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New Hampshire Manual for the General Court, 1899 (No. 6)

NEW HAMPSHIRE COLLEGE -OF—

flGRIGOLTURE m the MECHflNIG ARTS.

Class ••• /y.3^.^-.7"4- Number . . . d¥: .^"7^. /Tri

Volume. .^/<?^?^. ^^-^.f. Source X ,

Received

Cost . . ,

Accession No . .w. . . . y. .y Gov. FRANK West Rollins. STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIM aTiP»/ii:\ ;:

./-,

MANUAL FOR THE

GENERAL COURT 1890.

PREFABED AND PUBLISHED UNDER SECTION 14, CHAP- TER 15 OF THE PUBLIC STATUTES.

IS^o. 6.

MANCHESTER, N. H. Arthur E. Clarke, Public Printer. 1899. $

^ CONTENTS. ^ PAGE State Senators, 1784-1899 5

New Hampshire Men at Bunlver Hill 29

Election Sermons 89

Election Eetnrns — Congressmen 93

Governor 104

Councilors 119

Senators 132

County OPHcers 154 Town Elections '

188 State Government 289 The Judiciary 300

County Officers 308 Commissioners 317 The National Guard 322 The Legislature 330

5^5% INTEODUCTION.

This nimiber of the manual is compiled for the use of the last legislature to be conveued in the present century. The early pag'es present the names, alphabetically arranged, of all the mem- bers of the state senate from the adoption of a permanent con- stitution in 1784 to the present time, including the senate elected in 1898. During this period there have been ninety-five annual sessions of twelve senators, and eleven biennial sessions of twen- ty-four senators. There have been 1,412 elections to the senate, and noting re-elections and contested elections it appears that 763 different persons have held seats in the senate of this state. The early pages of this volume were printed before the organ- ization of the present senate. The name of the president will appear in the later pages. The following table and the lists of New Hampshire men at Bunker Hill were prepared by Hon. Georg'e C. Gilmore of Man- chester, N. H. NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

<^ STATE SENATORS FROM 1784 TO 1900.

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Koll of New Hampshire men at the Battle of Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775, their names arranged alphabetically by comijanies, omitting- all who were dischargecl prior to, or enlisted after that date. Of the twenty-four companies in the battle (including Captain Eeuben Dow's) only seven company rolls have been found that give the residences of the men, all the others supplied by the writer from the best information he could obtain from ail sources. There were a few men in the New Hampshire com- panies from Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Vermont. For volume and page, see New Hampshire State Papers, ex^ cept where M is placed against the volume and page. — M. Denotes Massachusetts rolls. — A. ^len in the Arnold expedition to Quebec. — A. P. ]\Ien taken prisoners at Quebec. *• —Menwho were paid for loss of equipments and clothing in the Battle of Bunker Hill.

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To His Excellency Hiram A. Tuttle, Governor, and) the Honorable Council:

January 24, 1889, the following order was submitted to the .

city council of Boston, and February 6 it was passed unanimously and approved by the mayor: "Ordered, That a special committee of five members of the com- mon council, with such as the board of aldermen may join, be appointed to arrange and prepare four bronze tablets, to bear the names of the American patriots killed or fatally injured at Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775; said tablets to embrace the requisite list of names now in the hands of the record commissioner, with such other names that belong in the list; said tablets to be com- pleted in season for erection on the occasion of the coming cele- bration of the anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill, June 17, 1889; said tablets to be placed in such position as the committee may determine in connection with the site of the battle." The design of the committee, to place the four memorial tablets at or near the entrance of Monument Square, not being approved by the directors of the Bunker Hill Monument association, who control the same, they were placed on Winthrop square, Charles- town. The city of Boston published the proceedings at the cele- bration the following 17th of June, at the dedication of the memo- rial tablets, in an elegant volume, "A Memorial of the American Patriots who fell at the Battle of Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775, with an account of the Dedication of the Memorial Tablets on Win- throp Square, Charlestown, June 17, 1889," containing the oration delivered on the occasion by Hon. John E. Murphy, and also the orations of Daniel Webster, delivered June 17, 1825, at the laying of the corner-stone of the Bunker Hill monument, and on its completion, June 17, 1843, a copy of which can be found in the State library. 81 82 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

New Hampshire having an interest in common with Massachu- setts to perpetuate inbronze the names of her dead patriots who gave np their lives atBunker Hill, Governor Sawyer and council appointed the writer special commissioner to confer with the committee appointed by the city council of Boston, and furnish them with the names of New Hampshire men killed or mortally wounded, to be placed on the proi)osed memorial tablets. A printed list of names was furnished the Hon. William H. Whit- more, chairman of the board of record commissioners of Boston, who was preparing the list of names to be placed on the memo- rial tablets,and by him substantially adopted; what was most — desired, however, that one of the four proposed be made a dis- tinctive New Hampshire tablet, on which to place all the names of the men from this state, —^was not granted; the main objection to them as finally arranged was placing the names of the Ne%\' Hampshire officers killed with those from Massachusetts, with- out designating their former residence. The printed list fur- nished Mr. Whitmore is herewith reprinted, with additions and corrections time has developed, and I most sincerely hope that the day is not far distant when a bronze tablet will be erected in the State Capitol park to the memory of the brave men from New Hampshire who perished at Bunker Hill. To Mr. Whitmore the writer is under great obligation for courtesies extended and documents furnished him, and also to the Honorable Secretary of State of Massachusetts, and his assist- ants, Messrs. Strong and Tracy, for unlimited research of the papers on file in his office. REPORT OF SPECIAL COMMISSIONER. 83

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055^ So OS o REPORT OP SPECIAL COMMISSIONER. 85

