuller 23 David Eugene Fulcher, Jr. August: 7 Robert Edward Felt �. 7 Bambi Jeanette Fulcher w 8 Glen Alden Tinney 23 Kenneth Warren Sims Septemben 1 James Earl Richardson 3 Jenny Savage 4 Derek Jay Woelfel 4 Elizabeth Ann Ozon 19 Randall Scott Dickson 21 Nickerson 22 Patricia Marie Clark Charles Warren Daniels William Lloyd Taylor James Arthur Doucette Cecil Emery Newcomb, Jr. Thomas Whitney Caswell Philip Armand Deschamps Carl Walter Landers Herbert Lynn Fuller David Eugene Fulcher William Joseph Felt Robley Evans Fulcher, Jr. William Braidwood Tinney Roger Wallace Sims Earl Monroe Richardson, Jr. Murray Charles Savage Francis Edward Woelfel Henri Prosper Ozon Robert Earl Dickson, Jr. lames Elwin Nickerson Robert Clayton Clark Name of Mother Janet Clair Pearson Sandra Sutherland Shaw Barbara Easton Teresa M. Ann Mararia Margaret Ruby Winters Ruth Elizabeth Shackley Patricia Lou Reed Thelma Mary Hodder Ellen Mary McCarthy Lillian Crosman Patricia Grace Knowles Prisci \ \a lane Pond Do \ores lean Dowma Gonna £�t�e\ Mayo Anna May Rogers Phyllis Warner Rogers Susan Jane Baker Lorraine Scott Joyce Janis Lee Langen Barbara Ann Walker Lillian Bernice Perreault Ellen Marion Parker Marliyn Saylor Kent Elinor Esther Higgins Lois Meta Wittman Betsey Ann Pond Judith Ann Lodge Elizabeth Louise Landry Barbara Janet Stewart loan Yvonne LeRoy Jeanne Lorraine Rioux Priscilla Etta Andrews Judith Ann Johnson Elizabeth Ann Chase October: 6 Monique Renee Gauvard Jean Francois Gauvard Marcelle Claire Cinq -Mars lg John Morris Hamilton, Jr. Sohn Morris Hamilton Josephine Terese Smith 31 Dale Ann Vipimo Dino Adolo Viprino Dorothy Mae Anderson t� �I Marriages Recorded for Year 1959 in Orleans — p Date 'Si dcace 'ante of Parties - 1959 -- - - --- January: c o 10 Robert Isaac Huskins 23 Newton. Mass. U 1 Patricia Ann 18 Orleans. Mass' U U .°e E 7 Truman Hensonayo 33 Scarsdale, N.Y. Elizabeth (Gray) Dwinell 25 Orleans, Mass. W al m .Ec o> n M aY: L t C V L y �^ z w.0 c 9 William DeWitt Hitchcock 30 Kingston. MSss' 2 i, an 2q Orleans, mass. Fancy 13 Sumnera Emannu 1 Robinson 27 P,c,incet w ass. 23 Norma Margaret Shearer 22 Orleans, wn Mass Roger B011as 33 Province to 72 Orleans, Mass. 24 Jean Adelaide Williams Bedford, N.H. c Ev ter E. Thaeher 67 Orleans, Mass. L. v o c y 28 Mar ton E (Ellis) Quinn 34 Orleans. Mass. U p °c u 3 Frances E. (Darlitt Ron ner 35 Orleans, Maine rai o y � c 0 wrence Stanley Douglas �3 Orleans- Mass. ,G a 3 j o V ]Fro Anne Gardner Fuller yb -p 0 U —yv. o June: tz U .c v'lle, Penn. '` " U v U 3 to William Charles Storch �9 yeynnewoo Penn. '� '.��^. o 30 Ronnie Ruth Ramsdell 67 Passaic, N.J. ass. p 4 Louis A. Schneider prlean . Edith M. (Howard) Ireland July: Orleans, mass, lssMass e y m 4 Leighton A. Nickerson 23 Feeding Mass. 21 rJ, `v aC c 4 Anita Louise Rosso 70 Ivii ctitea MS ss. i v N c U c ' 18 Flo Helenn(Selig)'Ward 30 P�ymnutho lt'CasMaine 3 W c w F and J. Brewer, Jr. 3 Kitt ean en s PMass. C y y v Y L Miller 7.2 (Collingwood) prl Mar Mass. C C \ •4 y 15 Louis William ParadY, Jr. 20 prlean, issoud lti h C Almira Jane Robinson 2t golla� M e ti y v a .c v 18 William Bradford Guild 19 Z M ry a t, `° '�, (: Dee Lucile Fuerst n Q w rn h 145 y 144 August: I Charles phillips lace Evelyn 22 Clyde Clare (Smith) Murray Anne a Smith 29 Thomas Kimball Mau ee Anthony Manion, Jr. n Deborah O'Meara 29 Howard Malcolm Ticknor Matilda Cole September: b1ASs 60 11 Gi 12 aysAlMond Young Derofei - (Smith) Slide Ig Jane Theresmshuk Providence, Ma s. Austin Fran Davis 20 Pete Laura Louise Fufcherge' Jr. Doane 30 Carob Walker An Cbuttes Landers 0 Helen V e Gn Desbn 0etober: l Mass 61 3 Harris 10 on Edtvard e "' L� Tyra, Orleans, Mass• Stannne Maryr Da hmson 21 )jow Ren"i Rob ere M Ora Snow Orleans, Mass- Marcia Reg, aidd ean Naveuhher: Bi Clak 7 Peter \Val Stephanie bete -011 Lougea8onnell 12 19 ea��e Kelley C Robe tte Rebe hipman rl 27 cca Suzan,, - $row perreault Edwit Ryder n Naneyd O. Benz Manfredi Cann, 28 b1ASs 60 East Braintree' 58 Orleans, y York, 1-4 Y. 27 28 New New York, r1' R'1' 25 Providence, Ma s. 21 Orleans, r4' I. 23 Englcwood, Concord, 21 Orleans, Mass. 48 Mass 61 Dennis, Mass, 23 Orleans, Mass. 23 Orleans, Mass• 27 Hyannis, Mass 22 Orleans, Mass- 24 Eastham, s MMass• 20 Orleans, 19 Harwich,Mass• 19 Orleans, Cann, 28 So. GlustoCoan• 23 Hartford, Moss.Mass, 22 Spencer, ch, WCSI Har "'1 22 26 Mass. Orleans, Mass. 22 Chatham, Mass' 19 Brewster,Ma5s. 19 Orleans, M its s• 21 Boston. Mass• 19 Orleans' 20 18 23 19 26 23 Mass. Orleans, Mass' Orleans, Mass' Orleans, Mass.�f05. Orleans, . , No. Rive Deaths Recorded for Year 1959 in Orleans ,)ate Name 1959 Ja 17�: Alice Wright 23 Dana Day 23 William John Cullum 25 Fred S. Higgins 28 Philip Nesmith Allard 28 Stephen Michael Allard February: 7 Edna Chase Tilley 14 Roy Milton Taylor 16 Sarah W. Pierce 17 Adele Virginia Brown Match: 12 E. Carlton Long 21 Henry William Landers 25 Frederick C. Hingsburg April: 21 Ella Frances Dance 2S Joseph Armand Lucien Ferland May: 2 Hattie Maria Nickerson 11 Eva Kingsley 12 Sarah Asenath Higgins 21 Charles Frederick Moore 23 Chester Robert Brown June: 2 George Sullivan Snow 24 Margaret Hatch July: 1 Jarrett Schaw Blodgett 9 Arthur Luther Long 11 Harriet E. L. Wellman 20 Marie Timm 23 Ralph R. Battersby 26 Stanley Ward Cook 27 Joseph J. Perry September: 2 Lloyd Austin Yates 26 Edward J. Staples 147 98 4 15 2 — 88 6 14 75 6 13 5 7 10 6 11 6 79 1 13 72 6 21 86 9 18 49 9 13 66 6 7 47 4 13 69 8 20 81 11 24 41 10 27 91 9 6 84 9 2 70 6 24 84 10 0 73 8 18 82 7 15 77 9 19 68 1 23 74 6 29 66 5 10 62 11 12 71 1 5 57 8 24 27 10 14 7 70 3 88 Series No. 173 Series No. 47 Series No. 12 Series No. 11 Series No. 1 Series No. 39 Series No. 3 Series No. P. 12 Series No. O 10 Series No. 2 Series No. 19 Series No Fish and Game Licenses issued in 7959 I Resident Citizen Fishing 2 Resident Citizen Hunting 3 Resident Citizen Sporting 4 Resident Citizen Minor Fishing lA Resident Citizen Female Fishing 6 Resident Citizen Trapping 7 Special Non - Resident Fishing 8 Non - Resident Citizen Minor Fishing 9 Non Resident Citizen Fishing 10 Non - Resident Citizen Hunting 12 Duplicate 15 Resident Citizen Sporting Z v Paid D= n Fees o w N wm 3 Retained Fish & Game $3.25 & $4.25 $288.00 $22.00 $266.00 3.25 & 4.25 607.25 43.25 564.00 � 5.5 & 7.25 a „ F 212.00 !-� N 00000 Ln T w � @ n Uj u. �O 2.75 'x @ 7.75 w c .25 7.50 a' c 2.75 107.25 Fish and Game Licenses issued in 7959 I Resident Citizen Fishing 2 Resident Citizen Hunting 3 Resident Citizen Sporting 4 Resident Citizen Minor Fishing lA Resident Citizen Female Fishing 6 Resident Citizen Trapping 7 Special Non - Resident Fishing 8 Non - Resident Citizen Minor Fishing 9 Non Resident Citizen Fishing 10 Non - Resident Citizen Hunting 12 Duplicate 15 Resident Citizen Sporting a- Paid D= Fees Division of Retained Fish & Game $3.25 & $4.25 $288.00 $22.00 $266.00 3.25 & 4.25 607.25 43.25 564.00 � 5.5 & 7.25 v,ONtnN �O 13.00 212.00 !-� N 00000 Ln @ 2.25 �O 2.75 22.00 @ 7.75 7.75 .25 7.50 0 2.75 107.25 9.75 97.50 a CI 2,25 6.75 .75 6.00 @ 7.75 93.00 3.00 90.00 @ 15.25 152.50 2.50 150.00 � _ Sv tnO O�Orn N "'pOQOO �' T O 00 00000 - - Fish and Game Licenses issued in 7959 I Resident Citizen Fishing 2 Resident Citizen Hunting 3 Resident Citizen Sporting 4 Resident Citizen Minor Fishing lA Resident Citizen Female Fishing 6 Resident Citizen Trapping 7 Special Non - Resident Fishing 8 Non - Resident Citizen Minor Fishing 9 Non Resident Citizen Fishing 10 Non - Resident Citizen Hunting 12 Duplicate 15 Resident Citizen Sporting Respectfully submitted, $1,594.00 $99.00 $1495.00 FRANCIS 1. ROGERS Town Clerk Paid Fees Division of Retained Fish & Game $3.25 & $4.25 $288.00 $22.00 $266.00 3.25 & 4.25 607.25 43.25 564.00 5.5 & 7.25 295.00 13.00 212.00 C @ 2.25 24.75 2.75 22.00 @ 7.75 7.75 .25 7.50 @ 2.75 107.25 9.75 97.50 @ 2,25 6.75 .75 6.00 @ 7.75 93.00 3.00 90.00 @ 15.25 152.50 2.50 150.00 @ .50 1.00 - 1.00 Free - - - Respectfully submitted, $1,594.00 $99.00 $1495.00 FRANCIS 1. ROGERS Town Clerk Az lio ��`�QDepdrtment Rescue $poad Citizens of the and of Selectmen J 6' 'Pectfulle subtnttstlFeie and Police Department RC50ue S9uaatdl, scrvi Rcscuc S Annual Report. Voiai5lc� calls wenesp °adifIg to d eahCompl tedddtthreeo(d0 e)trc�lls a2,lfi) III f (5 of Toing�al�jsowntASSon 5 injury - 30; Auto ?cc'dOfnttile ffom�,s yea The gvO (2) wereMts�olancous - 1)• e1P lse Dewar gUt'n Pte Squad re$pondedpto fourteen (14) tc veyer, 0 I d YA USedPrii' 095,E dent aesod in 1958. There were, ljO` as ac*t X90 ns o°aghoftint-%nfor wring the9fo11owlin Rescue iii e(8)�nt0 ltit`vas o ttneCh six, ix l vlrious enlergcnces, one of vvhh Ibis f5 1 ties 4� o the `�` 111Ufc th'lit'10111 the surf at Nausct l e a bo tike 0oo ihAbltnnityctio�cr.; of the Rescue1eS a d agaifiowishft0oopfocet ingnSasachng its hank the Doctors in Town for the' Rese ppt to thR�9uad �{��I pmb to in ndhvidualFirst who have donated eA me� T: In neue SRuadg the past year. tip tile atio et hIS tint wee and meetings are held bi- monthly to ire Op e ap of tjIQ of tills a pro titter First Aid methods and Rescu per rt'oat p IQ hTh� sPeh6t nuttdoeslnote nclude his rc?ul.tros an a b) l 5ton Rplain LRcscue Squtructing others in First Aid cla' hersyi4 °n9, Llwrence• Boy ° Wu Ell onststs of Che follow�i?jlime 1. p� o�18 1. 5 5 Ch st1R. Iliall's edw`aEOle Of 5e It V. G, Ftede : Lenders DopacK �tbJp4t c5 L`vingston afles Ped s�jfisy toChPtan oMedical Advisor: Dr. Edmond Bilrke tf'tpe�0uli tote devotiok the ineS9uad, I again would like to tacoptt M1dat community tithe andSefforh in Squad b thl etr .: e Respectfiilly Sitbinitted, LEIGHTC 150 Report ov the 00622", ad aC by tttc Cjticuns lie ort on Orleans Historical Markers as m' Historical Society to the 110111d 01 SAN @a\l N'. Signs to be made on %/ exterior plywood nderneath th �.