No. 42. Broderick, Joseph, private, of Captain Daniel Moore's company, Stark's regiment, enlisted May 1, and disappeared from roll June 17, being- allowed on roll, pay for one month and eigh- teen days, but it appears no one ever took his money. State Papers, Vol. 14, p. 70. Generally supposed to have been killed. No. 43. Patten, James, private, of Captain John Marcy's com- pany, Keed's regiment, enlisted May 10; allowed on roll, pay for one month and eleven daj^s. On roll, died June 17. No. 44. Melvin, John, private, of Captain John Marcy's com- pany, Eeed's regiment, enlisted May 25; allowed on roll, pay for twenty-four days. On roll, died Jiuie 17. No. 45. Chamberlain, Benjamin, private, of Captain John Mar- cy's company, Eeed's regiment, enlisted May 26; allowed on roll pay for one month and three days; died June 25. State Papers, Vol. 14, pp. 104, 105, for Nos. 43, 44, 45. The last three men are supposed to have been wounded, and to have died, as on the same roll Josej)h Farwell is marked killed June 17. No. 46. Day, Stephen, private, Xeene; Stark's regiment, Stiles's company; wounded, died August 17, 1775. No. 47. McGrath, Daniel, private, Amherst; Prescott's regi- ment, Corey's company; wounded, died a prisoner, August 10, 1775. Name No. 9, page 90, Memorial Volume; the records regard- ing this man are a perfect puzzle. No. 48. Minot, Joseph, corporal, Hollis; Prescott's regiment, Parker's company; killed. Name on the bronze tablets as from "Westford," Mass.; on original muster and pay roll, Hollis. He was taxed in Hollis in 1775. See History of Hollis, p. 138. Bigelow, Benjamin, private. Nelson; Prescott's regiment, Wy- man's company; wounded, prisoner in Boston jail and living Sep- tember 14, 1775. Can any person give information what became of him? No. 31. — On original muster and pay roll "David Scott, died June or "22," in very pale ink; and of a recent date, apparently 2," in a different handwriting and very dark ink, "Died June 16, 1775." No. "Joseph Taylor," on muster and pay roll, "enlisted 32. June and paid to Aug. 1." On October 6 reported "Dead"; 13, date of death not given, and marked in pencil, "Killed." 86 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

All the foregoing forty-eight men's names, except Day's and BJgelow's, are on the Massachusetts memorial tablets. Daniel Evans of AllenstoAvn was a member of the Provincial Congress, sitting at Exeter in May, 1775. When that congress adjoiirned, he was known to have gone to Haverhill, jMass. A Daniel Evans of Captain Richardson's company was killed June 17, 1775, the name being No. 50 on the memorial tablets, residence unknown. As Daniel Evans never returned to Allenstown, he was presumably the man.

NEW HAMPSHIEE COLONIAL OR STATE RECORDS. WHERE AEE THEY? EXTER, March—7th 1783.

Sir When had the honor to receive your favor of the 18th of I December in which you nominate Stephen Gorham Esq. for Com- missioner to Settle the accounts between this and the United States, etc. Our General Assembly was under an adjournment to the middle of February; as soon as they were convened I laid your Letter before them and they have approved of the Appoint- ment as the inclosed Copy will Show. I am Sir, with great Respect Your Obedient & Humbl Servt. M. WEARE, President. Honble Robert Morris, Esq: Copy. —State Papers, Tol 10, j). 607. Thursday, June— 19— 1783. Vote for the Committee of Safety to provide an office at Exeter for Mr. Gorham, the Commissioner appointed by Congress to settle accounts with this State. —State Papers, Vol. 8, p. 980. From the above, and it is all there is to be found, it is evident the government or congress of the United States assumed the indebtedness of New Hampshire, in part at least, for the ex- penses of the Revolutionary struggle for independence; and the question naturally arises, where are the records, muster and pay rolls? Were they not taken away by Gorham, and now in the possession of the government at Washington, or possibly de- stroyed by the British troops when they burned the government buildings at Washington in 1814? Of Stark's regiment of thirteen companies, who participated in the battle of Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775, but two muster rolls, one original and one a copy, are known to be in existence, the— REPORT OF SPECIAL COMMISSIONER, 87

original, that of Captain Archelaus Townes, in the Historical Society rooms at Concord; the copy, that of Captain Gordon Hutchins's company, in Vol. 17, p. 3, State Papers and not one — originalpay roll, only copies, and without the signatures of the men. Of Eeed's regiment of ten companies, one muster roll — "Muster Roll of Captain Ezra Towne's Company in the Regiment of Foot, commanded by Colonel James Reed; belonging to the Army of the United Colonies of North America," a complete descriptive roll, giving the names of the men, rank, time of enlist- ment, where born, age, place of abode, occupation, height, color of the hair and eyes (See Vol. 16, p. 52, Mass. rolls) — is in exist-

ence; also the roll of Captain Hezekiah Hutchins's company (Vol. 14, p. 76) and copies of pay rolls Avithout signatures of the men.

Perhaps the following record, never published before, may throw some light as to how Colonel Stark obtained his fifteen companies:

At a Meeting the officers from the Province of N. Hampshire at Cambridge —of — — April 26 1775. Voted, — 1. Col. John Hale— Chairman. ,

Toted,— 2. Peter Coffin— Clerk. Toted, — 3. ISIaj. officers encoiirage their men to tarry here That the that incline until they hear from the Congress of N. Hampshire, and rely on the Honor of the Said province. — Toted, 4. That no officers take listing orders under the prov- — ince of the Massachusetts Bay till they hear from the Congress aforesaid. Toted,^5. That the officers reccommend it to the Soldiers not to enlist under any officers belonging to the Bay Province, till they hear from Said Congress at N. Hampshire. — Toted, 6. That Col. John Stark take charge of the men till they hear from the Congress aforesaid. A True Copy, Test. PETER COFFIN, Clerk.

John Stark had fifteen companies in his regiment up to Col. June when two companies, Whitcomb's and Thomas's, were 12, — transferred on that date to Col. James Reed see Reed's letter to Committee of Safetj', Province Papers, Vol. 7, page 518 and — thirteen up to July 3 to 7. See Quartermaster Parkinson's ac- counts of rations issued to Colonel Stark's regiment, State Papers, Vol. 14, p. 153; also General Nathaniel Folsom, "Chief Com- — mander of the New Hampshire forces under the Commander-in- 88 • NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Chief of the Xew England Armj'" —to Committee of Safetj^ dated Medford, June 23, 1775, where he was Avriting- of Stark's regiment, "it still consisting of 13 companies," Province Papers, Vol. 7,