�0at leans seal at the top of each one and directty nK vn.red on 'ORLEANS HISTRICAL MARKER." Sio s ao h W hq pttCt@r- two 2" x 4" posts eight foot long, thee@ lv> \1F' ground. Contents of si s and locations as follows: 1, Located at Rock Harbor .. • uISed Britist I:,nd Here, Dec. 19, 1814, The Orleans mlliaburning village & ves- Ing from H.M.S. NEWCASTLE, intent upon sell -War of 1812. maritime center. Town's ancient population, commercial & Pt mouth, Packet's landing or assengers &freight between here, Y Boston, Salem, Maine & Maritimes. 2. Located on Canal Road . • Jcremiah's' and "Jobs Gut - First Cape Cod Canal, anciently , whaleboat April 26, ter ", from bay to ocean. First transited by blockaders. Closed 1717. Valuable in War 1812 to elude British by 1849 when Henry D. Thoreau crossed over it. Overlooking Chain- 3. Located at Snow Shore .. • killed by Snow Shore - of Stephen Snow since 1644. white m ter M' plain's July 1605 anchorage. Burial of first s carp alouin, Nausett Inians on the beach; Champlain's ship' of St. Malo. port of Nauset's early fishing fleets. Cable landing °f direct wire between Orleans & Brest, France. ties & freight 4_ Located at the River LandPacket landing f °r ass d Paine' Ne "Pochet Pond" between here and New York. Parents of J°aied from here to Poser of "HOME SWEET HOME „' mig S York Located on Rte. composer 8 at brid born. n S°• Orleans - East; arrow- Pleasant Bay anciently Monomm Ba1626okiKetchePRoaers Beach awk, England to VirgimaWLookiDeWe t, Home of Web (1843 -1934) Orleans last survivor of the Civil War. s 6• Located s' Bridge Road . ,de Oak framed from oµaFamily Original 1644 meetingohousB &lfort ?Occupied by the c- 1780Con- from 1723 -1956. 7 Located Capt. John Rte. Kenricks (1774 1795) hhiiOregonlin t full' Cape disc overed and named the Columbia River inmid- Cape 's ” sidered one of the best examples of early Coddcrs ". 151 I ii i 8 Located on Tonset Road near Main St.... pd in0 Mayon' Gles Hopkins' Epg gut la 1 E wer homestead sift. Born in 1690- asthain, old Passenger settled here in 1648, died arLocatedSnrIC1C°rvBBleyaNeck & Pochct Rds• 1St Reyelull, u Isaac at Y War survws homestead. Barnstable County s 1`Iatioll ad Veterans in Iv01 (1758 - 1855). He led flit RCVOO� por" Oleanse millemo °Igt�� leans in 1797. Builder I - st'oiill 01 man In dfenseaof Griner, shorn ak e tW tb cobbler. rl R1�2 iructpt, Repot of she Wa in Lorowltfe¢ terways investigat g To the Citizens o�i1Qo Re of the Town of Orleans: a 195 underAPort of the titre 1959, ip DTmFre to arl n of theagnnual Town Meetin CMarclennetb �1�3 If nlemb , JalneRadd n> Mr�rancis Richardson) P Y>odeill�D? t ererlls of the3. L' KiddPwc� P.IHenson, d by the i d 95 Sz tart. arlin Committee. ` PP o gaup Jr, gas Chair The Committee r s i the hleeti man and Mr. Paul P• Hen' Iealli'ti neon the Cnsattend Committee have been held Penndlitelt ll °mmittee'nce from time to time cxPresS pod th YS, a` 9 the s P`Ojects. two t Baylaar6 cnth0rizedr twenty-seven new liberglaNere i.05 pl pq, �helnSIdeTOWaster, Comer Articles 33 for I9�jtttppeln$`ti08' ab"e s to C I c Pletely marking the ve bE Y to den be inks Thesc hberglassgbuoys It'�bjep' 6 a se The ectWilft satisfactory, the only P tpp. make Wi h°mntittee ull and wanton rifle fire. o1pE that rs W a gift °°dcrstands that the Town is steel d has been a� ill sgen more �;pecially constrtd by tb 1p+ Pe o The C eptnPlpply the needs occasionc t1te�1 r. ghat Igm H Ub Ica[ onls° wishestto c Il [o they tteptiClt�ntd � 0 ay wi the first and of the Coast and co Gdeti efpl All then the Publi Pleasant Bay. This most us titers Town f ion f any chart of the w 152 haSlCOmmitteeead ertised4orr bids for ndredging tthe rivers ° nnels and leading into Arey's Pond, Lonnie's Pond, Paw Wall Pond Nar rows. Pond, and dredging the channel at the north end of the mitteThe only bid submitted was in the sum of $10,486. This Co486 additioobtained nd awarded the contract act tto the Ercon Construction Co. �poROmerville. The original contact that the Committee had and T whose could not obtain a performance ce dbond and did snot bid the siork• The equipment brought to the job b the Ercon Co. has coca - Some four months n�tthe Are the s River project and whichr has been mnentY Per cent Completed, the Bred a was moved to the Narrows, and after false starts the Ercon Co. hired a marine development be o dunngtthe last complete few eeks,oas of this writing, progressing rapid- ly eT nsatisfactorily and should be completed entirely before leted, Paw g' As of January 20th, the Narrows job has been comp Wah Creek has been drag lined. drede Th dredge is being overhaled and will proceed th both he inner and outer bars on Paw Wall Creek which ell areob yond the reachability of the drag line. Will The dredge will then o to Quanset Pond Channel and the job finish with the Lonnie's Pond River project. so n It is to be regretted that this dredging project eeas sure that long and has been so controversial, but this Comm ended, the eventual product will be well worth time and money inPAreYIs There remains at this rocks, one m which River and one in Paw Wall Rivergthat need to be rem because the °p stare larrger than one cubic a and in diameter in s ye All ,itioac °f of is being inco orated in the 1960 warrant to provide dtsp theseThe boa ramps installed during 1958 by the constantly used Proved once again to be extremely popular and . during the summer months. and improve This Committee recomemnds that a st ortanim cut Road. ost ['tents be made to the Town Landing at P growing Gast year .Family boating continues to be the fastest gin the p scents Participated -in sport in this country, ref elasales f 1959• There going nineteen per cent over the previous y 153 craft ft o end in sight to the participation and expansion Of �p0 crafpt both tg in this country. This past year more than 35,OL In is People this county ts' one out of every five men women and childre59 Y was on the water in boats during the summer of 19 This represents cation travel income which is very major portion of Cape Cod va Cape Cod, take continue advant more than ninety percent of income ritust to expand i go of this income potential, Orleans Coincidentall is waterways facilities. as to how soon there With 1 e e National Park the question i f Plea d ant Bay from the rwill Atlantic a major change in the entrance ° Durin Ocean, arld Senate, pm t s Bar 1959 there was included in the fio°seCon' gress, authorizatio ills for river s by a- set Harbor and n for and harbor appropriation Na before Pleasa Army Engineers to conduct surveys of step the Ar guneeBay. These surveys are a prelimtnafrri itn' prOVeu1ents to any part of consider spending any rs will money Hngi Me s orauda bring was pleasant Bay or Town Cove. Alto)) ability ana Prac uP t date roved by Congress to have to feast Rock liarburacticability Off eYs and examinations as thents o the T t is of g eat e of these reporlts hnsnas�tyet been tfiP d Vem to will take of Orleans to this Committee and doubtless SCniCC as regards a� Cean'at attitude ude the National Park get the would, glet the Federal G°rse, Opening to Pleasant Bay- a corife be Passable bo entrant overtime it truce and perhaps ideal if t efef be easterly stoaeep water safely the ocea a rip rap that oold an lied t is th ght t at any time, except perhaps driflri_ t1 North u1ewhe hat if su ab ize Chatham near OldhHn entrance were established and posh Morrsel teen pie )�assaget arbor Coast Guard Station dpstabof a uh"allynb without Ba) ay uld then be maintained aD oat Ked part of Y drifti having the Nantucket Sound to the bloe of 9 sand Such cy outhtt't'd aeon" of would tr sty coast h�ch eY-t $ds T ch aR oc must, ho xican border, of B s is theea° entrawe °er, be oectsa9' 130 such toWood,; 4 Of Role OeePeder 11y hb ?1 myt Engine Psf alit e ti nOgraPfuc Institute d spequippe 154 hc1a1 aspects ofnthis situat on pointed, till he mindfil of the bene- imU l floc committee envisions in the Cuture, a channel with a n"n- °mysbe °nd,otl width n andnNant Nantucket tt Sound - this Of coursfe could major p ac o mplished with State and Federal participation for n thereof. 