p. 529; and the letter of General Henry Dearborn, who was a cap- tain in Stark's regiment, afterwards secretary of war, and com- mander-in-chief of the American forces in the war of 1812, His- tory of Nottingham, N. H., page 223. General Washington took command of all the troops around Boston June 27, 1775; between that date and the 7th of July three more companies were transferred from Stark's regiment: One, Archelaus Townes's, 54 men, to Col. Ebenezer Bridge's Mas- sachusetts regiment, and two, William Scott's, 64 men, and Jere- miah Stiles's, 72 men, to Col. Paul D. Sargent's Massachusetts regiment. Colonel Sargent was a resident of Amherst, N. H., but engaged in the service of Massachusetts. Number of Ne'w Hampshire men on the Bunker Hill rolls, omit- ting all who were discharged prior to or enlisting after June 17, 1775: Stark's regiment, 842;.Eeed's regiment, 599; Massachu- setts regiments, 210; total, 1*651; and in other Massachusetts regi- ments, not in the battle of Bunker Hill, same date, 317 New Hamp- shire men; total, 1,968; and June 22, Col. Enoch Poor arrived there with eight companies of his regiment. There is great dilhculty in locating the residence of the men, even Avhen the town is given in the rolls, as there are 74 in ]\Iassa- chusetts and New Hampshire having the same name, and rising 100 changed from what they were in 1775. Captain Bancroft's company from Dunstable, with 42 men from that town, in the battle of Bunker Hill — some were killed, others wounded. Dunstable was originally one town; in 1775, two, one in Massachusetts, the other in New Hampshire. The New Hamp- shire Dunstable is now Nashua. New Hampshire paid two hundred and seventy pounds for ninety guns lost at the battle of Bunker Hill. GEORGE C. GILMORE, Special Commissioner. Manchester, February 12, 1891. ELECTION SERMONS.

The annual election sermons for almost a half century of a state government under the constitution of 1784 were a con- spicuous and respected feature of the inauguration ceremonies at the beginning of a political year. In their private and public relations, the clergy were held in high esteem, and the appoint- ment of a preacher of the election sermon was a special recog- nition of eminence in the clerical profession. With the excep- tion of 1793 a sermon was jareached at each inauguration of a governor from 1784 to 1831, and in 1861, a critical period in the history of the state and nation, Eev. Henry E. Parker, D. D., preached the last election sermon in this historic series. All the sermons, with the exception of the one preached in 1789 by Eev. Oliver Noble, and the one preached in 1795 by Eev. John Smith, were printed. Only a few complete sets of these sermons are joreserved. A list of the preachers of election ser- mons follows:

1784 Samuel McClintock, 90 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

179S Robert Gra3% A. M. Dover, Gen. xii: 2 1799 Seth Paysoii, D. D. Rindge, Eccl. ix: 18 1800 Noah Worcester, D. D. Thornton, Judges iii: 11 1801 Jacob Burnap, D. D. Merrimack, Ps. Ixxxvii: 4-6 1802 Joseph Woodman, A. M. Sanbornton, Hosea vii: 9 1803 Aaron Hall, A. M. Iveene, 2 Chron. xix: 6 1804 Nathaniel Porter, D. D. Conway, 1 Chron. xii: 33 1805 Eeed Paige, A. M. Hancock, Rom. xiii: 4 1806 James Miltimore, A. M. Stratham, Job xxix: 14 1807 Nathan Bradstreet, A. M. Chester, Luke vii: 4-5 1808 Asa McFarland, D. D. Concord, 2 Peter 1: 19 1809 William F. Eowland, A. M. Exeter, Gal. v: 14 1810 Boswell Shurtleff, A. M. Hanover, Rom. xiii: 1-5 1811 Thomas Beede, A. M. Wilton, John vii: 1-5 1812 Moses Bradford, A. M. Francestown, Tim. i: 15 1 1813 John H. Church, D. D. Pelham, 2 Chron. xv: 2 1814 Peter Holt, A. M. Epping, Dan. ii: 44 1815 David Sutherland, Bath, Rev. i: 7 1816 Pliny Dicldnson, Walpole, Chron. xxiv: 2 2 1817 Daniel Merrill, A. M. W. Nottingham, Matt, vi: 10 1818 William Allen, A. M. Hanover, Joshua i: 8 1819 Nathan Parker, D. D. Portsmouth, John viii: 12 1820 James B. Howe, A. M. Claremont, John ix: 29 1821 Ephr'm P. Bradford, A. B. New Boston,^ Isaiah xxi: 11 1822 Jonathan French, A. M. No. Hampton, 2 Chron. i: 10 1823 Daniel Dana, D. D. Londonderry, Prov. xiv: 34 1824 Bennet Tyler, D. D. Hanover, Gen. xx: 11 1825 Phineas Cooke, A. M. Acworth, Matt, xxii: 21 1826 Ferdinand Ellis, A. M. Exeter, Ps. Ixxxii: 6-7 1827 Nath'l W. Williams, A. M. Concord, Matt, vi: 10 1828 Nathaniel Bouton, A. M. Concord, Luke xix: 13 1829 Humphrey Moore, A. M. Milford, 1 Cor. xii: 21 1830 Jaazaniah Crosby, A. M. Charlestown, Deut. xxviii: 1 1831 Nathan Lord, D. D. Hanover, 1 Cor. xiii: 5 1861 Henry E. Parker, A. M. Concord, Jer. xviii: 7-10

No sermons were delivered between 1831 and 1861, and none after 1861, OFFICIAL VOTE. VOTE FOR CONGRESSMAN. 93

VOTE FOR CONGEESSMAN, NOV. 8, 1898.

FIRST CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. 94 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

FIRST CONGRES- SIONAL DISTRICT. — (Joniimied. VOTE FOR CONGRESSMAN. 95

1

FIRST CONGRES- SIONAL DISTRICT. — Continued. 96 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

FIRST CONGRES- SIONAL DISTRICT. — Continued. VOTE FOR CONGRESSMAN.

,

a n o FIRST CONGRES- o SIONAL DISTRICT. o s — Co)di)iued. c

to jD

o W 98 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

SECOND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. VOTE FOR CONGRESSMAN. 99

,

SECOND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT.— Contmued. 100 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

,

SECOND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT.— Cow^mwed. VOTE FOR CONGRESSMAN. 101

SECOND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT.— Co)iiimced. 102 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

SECOND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. —Co7itinued. VOTE FOR CONGRESSMAN. 103

1

SECOND CONGRESSIONAL mST'RlCT.—Conli7iued. 104 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

VOTE rOE GOVEMOE, NOV. 8, 1898.

1

ri2

ROCKINGHAM COUNTY. VOTE FOR GOVERNOR. 105

ROCKINGHA]\I COUNTY. ~Co7ili?iued. 106 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

a Q to" a s STRAFFORD o o COUNTY. P5 VOTE FOR GOVERNOR. 107

BELKNAP COUNTY. 108 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

o a, a o « ft

c o CARROLL COUNTY. o CO

IB

rt •7=

o VOTE FOR GOVERNOR. 109

MERRIMACK COUNTY. 110 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

o g Q as" a MERRIMACK o o 03 COU'NTY .—Continued. CO

fa u VOTE FOR GOVERNOR. Ill

o o P5 Q a a a> o HILLSBOROUGH o o w c5 -S rt

COUNTY. 6 .

p 1 O .- o 03 ?-^ c 11 be-;:; 03 o <5 02

Amherst . . . 66 114 5 Antrim 185 160 11 Bedford . . . . 115 162 2 Bennington. 95 76 Brookline Deering — . . 78 26 71 100

Francestown . 111 55 GoflFstown . . . 278 257 Greenfield . . . 57 75 Greenville , . . 123 70 Hancock 88 62 Hillsborous:h 346 210

Hollis 113 75 Hudson 141 121 Litchfield 46 31 Lyndeborough 110 69 Manchester Ward — 1. 308 215 " 2. 647 380

" 3. 572 443 '' 4. 639 366 " 5. 112 858 " 6. 802 864 " 7. 203 92 " 8. 441 490

" 9. 356 493 Mason 53 26 Merrimack , 130 128 Milford 343 215 Mont Vernon 55 63 112 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

P3

c HILLSBOROUGH c o COV^TY .—Co7iti7iued. P5

s IS o S ^'^ ^ VOTE FOR GOVERNOR. 113

CHESHIRE COUNTY. 114 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

,

o

SULLIVAN O o COUNTY. m

O VOTE FOR GOVERNOR. 115

GRAFTON COUNTY. 116 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

o o Sh .2 a '3 P-i o o Q s a > 05 o -u GRAFTON COUNTY o •t-i CZ3 C5

— Continued. P5 6 -4-> . o be

c u <s>

Hi

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1

Orange 17 24 4 i

Orf ord .... 103 41 1 1

Piermont . . 91 75 5 243 192 15 Plymouth . .">

Ruraney . . 124 120

Thornton . . 63 107 2 Warren . . . 103 120 1 Waterville 7 1 Wentworth 34 114 Woodstock 59 86

Totals. 4,881 3,541 VOTE FOR (GOVERNOR. 117

coos COUNTY. 118 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

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fa

03

fa VOTE FOR COUNCILORS. 119

VOTE FOR COUNCILORS, NOV. 8, 1898. .i

COUNCILOR DISTRICT No. 1. ^ 120 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR COUNCILORS. 121 122 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Atkinson , . . 67 52 1 Auburn 141 69 Brentwood 128 54 Bow 123 85 Chester 191 67 Danville 76 31

Derry 417 239 Dunbarton 95 68 East Kingston , 44 71 Exeter 722 222 Fremont 103 29 Hampstead 101 71

Hampton 166 98 Hampton Falls 91 9 Hooksett 199 135 Hudson , 146 114 Kensington , 83 69 Kingston 169 84

Litchfield 49 27 Londonderry 237 114 Manchestei" — Ward 1 352 165 " 2 724 281 " 3 631 378 " 4 633 324

o 132 832 " 6 887 744 " 7 221 72 " 8 475 410 " 9 382 457 .VOTE FOK COUNCILORS. 123

1

COUNCILOR DISTRICT No. 2. — Contiimed.

Newfields. Newton ... Pelham ... Plaistow . .

Salem

Sandown Seabrook South Hampton. Windham 124 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

COUNCILOR DISTRICT No. 3. VOTE FOR COUNCILORS. 125

o a o s c COUNCILOR DISTRICT No. 3. — Continued. be <5 n ^ o *^ 15 CI o O o Merrimack 162 91 2 Milford 380 162 11 Mont Vernon 70 48 — Nashua Ward 1 . 338 109 14 2. 220 114 7 O. 174 228

4:. 150 100 5. 87 137 6. 140 108 o 7. 343 262 14 8. 320 233 7 9. 248 250 9

Nelson 49 10 New Boston . . 137 111 2 New Ipswich. 112 33 1 Peterborough 255 101 15 Richmond 49 37 1 Rindge 123 21 16

Roxbury 13 •2

Sharon 3 12 Stoddard Of 30 1 Sullivan 48 11 1 Surry 24 10 1 Swanzey 162 148 6

Temple 45 23 Troy 132 51 Walpole 184 219 2 Weare 189 136 9 Westmoreland. 113 54 2 126 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR COUNCILORS. 127

1

o

o a COUNCILOR DISTRICT No. 4. 128 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

COUNCILOR DISTRICT No. — Continued. VOTE FOR COUNCILORS. 129

t

COUNCILOR DISTRICT No. 5. 130 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

COUNCILOR DISTRICT No. 5.

Continued. VOTE FOR COUNCILORS. 131

t

COUNCILOR DISTRICT No. Co7itm7ied. 132 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

VOTE FOR SENATORS, NOV. 8, 1898. 1

DISTRICT Xo. 1. VOTE FOR SENATORS. 133

DISTRICT No. 2.

Bath Benton . . .

Bethlehem. Dorchester .

Easton . . . .

Ellsworth Franconia. Groton . . . .

Haverhill .

Hebi'on . . .

Landaif . . .

Lincoln Lisbon Littleton Livermore (No election) Lyman Monroe

Rumney . . .

Thornton. .

Warren Waterville .

Wentworth ,

Woodstock ,

Totals. 134 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

DISTRICT No. 3. VOTE FOR SENATORS. 135

1

DISTRICT No. 4. 136 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

^

DISTRICT No. 5. VOTE FOR SENATORS, 137 138 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

DISTRICT No. 7. VOTE FOR SENATORS. 139 140 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

DISTRICT No. 9. VOTE FOR SENATORS. 141 142 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1

DISTRICT No. 11. VOTE FOR SENATORS. 143

^

DISTRICT No. 12. 144 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

,

DISTRICT No. 13. VOTE FOR SENATORS. 145

t

DISTRICT No. 14. 146 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR SENATORS. 147 148 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

I

O s 'o o Q s o DISTRICT No. 18. !S Q '3 o a -a ^ e3 O 1-5 03

Manchester —Ward 5 207 793 3 " 6 886 738 33 '• 8 607 398 101 " 9 425 429 45

Totals 2,025 2,358 182 VOTE FOR SENATOKS. 149

1

DISTRICT No. 19. 150 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR SENATORS. 151

DISTRICT No. 21.