41' mdTao COmmitte has not forgotten the Town Cove, and has m in 1 "le n Coee i1 This channel will unquestionably bly r into o ion n hlveothe Bah 1 C' vc nmemnif the NOationll Park Service vice acqu yes the Great allonal ou topfof flj g sitnationark. The Committee will continue to keep the The Ilarb Master and Selectmen are continuing to tmPrp°d a facilities °r PprOyea of these Pock Harbor e and this Committee endorses an 1hUed thr fore the Committee recommends that its work be °for another ugh the year 1960 and the Committee be extended r Year. Elmer Respectfully submitted, Jr., S� C Fr R Darling Paul P. Henson, M Renneth'H bichardsonirman Jame S. L. gidd Frederick Raddin 155 Annual Report of the School Committee Town of Orleans Organization for 1959 Mrs, Charity Kidd SCHOOL COMMITTEE Fred eM rti S , hai.rm• an r Martin MDinTovW Term Expires 1960 Term Expires 1960 Term Expires 1961 Term Expires 1 Term ExP SIypERlNTENDENT OF SCHOOLS Sydney G. Pierce SCHOOL, pHYSICIAN Henry A White, M.D. SCHOOL NURSES poris Pond, R.N. Mariop Chace, R.N. S �- UPERVISOR OF ATTENDANCE Chester Landers 156 FINANCIAL STATEMENT 1959 GENERAL 1959 t96o CONTROL School I Comittee Expenses erintendent 145 85 of Schools Enforcement of Law Salaries and Travel Other Expenses 6,014.64 623.24 of General Control 5,113.00 INSTRUCTION Supervisors Pri 10,696.72 Pals and Text Books Teachers 118,690.72 1,155.83 Supplies 4,007.35 72,360-00 OPERATION sION 134, 7 437.52 Fuel 3,211.42 Miscellaneous - Electricity Janitors' Su Supplies, 3.89 4'S� etc. 15,202.83 9,815.00 M MAINTENANCE Repairs, 11540.11 7,500.00 Replacements & Upkeep At L II arARY AGENCIES: 552.26 Health - Physician, Nurses' Supplies Transportation 16,02647 Miscellaneous Expenses (Telephone, Graduation, Fi ms, insurance, 4 487.37 390,00 Pre- Driver Ed.) — 22, ,_71,485-92 2400-00 OUT LAY 18:}4.27 2,0 New Equipment CONTINGENCIES 181, 8 g 00 121,57 Less Holding from 1958 X91 Total Expense in 1959 157 1959 Appropriation Refunds and Transfer Plus holding from 1958 � 1y°r'`vard 183,802.00 to 1960 39.41 Funds requested for 1960 183,— 8 4 337.10 1959 Expenditure 18484 178 Balance 181,070.18 Less Holdin8 1958 — — 3,108.32 UNEXPENDED 337.10 2 —� 1959 NET Acco ntPenditure CAST ()F SCHOOLS School Receivable Public Funds & State Aid Col Scho 1 T chool, ans _ Chap• 70 for mm0nwealth Portation Ch Reimburse °f Nlassaehu gip. handi TWtion'cappedec account children °f mentally Cash Collected or dama School ged Rent e lgymnd from ven b ® °lcs lost asium ding machine 32,392.63 12,897.14 1.[100.00 HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETIC ACCOUNT Ree'g s l f sward from, I 95 59 Expenditures 19 _5 UnexPended q VOCATIONAL EDUCATION 181,07018 1"pAe'Pri t1951 5`) IjnexPended Funds requested for 1960 $5,0g0.00 635.58 SCHOOL COMMITTEE SALARIES 36,652.36 195'9 A Expended r ©Priation 32.90 11.44 1 202.50 PECYAL SC110QL Brought f L LUNCH APP ropri °rw and fro ACCOUNT m Sale Sc4 111959 1958 F'Weraj RECEIPTS S.001 b,idieePnches l95 Salarie 9 774.86 2,000.00 Food and Supplies 13,566.51 5.666.29 22,007.6+ 158 P�1'E�5�5 7,04" 9A 1Z�5�1 � .590 0 'JnexPernded 2.417.22 403.53 1,047.75 1,446.28 1,438.27 8.01 580 00 4:938.32 861.68 350.00 350.00 Oo Report of the Orleans School CO "`mi"ee k the e tpP the On J une 19 1959 the Orleans Schvvl C scSctloc j ace d necessary legal steps to consolidate Orleans H Fljgh Snd Weed y uew Nauset Regional High School, and Orleans )ath des offer nm the t° exist. Orleans' youngsters, like these naI van se es th ad tiles of are fortunate indeed to have the education"' 5 ots90 t i the Modern new high school. J the future' there AP ea ed froal meet the educational challenges of the and s jeer a spe 'mproved curriculum will be otne great& p ittee a vote of The size of the Orleans School C0,11 by th three members to five on May 26,- 159 to4vri school Cotnmmtte ar Although the responsibilities of the Orleans eritaf' School are now limited almost exclusive! to the Elem s de- it1andin Th °mmittee's activities are in no wa fewer or le 'as a kinder committees ambition is to give the children of cold to none. gerten and six primary grades whose quality is sec or' tiara W der the leadership Mrs lRed' as the right, the p of the elementary supervisor, erig* e Y have school teachers of Union 54 arc no�v of the entire eurriculueen for the past two years, in a sh:ttp studnspectet and if Re 111, One sub'ect 1 The year is being tltorougltiy . v= pia Which began 1 st verhauled. The results or the Joplin IZCG i ue 1'op ne y e the first fine year arc superemel gratify ink:• This year th tl texts and results of the newritlli��ettc progr`�nl'c ;vby tb teachers the materials and methods studied and adopts Deaf writar study islh �' after a full year of investigation• r(lvI to 5�}r rig, spelling ac g made in the language arts, wlucl ressi °� t preseOur school °rganizing of oral and written e` p no l to nt nine_ Population is increasing � e are out`- ^I`eirl a1i�5 divide classro our �r Year all a grade whe elementary school. and has been re> ef occ oar elassr n the r n10 Ll through s two ooms are n to c n in it riunlbcr 3 wo are d�trres eagh si roon1s Grades one and es re st all it, omin OCCUPY one tech. The kindergarten and grLU e ft "0n,s eh. min otn each. We know from avail" ro al room a I� quentlyrai�es for the next four ears will need two ditt °t00 Shall need each succ SePternber 1960 we shall need one tears rid the Sell one additio din° September for the next three Yin Olt elementarl OoinnSitteenal room per year. With these fate e orty. and grit, y school huimet vvitlt the Orleans Selectmen, suPer,ttee' represent pal, the dri ding committee the e,ementaryri>�lseto 5ehool datives of the trial architect, the Orleans Finance 'Co o " sett consider adding gssi axpa crs Nlas btllt gyp' atiori ariCe y ' Association and the c ouldting of thr addition Commission. After much t ito in loll, grade Pro i ee regular has been proposed, to b. buloorns C, 0 raliev vide a total of classrooms and two oversized r for i e �he large ro twelve re or two ooh �f Cur, and demands u for our kindergarten and one lar`= efrC"}'t`to01e grarent limifeteria. Se the present all-purpose room ovetc fa storag-1 a includens or for e inor items designed either t�ctio,, fo°�d playgT nrses' do4 ring or addineeds of an enlarged c>7ersett nD daY, Die plan Was heating Plant, t, driveway, pai:kirt9 ar 13 Of % Proy c ficr i , 195tnted at a s ieeting °co Pin} vented ed Now Otis and9, with a r quest for $S,p00 fol."tiot' PrI' ' and t at the working drawin s The a_ ,rop .g, tee. ` voters annual 'Fill decide oA the i ng�-tfirm. m 160 ing the exact costs involved. If voted. it is hoped that construction of the addition will be completed by September, 1960. Like all chi Today education is a necessar challenge to all °f u''. tioldreA everywhere the children of Orleans needs the best found"` can' epecially in the basic or elementary skills, that the camniunttj give them. IZesl�c c 1 f irTl� sraUj7dited, Cllinil' CHARITY Iq KI TIN, Sec'y PHILIP E. NiA ROGERS FREDERICK P C. 4,INSLOW Jr. ORIN TOV EVERETT C• Report of the Superintendent of Schools To the School Committee and Citizens of Orleans this se . In keeping with custom I submit herewith"£ ��l "bald of this rtes p sch of annual reports of the su erintendent a town, p exper516 when The towns of our section of Cape Co d late in 1956 dis- series of changes in school organization sines xegional sc follo`"'ed I~asthanl Orleans and Wellfieet agreed upon towns. 'T filers. s sere - iTict organization for grades 7 -12 of those taw ency urLLonwas.- CM_ Ln 1957 a reorganization of the three supra Pease of `NlS�hool G ing seven towns of the lower Cape the, Purpose ele.mentah school level. era - have the organization of towns the same senior big ale °p dren as it was to be for pupils at 3umdnd pdeparatiGon°truct o a sh� tional 1959 was a changes that would ltake place in 1959. LcationSr¢°ons started on Nauset Regional High school. d budgetary e, tlje a 1p1Rg lags and for equipment alt were drawn. that would affect all ujminatio>x 5 Made. ttLe `l1 In September 1959 there occurred APprox, year planning and preparation: opened o£ the S a sink I. Nauset Regional high Scb °o1 eOpl a Lted ¢ e be ose bays and girls entered, and most of ills Wert La❑ ca or 8as0arotes d as age bracket from this three' town areas amp f n a its stude2t Jodi apparent change spool °alts'" time' fast tb Ougti alder pupils had been But Ln. far then of its yo"th, official avoice inythess condary -161 io X61 direct representatives tee' The man t° tl1e Regional School District ColzlCoded, Y years of tuition arrangements with Orlcans were Fes' and Eastham had a share ' and o ership of the in the privileges, responsibilities i 00- public schools available to all its school ago ch 3. In Orleans tog the transition was greater at the lcvtoo, principle than of practice. rr Of au S aMY in the operatio For this town it meant a sharing that o cleared by man n °f its public schools. This is a hurdle oe that remains for a'erlean communities during the 1950'5 and, nines are able to y more to clear in the decade ahead, as cOc oP" eratively, vie e© 4. The w and approach their common problen's sis in both th 11 of Wellfleet has faced the throes of InetaI11011e1 t sharin Oi'Y and of its with other to practice. As in Orleans the cliarl °e sp11.1e puPifs. F authority o p ttp °r Wellfle the across a borderi❑ Y f school} o cration t0 t15 away• In g tow et it also meant sending many of it Miles addition nand into the next, a dozen ar I"° Vler'te1" tary school use n}ts consolidated school was converted far here some , t more adj ,Among the towns it seems apparent thryt tancousl n1ent was required. y we have t ol, for the Y and a ec In forms of school organization operatizlg i3ft1ost tr'ict far element schools e each town alike*. a su erintendene� o1 dC' tO *n hSt is Older pupils Grades 1 -6), and a regional sclj° cacl1 by e The own school b (Grades 7 -12) . Under the for i,,c =�nttt" latter uildin C0 in's sublectnupervmsntative flam g' serdlocat d in l Orl ns' Sped local are employed jointly. superintendent and Grass Costs for COST$ lg�peratia� ®F SCYgOOL OPERATION >✓acul 5 8135 1956 Regi ®n ,227,87 $159,R47.()9 Reisn)aursz "Went, Tuiti 25,359, au Re 9$ Net Cost 29,896.40 27 ,794.09 tU Town Valuation 79,971,49 31,(}(,7.97 of ©,985'03 Tax far S 10, 13 94p 10 10,944,78() �n 1 erati $$ o 9.23. 11957 1958 5181,288.47 $206,902.96 33,653.27 35,969.74 111,665.46 11,633,9$5 43,207.6'8 39,720.98 123,974.30 12,183.790 60 10.18 16� 1954 $181 070, 19 51, 216'09 �32 36.6'•3 139,10S'66 705. 1?,s3s'J A No, of pupils Oct. 1 413 419 383 375 409 Net Cost per pupil 300-18 208.80 ''69.29 273.02 300.18 as 1t costs schools, just it c ©sts more money ewer. year to operate our costs are htgher more ever year for man things. Our schoogar just what we for several reasons. First it costs more this year identical for had last year, because the rice is higher each ye and new teach- roved eTs S",", le. a teacher salaries theeeducat'onal p Og � tl elneed for ers have nloxc ded in art effort to do Thirdly, better job in the face o nation Thedse better tl in sdareaex expensive and con", across the are affected In our articular circumstance hoF and tax- similarly. e are fortunate in two ways. 1. The ration between residents and s of Payers is also residers relatively small. If all taxpayers ers were is for school Orleans it scents easonaUle to assum that requircm at ly doubled• service, and also school costs, would be appro, ducatto al case Expressed another way, we are getting the �prersa I would be several rani for about half the 'burden to tlle taxp Y only. 2 F � luatton, If the cost were borne by resident taxpayers exp nding ed costs. Yca'-s we have Ueen livin with a continuously increas tn_ which has served to soften the impact of the tax for Per PuPionlY In 1959 for example, the school operating cry ion increased crea5ed 11.30/10 whhle the tax for scl3ool p 6.9 %. he public T Canclxxsaox� cation and op`"` These are excitincy years in the held of education- dia ever seliools are rcecivinR urn rccedcnted scruttnY� and c teal broad of the ions are being coinmt�nlcated by Means istributed peevrsi °n tict'� knorvt�. For ilany months xtatto'l�lriy� radio and plc $object. llools; ca. tsif�a r directed c nt nn tcW and t tvol;c, out on tration ° u,elea and international rno.vn have have sP concen learn as aced Wing 1ro.n thi�,,it to lc d y} t11� n, so evel tian are 1)atlletnoed toccncoura o as obCr �1 �abu1ud indelinite- he is able, so that tilere may b' rt Well as u led9o. d we hen reme Which to must that there may uFbea sot foundation p° gnow u1t, and e. OVV ly in a world that is exploding NCr t richre eri %d b�' ffam 3'°Xorl c Our schools are respe to tais Glue aifferert ndividu d Sialple constantly revise in an a� ill no Lt and erials art you visit your local school Yost Small °ence n"at elementary school days. uM rel ore re {er being done. Pupils are 103 research techniques than was common a few ears ago, when orpnt• clopedia B usehsclassroom Would have been considered extravaB a IncreasIn emphasis is made of audio - visual assistance in teaching• More growing in cgassroomsndependent reading, and library corners ar he years she Ibe d fieDt Of Individual initiative and the of eln n' tial teaching devices ectroni to in, . ever-broadened Pupil interests all will bs es Gist Mead, ed education. p Mar& total oI ueation has "efts In the past, according t° the snj the future knowled attempted not so much to add to 0 acqu h tWill °w ha sing y impo ant to develop au facility for field, at this sttimePinsthgratitude efor the it does privilege of rving <n the these people. ResPectfuliy Submitted, SYDNEY G. PIERC Schools Superintendent of Report of the Elementary Supervisor To the Visor hereby School COjmittee and Citizens Of Submit in orLast Y of U IOU #54Ud annual eporrtlasnElemcntary Sndin Progra Ye IOU report disc readii!o teiins m Which results f testin Oak place in nssed the reorganization of the trop in grade in w re beg staying Ocon hs later, 8. in April first oby the Pupil have ctionai leg challenges greatest gains were ntadhe sic ne th more level. This With material beyond ill as aeaa e second growth mad cby to pr g e to he expected, be oµevefi,00 grade APrii alua�lo he third el Was Pupils who faster ere receiving e sorPOP 0 13 Level2 u nay beg Oldinterestlnathis iplan.r Therresults °f 3 Pu _ Level 4 2p pupils 5 median Level ' 29 pupils _median Level � 2p pupils mdian ` 20 eian pupils median gain Median 164 gain 6 months gain 8 months the gain 1 year 2 moll ths ils gain 1 year 2 mop gain 2 years 4 mop gain 3 years are Although figures are a necessary art of an evaluation, they tions, habits, and interesti essential t the educational attitudes rowth of our to chi dye must as educators, and ou as parents, endeavors hoter in our children a love for andyappreciation of books• hae to teach your children the mechanics of reading, but more t n that and a thirst for knowledge ' we wish to instill a love for literature people. that will enrich their lives and foster the culture of our Plet Last Tune the combined faculty of School Union #54 com� og an effort evaluation this areanTh ugh a series Ur meetin s the aims and objectives in the teaching . an nr s le were discussed; new methods land materials were studied; and a series of new arithmetic texts were examined to determine the series best suited for our pupils, needs. When the selection was narrowed for four texts arrangements were made for the c xplai- ants of each company to hold meetings with the faculty sp expl� more full g t}ie ring, the teachers ado tedpther Growth the �r ti ineticn eries, publish Voted World Book Cm an The school committees of each town t° Purchase thesetex s for rades one through six t° be put m use- 0 this fall. g gook Oro- this Nell Seften, Arithmetic Consultant for W °rld ber during Pan held atwo -day workshop with the teach an SaPsef r the most Which time she demonstrated methods and rovement grog have a been effective use of the new texts. ram plan t° w cks year under the curriculumua P Arranger` e pr[s at wit- Made area of Crossley, Professor of Langu teaching �vi11 be Seliool of Education to conduct a wO: 54'nl ileewor ss a °f Concen' ten language for the teachers of Union # full day to held during the April vacation to allow three fa11 trated effort. P blished writing' nand A months school news magazine was �izational Itriis i110 in stimulate an interest in both creative and org µ iting• onsit7 ersl>iP thProvide opportunities for more PPulptakeutri nitres f r lead were, thetbditing goes on papers, children °pp °r54 whese�acKar and responsibility. otilag rofittiing by the educationuoffees hoof Mrss. enw°irrildren arriroro this not f all at the Wellfleet Elementary is doinSre ten and fn was elected to teach this class, an , there 0 tinirO' the needs of these children. At pr o frorn uig the class; four from Orleans, tw Wellfleet. 165 No major changes have been undertaken in the testing Pro- gram. We continue to administer group mental abilities tests an nually in grades one, three, and six and the Stanford Binet Intellr Bence Test is given to individuals where further evaluation is felt needed. The Stanford Achievement Tests are given in May to all grades, to help provide the school with a record of individual PUP curriculum, d to determine weaknesses and strengths throughout the pity hat i indeed interestedege to be working in education in a cornntu- who have contributed m its schools. My thanks to all those people Youth. their support for better education for ou Respectfully submitted, BARBARA N. WRIG141 Elementary Supervisor Report of the princi i �� To he Rag of the Elementary 509' SchooSchool Committee and the Citizens of Orleans: lsubmit pte my report as supervising Principal of the Elementary Se tuber gether again 14th fo ecause Hi 1 Blur °iaHirsdcubic sip h She kindergartener to be back to t e esentlsecond t srporici esradev Moved on to the Nattscd o d our fac Cole to teach in New Be and Tlerstandingon�eaMeahhbbotttis as choscii tto . Fad he child en wiliffew yeaas its are npLessound philo oplry of love Ides experience a it is ho great of cedes Will be double. Educationaley lead to ineref each child of eves through divisions in each Rradl at makes th self- eal zatioe fullest Poasi in tiaeeo g me' school, l parent nd community y yet n as adultI d the g eat0s a of h., 1011 of life; the pers fullest sister ?,y unthinkirl ctrl to and Possible capacities, toward the "or do they uses their envi onm ledge You at each agoodhgrades like Kc n the safie way. 166 discoone ot the responsibilities of parents and teachers is that of balance. lu e$ltatpi losophytioa ,vl,,t il best for ° prlanc pltyinof is that It reflectThe tValuestthatt�fani about a velset ledltupo bas those they wish to live by and to build into the lives of their children . Wisdom growth to us means that a child does note does not incre m at tlto expense of human understanding; that he is in- ase in favor at the ex ense of ersonal intcgrit ?; that but stead to stature includes not only optimum grow art lie is to play in it.y growth in his concern for his world and the pt Ltvmg with your children is an endless adventure. It is a }et of Privilege to underpmnm° faith Your in giving these children a strong as valuable peO" Pie it, th love which should help them be accepted their P faculty, s Again m1 right, appreciation to ntyembers, upervisors, Y I express most sincere app comttttttee in o the best tnleducation foplth epport so of a rleanst�tven m prOVidin� Respectfully sub»itted, YO CORA M. MA MLISic Report 01 the Sur-aller -nor ®f tnstrume�tals To- or of strumental Ivylusic n1theySchool of Orleans. as truss t? Of "Shall we purchase our child a on di �sintstafter Perrot st sest d over question which involves the seen parer for es 'tors er one hundred dollars, is asked by tnanstudents)ls y fs °t° Of atdlc b least ee months�oThe nswer 'n r°. not°yets The ttnlortunately sometimes the answer is - are' all cases, Which P Haspthe student musical talent7entltosthe ins des cots ire 2• Does the student show slrtoe�rnced on t d°�ooragdje prclass 3. How far has the student ad ante road e° at at vtsed The answers to the last two 4thusiasnttbere