Atkinson 79 Brentwood 127 Chester Danville

East Kingston .

Exeter Fremont Hampstead ....

Hampton Hampton Falls Kensington Kingston Newfields

Newton Plaistow Sandown Seabrook South Hampton

Totals 152 NEAV HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

1 • 1—r

DISTRICT No. 22. VOTE FOR SENATORS. 153

»

DISTRICT No. 23. 154 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

VOTE FOE COUNTY OFFICEES,

Register of Register of Treasurer. Deeds. Probate.

02 ROCKINGHAM COUNTY. 'o a o o O 'a H faC d o O bo s .2 CO .S C3 CD a u o c3 a o 0) « CO O CO

Atkinson 81 Auburn ,

Brentwood Candia ,

Chester

Danville Deerfield ,

Derry East Kingston ,

Bpping Exeter Fremont Greenland Hampstead . . .

Hampton Hampton Falls Kensington. . .

Kingston VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 155

NOV. 8, 1898.

Solicitor. 156 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 157

Solicitor. 158 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 159

Register of Deeds. 160 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

SO],ICITOR. .l\Jl 1 V

BELKNAP COUNTY o

a VOTE FOR COUKTY OFFICERS. 161

Register OF Deeds. 162 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Solici- Sheriff. tor.

CARROLL COUNTY. O o O c a;

-a .2 a 3 o fa VOTE FOB COUNTY OFFICERS. 163

Register OF Deeds. 164 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 165

Treasurer. 166 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Solicitor.

MERRIiMACK COV^iiTY.— Continued. VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 167

Treasurer.

to

u o

a 168 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Register of Probate.

MERRIMAC^K COUNTY.— Continued.

Allenstown 130 46 4 Andover 127 191 2 Boscawen 187 89 3 Bow 132 75 5 Bradford 154 117 3

Canterbury 132 105 7 Chichester 103 89 10 Concord — Ward 1 266 221 3 " 2 91 103 " 3 114 154

" 4 486 258 11 " 5 409 129 6 " 6 437 287 16 " 7 358 213 16 " 8 109 193 7

" 9 132 199 3 Danbur}- 75 109 1 Dunbarton 99 63 3 Epsom 126 87 2 Franklin — Ward 1 236 119 8

" 2 107 258 1 " 3 228 136 2 Henniker 191 101 4 Hill 95 60 2 Hooksett 202 128 4 VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 169

Commissioners. 170 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS, 171

Commissioners. 172 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Sheriff. Solicitor.

c a a HILLSBOROUGH a COUNTY. c o 03 O o Q o o

« IS ^ VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 173 174 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL,

Shekiff

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY.— Continued. O

o3

c3 VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 175

Treasurek. 176 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL,

Commissioners.

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY.— Coiitimied.

o •-5 VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 177

Commissioners.

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY.— be Continued. O

o 178 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Treas- Sheriff. Solicitor. urer.

CHESHIRE c W COUNTY. 3 o a CO H -a a; 53 o VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 179

Register OF Deeds. 180 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 181

Register OF Deeds. 182 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

SOXICI- Treaslkek. TOU.

GRAFTON COUNTY. VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 183

Register of Commissioners. Probate.

bD o f*5 OS O O 25 •-5

05 o « 111 eS o 05 o a a 184 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 185

Register of Probate. ! Commissioners.

0)

PQ

f— t 186 NEW HAMPSHIRE xMANUAL.

Solicitor. Sheriff.

COOS COUNTY.

Beiiin- -Ward 1 181 119 173 " 9 LS8 119 172 205 1 77 209 Carroll . . . 85 80 85 Colebrook . 171| 244 196 Clarksvill(? 40 49

Columbia , 83 Dummer .. 48 Dal ton .... 53 Errol 8 Gorham . . . 129 Jefferson . . 100

Lancaster 437 Milan 95 Northumberland 169 Pittsburg 93 Randolph 15 Stratford 63

Shelburne 41 Stark. 59 Stewartstowu 135 Whitefield 242 Wentworth's Location . 1

Totals 2,631 VOTE FOR COUNTY OFFICERS. 187

Register Register OF OF Deeds. Probate.

^-1 03

CO u a 03 CANDIDATES FOE EEPEESENTATIYES AND TOWN OFFICES.

The candidates nominated under the j^rovisions of the ballot law and printed in the of&cial ballots for the several towns and wards in this state are here given complete. The politics of the candidates is indicated, and those elected are distinguished by an asterisk. The vote for each candidate for representative is stated.

ACWORTH. Representative to General Court.

Hiram IN". Hayward, r.* 100 Almon E. Clark, d. . 76

Supervisors of the Check-Lisf. Hiram E. Neal, r.*=- Herbert L. Tiper, d. Elmer E. \^1ieeler, r.^- George F. Lewis, d. Irving C. Davis, r.* John Symonds, d. Moderator.

Hiram N. Hayward, r.* Fred C. Parker, d.

ALBANY. li'rpnscntativc to General Court.

James M. Shackford, Hiram S. Currier, r.

(/."••" ...... 27 45

Kiipcrri-'^ors of the Clirck-List.

William H. Nickerson, r. George W. Wllley, d.* Mark M. Knox, r. Edward F. Hurley, d.- Frank O. Hammond, r. William C. Chase, (7.*

188 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 189

Moderator.

James M. Shackford, r. Thomas J. Hurley, d*

ALEXANDRIA. Representative to General Court.

Melville C. IMathews, r. . . . . . 82 Everett W. Tucker, d.* 113

Supervisors of the Checlc-List.

Hovi^ard E. Wells, r. Alpheus S. Bucklin, (Z.*

Elijah C. Paige, r. Azro A. Welton, d.* John Emery, r. George D. Patten, d.*

Moderator.

C. Aaron Southard, r.

John F. Phillips, d.*

ALLENSTOWN. Representative to General Court.

Almon A. Blodgett, r.* 131 Warren Sargent, d 51

Supervisors of the Check-List. James Shirry, r.* Joseph Lacasse, d. Peter Connor, r.* George Dovvrst, d. Fred E. Cleveland, r.* John G. Gordon, d. Moderator.

Charles H. Smith, r.* John F. Bartlett, d.

ALSTEAD. Representative to General Court.