os °per bV thA en_ reon 11'2017 instruction per week. The amount of progress made between these instruction periods is determined by the amount of instruction h be si are elsewhere. Unfo help many parents and family an the lack of not enthusiasm Lack P the student. Lack of knowledge dents In the ideal elem' arny times, go hand -in -hand. stu Duringrthes daily sul ervised in class instrucLionuand p act ce sessions' by those around him w Periods the student is always enc°ura IDa but also are sharing ame To achieve th the o not only are sharing the same probl assistant this ideal enthusiasm. an believe that the situation would mean the addition areJY the lementary level. If this were to happen I sine honest t and answers mio 9 ic, al talent competent o . to the above questions could then be an aptitude and n prompted only b the student's ill a tion and enthusiasm, not y Y stru Ia conclusio merely by the lack of enough in appreciation for the coo again I wish to express m most Son t of Educatlo�, principals of tation received From the Suyerintendent r Parents he schools the Supervisor of Elementa Y and pupils. Respecttt,lly submitted, FRANK BERTELLE JAMS o the Report of the Art Supervisor NOw, eahaP o a tlof e e s Years have made reat progress ress t• School. Our a atneg area bouts in g w g wellfle the basic for Orleans, Eastham, and W 1 the situa . s to be effecam is stronh bts, the Nauset Regional Durinn as existshve. exg but we need more rim otitliue the s it TO Plain this need ods Provide bas c b ck ra choo1 yeas t° recommend a solution tied element els. In the g °und in the e Art program has Conlin th, tity of airy schools are of Orley various art mediums and to the Person to to aterials, I Supplied with ns' Eastham, and WeilfleetUatt Junior hiThe total RU °lass from[, it hasl been the aolc for the �e classes and school levels - °f classes One through grade eigbt once is tWent eleenga artw onstult e high schosevnt Then,t here are tw d sal at the actualvartttech�gh oadgh is Ses- Outside of fort level, atr all wlevels service this load is heat M the national class teaching verage. In fact, it leaves no little nd that supervision. Then at the Nauset Regional High School, we find two Only forty five minutes once each week is allotted to each °f Iriods. art Cl asses. These classes should be lengthened into double P' Also, they should be made available to more student and nereis situation is a result of a ;rowing school population e increasin° an 1 aced interest in arts and crafts. The art classes . at both rounds of the educational ladder. As a result. 1 cladditton definite need arises. This need can only be fulfilled by the to the staff of another art person. it Tba addition of another art person would make possibvo�ld is all b one Personrto care for theoaeneeidsdonlit,, lemet1ta1ry R chonal I-la one person to direct the art activities ' the N be laid t ward the ps°Pos tion this art will becoe foundation, major stones subject in arts and craf of the schools. This is not a new or novel Idea full roles in in their inafnY states been recognized for many yeltouf the nation 11, scanae -r es the need todayu is of circles for the lectethe beautrftic for a emot onal, andns er'rtualeworld for tl e Let coldnfa tual, aof d wor core Orld of world ti ] yand competition in political iph losophies. Art ustnot a fad A is living. Respectfully SO EDtWARD E sOLTON music vOCaI of the Report of the Supervisor ofnn the Prop ess odd report to Ust- v0 Once again I am pleased to arrivivJ5 J ord- eat 15 loan d to do$, calOn Music the e lementary ementar level new eq iPol the Or i ar5 bra es enrichment to the regular classroom pion of for PotUpbo� rd, ed' rigs to aecomran Schools theltexts are oo each PuwyoUn a bee teed en In addition monthly subscri trot- for a l o,v ed, h er ned'ah 0P to the excellent msic a preciatio ater al oo the antSehon "teh and recording to supplement of raalbun sefEast"OTI, an It is hoped that texts and Th will be supplied as budgets Permit. bells, eniov!oe ---, rhythm rnstrum well. The Wellfleet School has record albums for the (list grade text acquired last year. A voluntary course in class piano has been established at the Orleans Elementary School to include stimulation of creative m al ability and instruction in the nsic of theory and in sight use of the keyboard, in the elements Pupils is dividthis coursed sections. Besides r supplementing Pn ref how thessons, instruction,ild takes to music before incurring PPo expense of Private mal and Indiate grades from each town have combined to hear rnfor the ihsfall f om New Y York. concerts b different instrumental e d rostrum ts1C was Percuss o s tit th ork. Y a piing there was a brass quintet, all the child played e n trio. Each group has told abo �ye6 delight of the Individuals oepReydSthec nstruments, totthe mmense Six ' mus cxclas et r e'gmusie ions' the Chorus, and the special class foi ne acoustcs of ache ule Conti. rsalsl one mus music and the Glee Cfiae individuals Pleasant envuo are unable to benefit from thelrave tioll baaltexa2 e, anpdtit stoKeyboard, The junior high P°Ptlsrecia- pu text inclu there are JT•, a monthly music PP The Publishing Co de those from recordings to supplement thcs ette d teacher havpPnY• se fere Ginn and Company and from FOlaept hearse hi been added to cc B�oschool libr ry. of both stu re- assemhigh school bl nee a we Chorus of about es t° s is re co Y and preparation 60 singers continues ostablishetdonded the ration concert for programs at the C . s 1 students for thlshat a in- Cott and end of school acti�teek.he Festival we chosenthusiastic m of three rehearsals a w nee be at Barre, ser to participate In the spring of 1959Music Music selected by a .Wont Pate in the New England late" to mee Thest. to be heild at°ard o fall atfive tendstudents I) 53[yt Gir > Aeerformancetearseleo Club numbers about Mhiitacvoicessthis Year for June and for teethe Christ,,, P1eparationsyare being IT Cott Bo Nunlero Program given satnibly, for the annual springce 14 Pr se Glee Cl s requests the Glee Club formal da a f only wi The Mubut there is 11 rem the students themselves at the With additional t "Partin entt arc'. In es will continue sc o1 exPand g personnel. 170 Interest in music in the schools of this union is increasing, and this interest is vitally needed by our children for balance in this era If atoms and missiles. Re.spec[fully submitted, DULCE W. RYDER Report of the Physical Education Program The Physical Education Pro ram in the Orleans Elementary School has been increased and itn roved with the additional time in for allotment, It is most gratifying to be able to use tiledgTnanall rooms and classrooms classrooms weLc poorweather substitutes for afgym -) three Years has The Physical Education Program for the P action st °r" 1 a ?rdthe first ltwo grades,trhythms, fundamentals 1orts all c Jilof l- and nLnerng, stunts and tumblin s, games, relays and P th es have been given an opportunity to practice dunno the FOough classes by actin ass squad leaders or captains and Through Up Period take char e of the various games and activities. y, men - all these activities the aim is to develop the children P Y e tally, morally and socially. P if ossible to give soc- has made f ourth,fi Lengthening ad ixth grhdes an Intramural prograll are od afterlf ill i this fall i�T and volley ball, basketball, lead -up games on gular gym classes and are used in the Follow -uP pwhich is bihtY mus The Krauss- -Weber Test for Physical Fitness, and dffinstN °t- has been given for othe three years I have been eac d iu the cetor ing in the Orleans Elementary School. It has create tethe i of h test a desire to strengthen weak muscles and The resultsde rlaiOO choosing suitable exercises to aye them. the first ° tblepo t two shove the greatest percentage of failbreYrie v n for egility ties Area the The above test is augmented Y been St engtit, eit abil.om years. t Physical Fitness Test w essivel3 tests of here, mat and a fo�d'e endurance as standards against whiche�col� geracipati°rr Jdren and progress. These standards are to errs P ch o pm c l g�n t -'IX to eighteen years ea ha d veloe hsiafiess yes ye nt opy �e Physical fitness theestWill provide, eY match I rove their physical conchu °n 171 the standards. The first time the A.A.U. Test was given in Orlealls June, 1958, the results were discouragin with only 3% qualifying and receiving their certificates. This year the ercentaRe raised to 75 %, and noteworthy is the interest and r th percentage of the children• Recommended b ys- ical Education and y the American Association for Health, ph Recreation for Elementary School Children is informal intramural com Y and invitation Petition; such as play days, sport days Competition for funis safety and Occasionally, with nearby schools. of y health for the childr emphasized as the greatest means had a very successful soccer d The fifth and sixth grade School in the fall of 1958 They day with the Easthanl Elementary Union would like Very much children in the three schools of he invitation games if the transportation have more of these play days a I considered it a P anon problem can be arranged. ical Education Program privilege to be asked to explain the Ph o Your interested team ia Elementary Schools and its needs r, Sydney school committee M Pierce, at a recent members and Superintendent M needs Y earnest desire is ha t he of School Union #54. t th I wish children and is Physical Ed. Program mee e Sydney thank the satisfactory to the townspeople. r• Y P1ercethe School Committee, Supt, of Schools, Ms- pecially pearl llis ho ci in 1958) generously , Ns• Cora Mayo; the teachers room cooperation Parents and custodian let us use the kindergarten rful Mr. Lionel Gill for their wonde Respect fully siebinitted ETHEL T. REED Report of the Scho . . infecThe School a �� PhYSlClan commonscoiseases with958 -19S in the Middle that we hav two �ptios in which there were a fie from scho a of the winter always wits The exceptions were but will re ol. I d° not Intel, that was f th us' and a mild flu epide s It is di any that are •d to tablua e°wed by prolonged abse¢ed shown disappointin intere the illnesses that occurr ' w re the use b g to find thatd to the re of three Of there , port of the school- es hla f the PoPul iculatio ,te I . ots for those t ual fth , on l' t is s ose Who have lack the tri al this Jaime have had t at high s am happy t co has 'lot various authorities oe' drool grade, a eport that d any of the polio re in excellent teeth children of the f oUr Of infected to 1�Si1S Large infect 172 are growing scarce in the six upper school grades. All large tonsils ent are not all infected sonic are me rely enlarged because of q attacks of tonsilitis , and have returned to their original size by the time the eleventh or twelfth grade is reached. There seems to be fewer-children with arches of the feet ing down to end in flat feet. Notices are sent home to the parents of defects found so that the may be corrected. Taken as a oup, I think the chidren and young people attending our two schools are a health a } P P y group. E, 1Vi.D• HENRY A. WHIT School Physician Report of the School Nurses Program for the Year 1958 -1959 291 1 • inspection b physician and nurse 2. Individual pupil examination by physician With 3. Individual 291 41 uil examination by physician 485 Parent present 4• Pupils admitted to nursing service 120 2,142 5 • Field visits by nurse 6 150 Office visits by nurse 150 Inspection by dental hygienist 8. -hygienist 20 75 Prophylaxis b dental 12 l Pupils given first aid 1p, nhor sickness 1 - Lectures atended 0T "ER SERVICES: 502 5511 Massachusetts Vision Test 514 Audiometer Test Registration Day Weighed and measured 41 Pediaci CLINICS. Rogers, cough 28 C 1 • Pre - school checkup by Dr. Frederick and Whooping Fred L• 70 Booster - Diphtheria, Tetanus 19r. Small Pox Vaccinations Tetanus by --• Booster Slinic for Diphtheria and Moore, County Health Doctor 173 3. Fluorine Clinics conducted b County Hygienist e 5 Y Mrs. Alice Dalzell, 150 4. Polio - Salk vaccine ocul0ati13 year age group) 1 5. State Orthopedic Clinics ons 3 Contributions for $ ,70.00 Contagious and in Sal vation Army Fund German Measles iseases : 1 Chicken pox i Impetigo 7 Conjunctivitis I Ring Worm 2 Athelete's Foot I Pneumonia 5 '40ninucleoses 1 Ear Infections Gland Infections 10 Trench Mouth 1 During the 3 Reports on school year all clinics and t v1ews physical defects tests were carradnte defect given to were sent Thien their se wishin home to parents an , Of children, g advice about making corrections exCe COntagious d sic pt for the cold and infectious diseases were at a minimum an knVe in the scho viruses ' there was a percentage, of the publi at this time to very small per Health pro r thank all that participated in prom °tint; g and for the year 1958 and 1959. Respect fully submitted DORIS A. POND, R•14' N, MARION I. CHACB, School Nurses ® so UN EAS�H aid #54 January NS- fiaebTary �Mo Aa, SCROD L�'i..EE'T nary 19 nday.� DISTRICT February 2g -Frida Reopen Al'ri114.ThuMOn ay CRse, usual ti cati °n vacation. day "Y—R o' a me, for mid - winter va 'nt' al time' for Good Friday and SPrI 174 April 20— Wednesday— Reopen. May 30— Monday— Memorial Day June 17—Friday—Close R September 7—Wednesday—Schools y Close mid - morning for summer recess. October 1 2— Open October 19 Wednesday -- Columbus Day. C •)—Wednesday—Teachers' Convention. November 11-- Friday— , November 23 � veterans Day. y R �cess NoVemb ,� —V� ednesda —Close middy for Thanksgiving R' 1gov er 28— Monday — Reopen. tuber 23— Friday —Close midday for Christmas Recess. SCHOOL CENSUS Boys Five years or over and under seven Seven years or over and under sixteen 170 215 In Distribution of Above Minors Public day school membership Five years or over and under seven Seven In p years or over and under sixteen rivate school membership Five years or over and under seven Seven years or over and under sixteen In vocational school membership Seven years or over and under sixteen In St F e & County Institutions sixteen Five years or over and under s Seven years or over and under sixteen ELEMENTARY nrigN KINDERGAlt no Girls 50 168 l X18 78 X82 17 54 �z d� n � cr NN,NoNaoNay rn c7t I -..r .t ro Teachers College Elem.- Assist. Teachers College of Conn., � a Elem.- Assist. Plymouth Normal Elem.-Assist. Perry Norman Wheelock Col., B.U. nC) Lowell Teachers Col• x 01 N W W N N N ,�WC7�0CAST: B.U. Boston Teachers Col, Elern.. Assist, Simmons Col., Hillyer Col. Elem.- Assist. ,a Art supervisor oo N WWwNNW: LA -4 N.E. Conservatory of Music physical Ed. pem) Sargent, U. of Buffalo Vocal Music Christian College, B.U. Elem. Supervisor Tufts o j WwN 0 i t P 00a o to . Un vM M _ wNwW4Ah- c NOOWCD CaW: v NWNthNN: t d 03 C7 A; - y m ,> o 0 03 o � ©Z C cr} r' C CV _o ATI �n Cr z K Gorham, Bridgewater State Teachers College Elem.- Assist. Teachers College of Conn., Name Cora W Mayo Dorothea M. Abbott Dorothy P. Eldredge Pearl Ellis Eleanor B. Fisher M. Elizabeth 'Jones Bertha E. Keefe Albert G. Kolodzik Constance M. Newell Catherine M. skinner Edvracd E. Bolton Frank W lames Ethel T. Reed Dam W. Ryder Barbara lei. W fItt w CP tfiap "C w • "-�• A. ro :i5 a ao 0 CD V=F n ' 3 z lUl",F� WC) nom Z:j C5 ry � rn o� oil C eo CJ CA Z '� CCU � � n Cy •� � � � `C � `�' t..l s W Z n p 'b my ~ t' Cn +�+ 'Z `� � � � �• � ,.r, � mac, ca � '� �,,_• �-- r �„ o COR 'pS or, 1,E.ACIIERS— pceerrrber 1959 Position Preparation Elena.- Principal Gorham, Bridgewater State Teachers College Elem.- Assist. Teachers College of Conn., � a Elem.- Assist. Plymouth Normal Elem.-Assist. Perry Norman Wheelock Col., B.U. nC) Lowell Teachers Col• E6em - Assist, Elem.-Assist. Hyannis "Teachers Col. Elem.-Assist, B.U. Boston Teachers Col, Elern.. Assist, Simmons Col., Hillyer Col. Elem.- Assist. Name Cora W Mayo Dorothea M. Abbott Dorothy P. Eldredge Pearl Ellis Eleanor B. Fisher M. Elizabeth 'Jones Bertha E. Keefe Albert G. Kolodzik Constance M. Newell Catherine M. skinner Edvracd E. Bolton Frank W lames Ethel T. Reed Dam W. Ryder Barbara lei. W fItt w CP tfiap "C w • "-�• A. ro :i5 a ao 0 CD V=F n ' 3 z lUl",F� WC) nom Z:j C5 ry � rn o� oil C eo CJ CA Z '� CCU � � n Cy •� � � � `C � `�' t..l s W Z n p 'b my ~ t' Cn +�+ 'Z `� � � � �• � ,.r, � mac, ca � '� �,,_• �-- r �„ o COR 'pS or, 1,E.ACIIERS— pceerrrber 1959 Position Preparation Elena.- Principal Gorham, Bridgewater State Teachers College Elem.- Assist. Teachers College of Conn., New Britain Elem.- Assist. Plymouth Normal Elem.-Assist. Perry Norman Wheelock Col., B.U. Elem: Assist. Lowell Teachers Col• E6em - Assist, Elem.-Assist. Hyannis "Teachers Col. Elem.-Assist, B.U. Boston Teachers Col, Elern.. Assist, Simmons Col., Hillyer Col. Elem.- Assist. Bridgewater State Art supervisor Bridgewater State, Tufts lnst, Music N.E. Conservatory of Music physical Ed. pem) Sargent, U. of Buffalo Vocal Music Christian College, B.U. Elem. Supervisor Tufts Degree B,S. M.Ed. B.S. B.S. M.A. M.Ed. M.Ed. B.M. B.M. A.B. Service Experience Began in Prior to Orleans Sept. 1959 1 -1 -49 25 yrs. 9 -9 -59 9 -4 -44 9 -1446 9 -9 -57 9 -8 -52 2 -1 -30 9 -5 -56 9 -8 -58 9 -6 -46 9 -5 -56 9 -9 -57 9 -9 -57 9 -8 -58 9 -8 -52 22 yrs. 23 yrs. 13 yrs. 22 yrs. 13 yrs. 28 yrs. 61fa yrs. 5 yrs. 27 yrs. 7 yrs, 2 yrs 27 yrs. 1 yr. 7 yrs. Address Orleans Orleans Orleans Orleans E. Orleans Orleans Eastham Chatham Orleans Harwich Eastham W. Chatham Eastham Osterville Orleans Report of the Easiham- Orleans- Welffleet Regional Distract school Committee 1959 Last a ne%, regional high report estimated that the total project f or d that a change gh school was about one -third completed and note ed the com corn a hipped plank to a flat, fire resistant roof had delay n' �g delay was nevenal working plans about six weeks•dulei a r overtaken in the construction sc s of construction Th The ter of 1959 was a hard one from the standpoint rete work, schedule involving a substantial proportion of were too eo r or Of the working days in January and February be 101 that Perni- wet it was almost April before a roof could e By May itnwas r work to proceed at a good rate• have to bd concentrated clear that the major efforts would h in locker roo on the classroom wings at the expense of the gy Feed that the ms' and before av school August had hardly begun it Waitron a0d complete . would be o cn in September without kitchen. T installation Most school was equipment in the laboratories, s iaPse Of these as opened September 17 with these hand" nd cafeteria was special areas were usable for class recitations and to eat available for a study hall and a place for the Stn d the lane Min Rot lunches they brought with them. tember o1P, meat and were not served until the end of Sep d eq a Were changes in kitchen appliances an labo f• tones 'The shops sere in he Christmas recess. However t f octob�l take enure active operation before the end ° it i a few project is now substantially completed but o0 details more Weeks ' of 1� tern, and bring operations U9b0 to clean up a nu hbergoing c P o the level of a smoothly er and man said ab been betm, mitte• quicker Ways to out the railroad there may have b the c °the just did complete but Premature not ha a big buildin project blY+ of the • occu PPen to know g P j ueSti °na on fe goodbut ' P som of the p emises expedited the lrne X11 Of will t did r comp as ers Patience bi er than that. It produced a tease P gg charm Parents hat amounted cooperation on the par of studenai' to ofO this ac d caliber of to an eloquent testimo for WD W school district wa y an he human resources b d s formed and is now operating' at N About t five hand OPEN HOUSE r 1 °oa Regional d parents and friends had a prel!O ?4otlo0 gh School November 10th during 178 hers, was Educational Week. This occasion, sponsored by the teachers' s intended to facilitate parent-teach' conferences on the been school work. It was a continuation of a program which had carried on b the Or School for several years• The crowd .0 Y leans High Sc to give th was too big and too interested in seeing everything the evening Purpose of the event much of a chance, and, in effect, Provided a preview to an Open House. 