Charles H, Cooke, r.* 130 Martin L. Richardson, d 91 190 NEAV HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Harvey D. Dickey, r.* Frank J. Leach, d. Gardner G. Banks, r.* Fred B. Trow, d. George E. Cater, r.* George A. Mayo, d. Moderator.

Edward M. Smith, r.* John F. Dickey, d.

ALTON. Representative to General Court.

William R. Clough, r." 197 George W. Place, d .193 Supervisors of the Check-List. Ellsworth H. Eollins, r:- Edward Doane, d. Oscar E. Davis, n* Alonzo B. Lang-, d. Frank W. Muzzey, r.* Chester A. Twombly, d.

Moderator.

George H. Demeritt, r. Charles H. Downing, (7.*

AMHEEST. Representative to General Court..

Eugene C. Hubbard, r.* 132

Supervisors of the Check-List. William L. Weston, r.* Cliarles W. Dodge, d.

Harry Boutelle, r.* Charles A. Peabodj^ d. Charles D. Wilson, r.- Arthur C. Decatur, (/.

Moderator.

Aaron M. Wilkins, r.* Charles W. Dodge, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 191

ANDOVER. Representative to General Court.

Joseph D. Philbrick, r 105

Henry A. Weymouth, d.* 211

Supervisors of tin: Cluck-List.

Otis K. Connor, r. Joseph W. Elkins, d* Terry B. Flanders, r. Everand C. Perkins, d.* Vivian S. Quimb}^ r. George E. Eastman, d.* Moderator.

Joseph D. Philbi-ick, r.

Henrj- A. Weymouth, d.*

AXTRi:\L Representative to General Court.

Charles O. Woods, r 146 Franklin G. Warner, d.-- 204

Supervisors of the Chick-List. William W. Crosby, r.* George J. Appleton, d. William A. Holt, r* Thomas F. ]Madden, d. Richard C. Goodell, r* William C. Hills, d.

Moderator.

Abner B. Crombie, r.

ISTathan C. Jameson, d.*

ASHLAND. Representative to General Court. George B. Stevens, 7'.* 164 John H. ilorrill, d 97

Supervisors of the Check-List. Dexter Sanborn, r.- John Murray, d. Moses G. Tucker, ?•." Henry W. Boynton, d.

George F. Dow, r.* Otto Willonghby, d. 192 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderator.

George B. Gordon, r* Daniel F. Sullivan, d.

ATKINSON. Representative to General Court.

Moses G. Calef, r 68 Gilman Greenough, d.* 71

Supervisors of tne Checlc-List.

George E. Emerson, r* Stephen C. P. Trefrey, d. Horace H. Brickett, r.* Moses B. Stevens, d. George B. Freeman, r.* John K. Mason, d. Moderator. ;

George P. Dow, r.*

AUBURN. Representative to General Court. Thomas F. Dodge, r.* 139 Samuel Eichardson, d 70

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Henry C. Sanborn, r.* John P. Griffin, d. Henry J. Cilley, r.* William A. Heselton, d.

Sylvester E. Emery, r.* JNIelvin Hall, d.

Moderator.

Alfred D. Emery, r.* Lester Hall, d.

BAENSTEAD. Representative to General Court. Hanson H. Young, r 172 Herbert A. Garland, d.* 178 CANDIDATES FOR TOAVN OFFICES. 193

Supervisors of the Check-List. John Waldo, r. :\Iartin V. B. Nutter, d* John L. Piper, r. John H. Knowles, d.* Melvin H. Garland, r. Albion N. Foss, d.*

Moderator.

Joseph H. Prime, r.

Daniel E. Tuttle, (Z.*

BAERINGTON. Representative to General Court.

William E. Wat'erhouse, r." 203 John E. Palmer, d 71

Supervisors of the Check-List. Isaac H. Young-, r.* Daniel W. Boody, d. James C. Hall, r* Walter H. Smith, d. Samuel B. Hartford, r* Frank H. Clark, d. Moderator.

William E. Waterhouse, r.* Charles W. Weeks, d.

BAETLETT. Representative to General Court. Alvah W. Buruell, r* 160 William Pitman, d 128

Supervisors of the Check-List. Edward B. Cobb, r* • Frank B. Cannell, d. Ernest E. Taylor, r.* Daniel D. Carleton, d. Albert Pitman, r.* Walter J. Chandler, d. Moderator.

Granville K. Howard, r.* Luther A. Dunbar, d. 194 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

BATH. Representative to General Court.

117 George B. Hazen, r.* 112 Benjamin W. Clark, d Supervisors of the Check-List.

Henry C. Carbee, r* George E. Davenport, d.

Horace F. Deniing, r* Ezra A. Eodiman, d. Harry Chamberlin, r.* Ira E. Deming, d.

Moderator.

Charles M. Hibbard, r.

Clayton C. Foster, d.^

BEDFOED. Representative -to General Court.

Silas A. Eiddle, r .121 Quincy Barnard, (Z.* 163

Supervisors of the Check-List.

James E. Leach, r.- Fred B. Worthley, d.

Harry A. Shepard, r:- Ira Barr, d. Fred F. Lane, r.* Charles 1\ Fariej% d.

Moderator.

William M. Patten, r.^

Quincy Barnard, d.

BELMONT. Representative to Gcneral^Court.

Frank K. Johnson, r.- 149 James P. Cilley, d 136

Supervisors of the Check-List. Brock Dearborn, r."" Francis A. Badger, (/.

Henry H. Young, r.* Oi-rin W. Foster, d.

Martin L. Lane, r.* Jason J. Cotton, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 195

Moderator.

Edwin r. Thompson, r*

Joseph Plumer, d.

BENNINGTON. Representative to General Court.

Fred H. Kimball, r.* 97

George E. Dodge, d 'J'l

Supervisors of tlir Check-List.

Charles F. Burnham r* Morris M. Cheney, d.

Cyrus H. Philbrick, r* Rnel S. Cram, d. Alexander Caldwell, r.* George S. Holt, d. Moderator.

Micajah M. George, r* Henry J. Burtt. d.

BENTON. Supervisors of the Check-List.

Harry H. Elliott, r. Orman L. Mann, d.^

Halsey R. Howe, r. Solomon J. Hutchins, d.* Albert A. Foss, r. Willie I. Eastman, d.*

Moderator.

Harry E. Little, r. George W. Mann, d.^

BERLIN—WARD 1.

Representative to General Court.