5 more than On Sunda afternoon December 13th, Student a thousand people from 2 to le res onded to an invitation from the lots to Council to visit the school. From arrival in the parking other departures from the cafeteria all guests, including several fro under - Lower guided and informed by Cape towns were welcomed, gu their res- graduates of the school with the teachers standing by in each Pective classrooms. Upon arrival at the Administrative offices d many guest was Tans ode total given an eight page booklet with floor plans the Pictures mostly classroom interiors, and the aerial view been Plant- All of these pictures, except the frontispiece, ora by Club and Prepared for reproduction by pmembers of the Photograph: ph: cts in Of the school. Students were at ork on experiments , ng rooms' all the laboratories in the shops and the sewing Th cordiality and there was a special exhibit in the Fine Arts rooms- this and efficient of the undergraduate participation in and its added considerably to the impressions that the equipment made on these friends of this school. PRELIMINARIES TO OpOt XT1ONS cor- reorganized to ssist - From earl in 1958 when the union was tinu�us respond to the district the Committee has had the c °n tl me - easing th ante � a constan y first � Of its present Superintendent in handling fields. Thwas making volume of details particularly in three major schools, , al eurri' the assistance of details, 1pthe teachers in the two high a regiOn tional an educational surve the basis for the outline ° of an ed cal plan culum and the preparation of the specifi to m ke the Phydie teat , inventory which the architect had to ha, ion Wio man tion for the building. he second, again in .compilation Specific , corn- ers who would have to use them, was the many . eries t of equip for whichand. dehof a fact b movable furnishings and eq P orders Placea�atl °n the„° Who had to be prepared, bids taken, pleted. The third was concerned with the teachers ncePt two as the ex stay - for the new regional high School' ed COntractaeeidedto rov> d schools were interviewed and elleflet teache er wen vac cles resigned. Subsequently, one school and an th these accept - tpown 1 Seven the new teachers Elementary obtained to Was offered and to operate the enlarged curriculum- Pierce On July 1, 1959, Mr. Sydney 179 eded a contract to be Re„ d half his total Sala Regional Superintendent for three years an W roll and the salary was assumed on a regional district operating P for whom Other half was split three wa 5 b the three t0tiv1t5 0l he continued as Superintendent of their elcmentary school systems. Mr. Armand se Regional High School Ouarina was appointed Principal of titer N tinier and 3 part time teacher August 1, 1959. A faculty of 25 fulll roster of the faculty 'Vero teri ber will be given contracts on Sep found at the end of this report, The estahlis "'OOMAM AND PLANS expected to r hment of the re tia ►vas provide int regional schoo! oraniza n npils of the inernber tow proved educational advantages for the P ro tresses ' ns• As the operation of tltc rc ional school Ping it 1S rea . urrn of pupils in g to notice three thins in articular: married out to a actor Zl subject greater degree. with general ability levels is being Carne, matter than was possible with smaller ear t ntniore capable in several areas is being etc., and apiss' e'g algebra 1 g presented earlier de nipe� struction far pccial class i5 i in grade eight, biology in grained iV° pupils ha n, operation to provide Special - Fxoced divi u oblec e Coif apped by mental retardation. tent of dual tothe education is to foster the develoPrl t the meat Further ntiancd here tare his capability. We believe deye]opf the academic snore, they r real advantages for that lion ° work areas of thep Provide a foundation for the cYpan raced appeairisiay be included in t rriculurn , so that in the future advo� on the public al intportanCe high school program. Such Pr° made schools rn the rn the face of the demands to be Years ahead. ACHIi Pa 14ENT TEST RESULTS of standardized °ur annual testing pro ram is the administratiolpol and the i Id' - hieven1ent tests. the broad ual pupil With These serve to acquaint titer i4 school may general as h a measurement of accomplisitrr' the std how tsnow in Which the curriculum. From the resoles lie, pools. Dori achievement areas it is strop where weakness hiP our pupils have the compares with other American e�ect cntatics sco four Years that this ro�*ram has been ,th` each Yearn oocial studs sell, but showed less achievement in got onedit sco .ever' and this an in other areas. Gains were aPpi ved percent at the nines year each class (grades 9 -12) ac otlly the nation ,h the classes iy'ninth Percentile. ineans thatCro55 studelt seems an d o etter at' aevast sampling of high schools a dalganbtil �- - pea Ps ofnom these result that we have a �e�et already strengthened by our 180 SALAP.,y ADMINISTRATION in 158 glary schedule and personnel policy had been adopted late 1958 as part of the basis for niaking ono gratin, budget for Orleans his scale was identical With the scale then in cfTcct for degree High School with a starting, rate of $3600 for an ,4.B• at The 1950 legislature enacted --a law setting the starting rate $`1,000 effective Scpicntber 1, 1 L ?Gi). a st rtin', cr►tatives of the Nauset Teachers Association asked for each t- rate of $4200 ti %,ith a corresponding increase of $600 at Pr ay step in the sca }c, t0gcther with an increase in the annual Con viii .,increment front $200 to $250. They suggested that the ule. The might take two years to get everyone on this new schcd- Yond oneCoiYimittee was unwilling to make any contntitinent be- unanimo year' and after a week of careful consideration it voted maxi usly to establish a scale With a minin -lurn of $4000 and a degreunt of $6000 for a B.A. degree; $4300 to $6900 far an and to plae�aitd $4500 to $7500 for an A.M. degree plus 30 hours and 1, 1 60 the stag on the proper steps of the schedule as of September alt }too he Committee was glad to increase rite starting rate to $4000 gh it had no alternative in view of the action of the legislature, It Would have liked to raise the starting ate to $4200 but this would jade involved Prohibitive increases or destroyed the schedules- In its in v e\,v the latter would be undesirable at this time particul:Yrl }' far ult of the high de ree of balance in the s read of the present Y roster between g periods of service' short, ntcdium and loner P e that the ftot If there is to be a schedule it is fallacious to ass u"" sec ° d step can be than ed without a connparabie adjustn'entt e w 11 he nitre 1SP and so on to the top of the scale. The starting tember 1 1q5� d from $36Q0 to $4000 an increase of $400 00* only the The second step on the resent schedule is $ 1959 or aftartina rate is raised then apteacher hired Septet' $3, 0p is secondr= Would be paid $4000 his first year - reduced The same every tio he and Year and restor tion restored would o $4000 6 lthe fir t tworinv aeu1 Y � icludes o r step in the ten year schedule, and the curren c e Jule- R tteE ne or snore teachers at 7 of the ten. steps in the a oust pOUjar as- The The teachers' representatives suggested that d parttct),jd be f teachers 13 get up to on Yittee w2 if its pects of Regional salary dnninistra icon• aneexpl° a en bass ou Cory salary 114 oral. to a� Py to join in such a joint enterprise on tion, tec g ptter; t,,,ept en'da could be broadened to a corisidera ect20 ce administration fora public school system•it�o a merit treat']' the desirability and practicability of aPP1Y'n iii it_ t.81 EASMANCIAL STATEMENT REGIONAL SCHUDL DISTRICT DECEMBER 31' 1959 RECEIPTS Cash on $and Eastham Assessment Orleans Assessment Federal Assessment State Withhold' Tax Earns ablleehConriy Retirement Teacher Insurance Federal Funds Interest on Treasury Notes Sale of Boiler Construction Region s Sh I `- Imbursement Refund Constn ction Accounting Cafeteria Athletic Receipts Teacher Receipts Mass, Retirement Hospital Service $1,279,959.76 46,961.01 101,122.70 53,147.50 7,449.10 663.13 541.96 170.61 66.67 19,926-11 150.00 24,927.10 Tax 4.45 5.00 4,855.81 416.25 2,596.17 884.00 $1,543, 8`1 '33 Federal PAYMENTS 13 State Withhold' W1thho Tarustab e C 1 Taxax Mac le ass er Rettireme Retirement Teacherl0$pital S rvice Gen to cttonrance instruction onit'ol Operatio Maintenance Auxiliar CapI al Costsencies CAS tt a ant H ON co bECEMBgR 31 1959 182 $ 7,449.10 663.13 541.96 2,596.17 884.00 170.61 1,052,758.80 5,666.51 62,976.37 15,670.53 584.76 9,098.84 123,600.00 6,041.48 774.91 243,370.16 $1 543'81733 BALANCE SHEET FOR YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1959 EASTUAM- ORLEANS -3 iELLFLEET REGIONAL SCHOOL DISTRICT Cash °n Hand Net Funded December 31, 1959 $ 243,370.16 xcess O1 Fixed Debt 1,515,000-00 Sc ool and Deficiene 124,143.41 Con t tiostruction 1,515.000.00 hlainte n Costs 115,9.17.17 Athleticancc (Encumbered) 757.24 Federal Account 641.34 Cafeteria ands 66.67 1,814.33 $1,755,370.16 $1,758,370.16 Cash on Hand Cash in Second Bank State 1St. Trust $243,370.16 $ 15 853.006 Cash to Cafe Cod Trust Co. 195,603.25 Cash iu First National Bank of Provincetown $243,370.16 $243,370.16 Respect fully submitted, Treasurer L. ISABELLE BRACKETT' EXPENDITURES, 1959' and SU][)GET 1960 OPERATION Caner Control Instruction () eration Maintenance Auxiliary Agencies 3utlay g Contingencies Total 10perational costs in 1959 were for 183 60619* l0j 5075•p0 93 165,0'00 63',034.81 37,500.00 15,o06-02 4, 584.76 16,72 00 9,384.59 S 000.00 3000-06 239' 97 ear approximately 0ae "third Y i Athletics Out -of -State Travel Principal Interest Credits Net Cost SPECS ACCOUNTS Eastham Operation (21.770 ) Building (25 %) ' Payment Total Orleans Operation (50.5%) Building (50%) Total Wellfleet Operation (27,8% Building (25%) ) O H' S. Payment Total ............ 1,000.00 500.00 LOAN COSTS 1959 85,000.00 49,600.00 134,600.00 34,786.79 ASSESSMENTS 99,813.21 1959 22,007.71 24953.30 46,961.01 51 216.09 495906.61 1015122-70 28194.20 24,953.30 535157,5n 1960 80,000.00 46,965.00 1262965-00 24,927.10 102 1960 (23.8%) 57,263.04 (25 %) 251509.48 3� 85,772'52 15 (51.1%) 122018 (50 %) 51,9 � 173,966.06 (25.1%) 60,390'415 (25 %) 25,509.00 3 88 90032 CON8T1tTjCT'ON ACCOUNT Building Expended to Dec. Estimated Architect & Equipment 31 ' I959 1' Engineering 110'414,65 Additional Sitev,ork ,204.8g 109 370.11 Idsur anC e 83 ,85Advertising 1.37 116,00 3,145.09 32,203.63 Other 4,1041.85 ..........V. Totals 74.43 10-34 .00000000 *00 ............ 1 492'77 3.52 ............ 7 35 144,718.83 1,637,49 184 y ka . xq Athletics SPECIAL, ACCOUNTS Out -of -State Travel ............ 1,000.00 500.00 LOAN COSTS Principal Interest 1959 19d0 85,000.00 80,000.0 0 492600.00 46,965.00 Credits 134,600.00 126,965.00 Net Cost 34,786.79 24,927.10 9 ASSESSM S 9,813.21 102 ENT Eastham Operation {21.7% 1959 1960 Building (25%) 22,007.71 (23.8 %) 57263• 04 0• H. S, pa yment 24 ,953.30 (25 %) 25,50;�Tot al 30�� Orleans Operation (5o,.5%) 46'961.01 85,772.52 Building (SD %) 51,216.09 (51.1%) 122,947.15 Total 49906.61 (50%) 51,018 9 Wellfleet �— . Operation (27.8 101,1X2.70 3 % 17 0. Building (25 %) ) 28,194. 0.55 S Payment 24953.30 (25.1 %) 60'309.47 Total ............ { -5 %) 23200.00 53157.50 8 CONST��CTION S, ExpeAded to ACC ®UNT Building Dec. 31 Estimated Architect & ' 1989 Additional Equipment Engineering 1' 190,414,65 109 Sitework ,204.88 ,370.11 jdsurance 3 145.09 Advertising 32,203.63 Other ising 6 0 •0 4101.85 0.6...04096. 74,43 ............ Totals 10.34 .......... 1,492,75 5 2 144,718.83 1,637,492'3 184 SPECIAL ACCOUNTS Athletics 1,000•00 Out -of -State Travel 500.00 Financing Provisions LOAN COSTS Three -Town Appropriations $ 10,000.00 1959 1960 TWent - sue ()00.00 Principal 50,000.00 y Year Band Issue 1,6110, 85,000.00 Interest on U. S. Treasury Notes 23,612.00 Interest 469965-00 State Planning 49,600.00 � Reimbursement 72,900.00 Credits 134,600.00 126�9�7.a0 x,1,706,512 AO 34,786.79 '74,9f Net Cost 99,813.21 142 ASSESSMENTS PUPIL ENROLLMENT Easthau� 1959 1.860 OCTOBER 1, '1959 Operation 04 (21.7 %) ? 263• Building (25%) 2,007.71 (23.8 %) 57,508,45 Truro Total O' H S. payment 24,953.30 (2S °10) 23000 00 Gra Orleans Brewster E,,tham Wel1ycet 100 Gra e 7 46 0 211 29 l 69 Total --- de 8 0 Orleans 46,961.01 85,77 30 0 12 27 67 Operation (50,5 %) Grade 9 16 1 Iluildin 51,216.09 (51.1 %) 122,847.11 39 2 10 g (50 %) g4 49,906. 51,018.95 Grade 10 9 1 Total 6l (SO %) Qr 27 3 14 2 68 �_. ade 11 31 7 17 1 i 5� Wellfleet 101,122.70 173,966.06 2 Operation Grade 12 7 Building (25%) %) 28,194.20 (25.1%) 60,390.47 30 3 17 0,1-1,S . Pa 24,953.30 25,509 0 —� 7 A I Payment (_5 %) 000.0 Totai ............ 31000- 1 202 15 94 99 53,157,50 88,900.32 CONSTRILJCTI ()N ACCOUNT Expended to E stimated Building Dec. 31, 1959 Architect & Engineering Additional, 1,294,414. Equipment 8 110,204.88 109,370.11 Sitework 83,85137 3,145.09 Insurance 116.00 32,203.63 Advertising ,101$5 , ............ Other g 74.43 ........,... Totals 10.34 ............ 1,492,773.52 144,718.83 1,637,49'•3 184 185 FACULTY Armand A. Guarino Principal Dartmouth College, Harvard Univ., M.Ed. Phyllis A. Baker Librarian - English Simmons College, B.S. Stanley M. Boynton i,ffathematics Clark Univ., Boston Univ., M.A. S. Stewart Brooks Language - Sec. Stud. Princeton, Ph. D. Moncrieff M. Cochran, Jr. Guidance McGill Univ., Harvard Univ, M.Ed. Richard W. Cochran Mathematics Tufts College, B.S. Bernard C. Collins, Jr. Industrial Arts Fitchburg, T.C., B.S. Elizabeth T. Collins Home Economics Univ. Vt. Edward A. Dickinson Social Studies Boston Univ., B.S. John P. Donahue Physical Education Dartmouth College, A.B. Thomas R. Downie French Knox College, A.B. W. David Edwards English Univ. Rochester, B.A. Ov Bradley Fisk, Jr. Social Studies Swarthmore College, Clark Univ., A.M. Dorothy Fulcher Social Studies Bridgewater, T.C., B.S.E. David A. Gates Science Stonehill College, Bridgewater, T.C., M.Ed. Elisabeth Hooker English Smith College, M.A. Mary A. Leary Commercial Boston Univ., M.C.S. Georgia R. Lowell English Tufts College, A.R. Leo P. Miller Special Class Fitchburg, T.C., B.S.E. Betty D. Murphy French and English Tufts College, A.B. Edward F. O'Brien Science Boston College, Boston, T.C., M.Ed. John E. O'Hara Industrial Arts Bridgewater, T.C. Herbert F. VettengtB Science Univ. of Maine, B.S.Ed. Caco \yn M. Commereial Boston Univ. B.S. Stacdey 4.. Stcivtyi, Sc Mathematics Boston Univ. MEd. lAa�l`aa XX' Yhy azwx T<emon, T.C., Ws. Edward E. Bolton Art Tufts College, Bridgewater, T.C., M.Ed. Frank B. James Music N. E. Conserv. B.M. Boston Univ., B.M. Dulce W. Ryder Music Respectfully submitted, Eastham- Orleans- Wellfleet Regional School District Committee Winthrop A. Griffin, Chairman Daniel J. Chisholm Joan Fletcher Theodore L. Hicks Charity M. Kidd y Kathleen M. VanBuskirk Richard J. VanderMay L. Isabelle Brackett, Secretary - Treasurer Charles E. Frazier, Jr., Counsel Sydney G. Pierce, Superintendent Index to Report5 UA1tdl,tl'� .............. • Page 6i . .. ... lZeport . 60 (,4 FlCpUrt .................................... F3oarsl beet December 3 f . V 959 ............ ............................. .• .....,. ..... 1) 'it o1 APpcstlx 41 ¢5 .......,... F3ttildi F �'sKlc ... ............................... .. 11a t ances '1'ramS4rrs .......................... .... ...... .............. ........... ......,,,,,,., ........... , hector ........ Cots li 1u �Zt ��tlltl` ....••• 111 t1 �h�c`lntctlt 1' :l�tl \�t11. ..................... a "lic-tI) .••• FiSC nr� Pc'lm` 57 i ��i]lltil}1C1lk, tt1lA �t'ltSl 1'lltR��� ............... ......,,...•• ie`i�t, ...... .,... ..... ............................... .. ...,. 1 .. 106 UA1tdl,tl'� .............. • st1>}tt1 �1nin�,sit7cc Assnci,ttion . l SlaLIgl11tir1n�* ......... ............................... A�sctisn 6i . .. ... lZeport . 60 1ttiS ............................... liaianc� ort till Ma�..111 Tuwn 109 58 .................................... F3oarsl beet December 3 f . V 959 ............ ............................. .• .....,. ..... 1) 'it o1 APpcstlx 41 ¢5 .......,... F3ttildi F �'sKlc ... ............................... .. 44 Civil r' ............ .............•................. ng ln� I]ef s9 , hector ........ Cots 131 �. I , }cultkl Oflicc� ;..' ....................... '.....,...... .. ... ....... .... , ' cnscs ........................• .......• !nano Issucd in 1959 .............. . .. .,.. ire 1S0 149 a "lic-tI) .••• FiSC nr� Pc'lm` 57 L]c ntment Rescue Squad Ire Ga pt 55 .. L.tceli5l'S '••' �cPssri cnt Ii.. �F'asster's ............................ Heal tr ..... Report ..... ....• Hifhv,. ]S at-tmcnt .. 9 39 ... ............................... III Nj yClharles ��1,r t p6tituSu F, Moore ...... ,. ,. •• 46 cicttc Foy Port of... lytirarsy—Snovvp S Library ... ........ pj4h C0n"Imotiti ........ .......p ...................... n 7 . ............................... Pe'lsic mg Board 11 Department ' ' .............................. .. •• 11 FZe6i5t`,ion Commission ................ '.....,.... ors ............ ............ Sala, Voters 10 .. -ies Pof SQ11 in 1 )5) ............... ... ... .•• i l 11 r1$ I�eporl ..•• ;,..• Seale yg %L1 ctny�onwcse and Ki'e* ores .......... ... .........i..fo ..j460 •.'__.: ,,..••.: .• Sele Report lotion.. ,....••• 1t- .... ............................... •• Shclll'ish n s and D, l-Imental Rccon�n�en ' ";. 147 1Q0 .. `,ths Constable's Report . ve Td , Collector's Report �olvn ... 90 .. Clerk's Report 3 - 1959'........, ......... t'45 Annlsal "Town Meeting, 1959 izsE 32 3$ Rirths }4? M-irr tDcsi959 'Tov Special `Town Meeting. t]ecen'1� '' 16 } n Counsel . ........... 63 n Govt ........•• •1'n 'ri71'nent ................ .. .• Tr, n � cer; .................. • ... tsurcr'y f Sy 35 �' ec warden .................. ... Rcport .. ....... ..........................1g6t) veterans' Agent VV hi`rnt—Annual Town Mcetin &° water\ Ys Investigating CQnrrrzittee welfareaDepartment ...............................