180 Joseph H. Wight, r."-

130 Joseph F. Bell, d 196 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Stipervisors of the Check-List.

John B. Gilbert, r* Waldo Babson, d. John B. Xo.yes, r.^ John E. Vallee, d. James M. Lavin, «•."• Henry D. Shea, d. Moderator.

"Frederick Barrows, r.

Moses Hodgdon, d.

BERLIN—WARD 2.

Representative to General Court.

Philippe E. Beandoin, r.* 173 William H. Paine, d, 156

Snpervisors of the Check-List.

Joseph Lambert, r.* John Hayes, d.

George A. Porter, r* Edward Toussaint, d.

George F. Rich, r. Joseph A. Wagner, d.

Moderator.

Robert N. Chamberlain, r.

Daniel J. Dalej^ d.

BERLIN—WARD 3.

Representative to General Court. Edward Lambert, r* . igl Harvey E. Smith, d 114

Supervisors of the Check-List. Fred R. Oleson, r.* Oluf C. Oleson, d. Elden E. Pierce, r* John B. Langis, r* Xerxes F. Wardwell, d.

Moderator.

Fremont D. Bartlett, r.* Samuel E. Paine, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 197

BETHLEHEM. Representative to General Court. * George T. Cruft, r 243 Kufus N. Gordon, d 76

Supervisors of the Check-List. Thomas M. Fletcher, r* Charles H. Hoit, d. Fred D. Lewis, r* Frank H. Abbott, d. Charles H. Hazen, r.* John P. Donovan, d. Moderator.

Charles E. Swasej', d.*

BOSCAWEN. Representative to General Court. Anson C. Alexander, r.* 175 Charles W. Carter, d 100

Supervisors of the Chcck-H.st. Edson H. Mattice, r* Harlow F. Rolfe, d. Ervin A. Griffin, r.* Henry H. Gill, d. Samuel W. Morrison, r* Edward McShane, d. Moderator.

Eobert L. Harris, r.* Charles P. Shepard, d.

BOW. Representative to General Court. Warren C. Saltmarsh, r.* 123 Betton F. Smith, d 88

Supervisors of the Check-List. Warren C. Saltmarsh, r.* Charles F. Hammond, d. John P. Elliott, r.* Sam Sarg-ent, d. Edgar A, Wetherbee, r.* Bertrand Morgan, d. 13 198 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderator.

David W. White, r.* Charles B. Eogers, d.

BKADFOED. Representative to General Court.

Lyman B. Butman, r 135 Edward C. Messer, d* 142

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Albert E. Choate, r. John E. French, d.* Martin H. Huntoon, r. George F. Cressy, d.* Frank M. Tappan, r. Warren T. Bagley, d.*

Moderator.

Charles Giilis, r. George B. Wright, d.*

BRENTWOOD. Representative to General Court.

Daniel O. Waldron, r.* 120 Nathaniel B. Glidden, d 73

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Horace J. Robinson, r.* William I. Rhodes, d.

Charles Flanders, r.* George A. Mitchell, d.

Burton G. Sanborn, r.* James W. Blake, d.

Moderator.

Ephraim G. Flanders, r.* John Lake, d.

BRIDGEWATER. Representative to General Court.

Parker P. Sanborn, r 35 Harris W. Hammond, d.* . . . . . 37 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 199

Supervisors of the CJieck-List.

Shirman S. Fletcher, r.* Arthur W. Nichols, d. Winfred W. Gilpatrick, r.* Edwin D. Morrill^ d. George H. Wheeler, r.* Harry B. Clement, d.

Moderator.

Kobert B. Gilpatrick, r,* Charlie H. Marston, d.

BRISTOL.

Representative to General Court.

Orlando B. French, r.* 230 George B. Cavis, d 132

Supervisors of the Check-List. Edward A. Blake, r * Charles H. Proctor, d. Clarence A. Smith, r* Joseph N. Dickinson, d. John E. Connor, r.* Homer Roby, d. Moderator.

Ira A. Chase, r.* Joseph N. Dickinson, d.

BROOKFIELD, Representative to General Court. John E. Witham, r. and d* 78

Supervisors of the Check-List. Luther M. Sanborn, r* Stephen H. Hutchins, d.* Wilson Colman, r. Charles H. Neal, d.* John F. Robinson, r. Luther M. Sanborn, d.

Moderator.

Charles Willey, r. and d.* 200 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

BROOKLINE. Representative to General Court.

Frank L. Willoby, r* 81 David D. Rockwood, d 69

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Henry G. Shattuck, r.* Llewellyn S. Powers, d. Charles S. Dunbar, r.* Charles W. Currier, d. Clarence R. Russell, r.* Elbert L. Baldwin, d. Moderator.

Frank L. Willoby, r* Orville D. Fessenden, d.

CAMPTON. Representative to General Court.

George H. Little, r* 148 Frank P. Hart, d 109

Supervisors of the Vluvk-List. Mark Spokesfield, v.* Moody B. Cone, d. William H. Berry, r.* William H. Avery, d. Austin G. Simpson, r.* Charles G. Avery, d.

Moderator.

Edward H. Sanborn, r.* Heber K. Smith, (/.

CANAAN. Representative to General Court. Frank D. Currier, r.* 232 Arthur W. Hutchinson, d. . . . . . 117

Supervisors of the Check-List. Webster J. Martin, r.* Henry H. Wadsworth, d. Edwin C. Kenyon, r.* Charles L. Lathrop, d. George W. Chase, r.* Ira B. Stevens, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 201

Moderator.

Frank D. Currier, r* Horace G. Kobie, d.

CANDIA. Representative to General Court.

Francis D. Rowe, Jacob F. Holt, d r.* ...... 160 140

Supervisors of the Cheek-List.

Ira F. Godfrey,r.* John H. Moore, d.

Alvin W. Palmer, r.* Jenness E. Dearborn, d.

Allan H. Nelson, r.* Jesse W. Sargeant, d.

Moderator.

Edwin J. Godfrey, v.* Henry W. Moore, d.

CANTERBURY. Representative to General Court.

Fred H. Blanchard, r.* 129 John A. Beck, d 115

Supervisors of the Check-List.'

Joshua F. Harris, r.* Charles Smith, d.

Charles H. Fellows, r.* Harlon Dow, d. Samuel Gilman, r.* Fred A. Merrill, d.

Moderator.

Robert S. Morrill, r.* Charles Smith, d. .

CARROLL. Representative to General Court.

Duncan McMillan, r.* 88 Willie Burbank, d 80 202 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List.

George Howe, r* Samuel D. Hunt, d. James J. Parks, r.* William Eosebrook, d.

Andrew Churcli, r.* Nelson A. Glines, d.

Moderator.

Charles S. Miles, r.

William F. Hobbs, d.*

CENTER HARBOR. Representative to General Court.

Smith F. Emery, r. and d.* 84

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Frank B. Stanley, r.* James P. Leighton, d.* Everett Hawkins, r.*

Moderator.

Orville P. Smith, d.*

CHARLESTOWN. Representative to General Court.

William E. Butterfield, Frank E. Kendall, d r.* ..... 153 102

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Everett T. Holden, r.* John S. Walker, d. Albert E. Buswell, r.* George H. Messer, d. Harvey E. Royce, r.* Thomas J. McMahon, d.

Moderator.

Charles E. Whipple, r.*

Stephen T. Searle, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 203

CHATHAM. Representative to General Court.

Charles H. Binford, r 37 Charles S. Chandler, d * 39

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Charles H. Binford, r.* Eichard F. Chandler, d.

Walter P. McKeen, r* Osborn Anderson, d. Alvin Head, r.* Chester C. Eastman, d.

Moderator.

James M. Weeks, r.* John F. Charles, d.

CHESTER. Representative to General Court.

George S. West, r.* 165

George S. Webster, d 93

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Cyrus F. Marston, r.- Charles Johns, d. S.

George L. Converse, r.* Charles Smith, d. H-.

Eobert H. Hazelton, r.* James M. Heath, d. Moderator.

Nathan W. Goldsmith, r.* Nathan S. Morse, d.

CHESTERFIELD. Representative to General Cmirt.

Lucius Thatcher, r 96 Sem L. Stowell, d.* 125

Supervisors of the Check-Lint. Frank C. Hamilton, r.* George A. Tuttle, d. Frank M. Holman, r.* Arthur IM. Davis, d. Olin R. Farr, r.* Larkin W. Aniidon, d. 204 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderator.

Frederick B. Pierce, r.* John W. York, d.

CHICHESTER. Bepreseiitativc to General Co^trt.

Abraham L. West, r.- 98 James F. Towle, d. 96 Samuel A. Kendall, p 10

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Frederick W. Watson, r. John K. Towle, d. Alvin M. Haines, r.* Charles Bailey, d.* Samuel C. Harden, /•. .Harry S. Kelley, rf.*

Ira Sanborn, p. Charles J. Shaw, p. Horace E. Marden, p.

Moderator.

Otis T. Maxfield, r.

V George W. Lane, d.*

;Mayo Lake, p.

CLAREIMONT.

. Representatives to General Court.

Frank P. Maynard, r.* . CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 205

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Ira G. Colby, r* Eufus L. Howe. d. Chaxles A. Fisher, r* Orland P. Fitch, d. Allen P. Messer, /•.* Alvah E. Cummings, d. Moderator.

Julius C. Timson, r.* Hosea W. Parker, d.

CLAEKSVILLE. Representative to General Court.

Willis A. Harriman, Irving G. Young, d.* r.

...... . , . . . . 39 52

Supervisors of the Checlc-List. Ernest B. Hardy, r. Frank L. Bumford, d.* Albert Aldrieh, r. Jonathan C. Hopkins, d.* Joseph G. Eoby, r. William H. Brooks, d.*

Moderator.

Willis A. Harriman, r. Horace Comstock, d.*

COLEBEOOK. Representative to General Coiirt. Frank H. Abbott, r 180 Eeuben H. Gould, d.* 243

Supervisors of the Check-List. James L. Loomis, r. George W. Martin, d.* Edwin J. Belville, r. George B. Frizzell, d.* George A. Gleason, r. Edwin Small, d.* Moderator.

Ira A. Eamsaj^ /'.

Sidney B. Whittemore, d.* 206 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

COLUMBIA. Representative to General Co'urt.

Anson H. Wallace, r.* 87 63 Benjamin F. Jeffers, '/

Supervisois of the Check-List.

William Fairman, r* William Hapgood, d. Horace M. Hobart, r* Wilbur F. Barnett, d. Charles Keeble, r.* Charles B. Bishop, d.

Moderator.

David H. Cook, r.*

Samuel I. Bailey, d.

CONCORD—WARD 1.

Representatives to General Court. 253 George W. Abbott, r.* John Harris, r 243 John E. Harden, rf.* 244 23& Harvey Campbell, d

COKCORD—WARD 2.

Representative to General Court.

John C. Hutchins, r 87 109' George A. Hoit, (?.«

CONCORD—WARD 3.

Representative to General Court.

Albert Saltmarsh, r 132

James W. Welsh, (/.* 135

Edward S. Barrett, p ^ CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES, 20T

CONCORD—WARD 4.

Representatives to General Court. Fred Johnson, r.* S. 427 John G. McQuilkin, r." Granville P. Conn, r.''" Henry F. Hollis, d ...... 433 440 321 James H. Morris, d 314 John W. Ford, d 305 Charles W. Tarlton, p 7 John S. Blanchard, p 8

CONCORD—WARD 5.

Representatives to General Court. Frank Battles, r* 366 Ferdinand A. Stillings, r* 373 George H. Russ, d 155- Jauaes C. Badger, d 156 Walter S. Baker, p 7 James D. Perkins, p 7

CONCORD—WARD 6.

Representatives to General Court. Edgar A. Clark, r* 398 Walter E. Darrah, r.* 375 Martin F. Cleary, d 315 Charles C. Nutter, d 321 Frank Cof&n, p 24 Evarts McQuesten, p 19

CONCORD— WARD 7.

Representatives to General Court.

Henry E. Conant,r* 319'

George T. Abbott, r* 337 James T. Gordon, d . 264 Charles H. Noyes, d Augustus F. Dolley, Frank K. Chase, p p. ...... . 239' 11 16 208 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

CONCORD— WAKD 8.

Representative to General Court.

Leland A. Smith, r 99 Oliver J. Pelren, d* 302

CONCORD—WARD 9.

Representative to General Court.

William P. Ballard, r 108 John Jordan, d 227 William H. Johns, p 5

CONWAY, Representatives to General Court.

Joel E. Morrill, r * 280 Frank W. * 333 Russell, r '

William M. Wyman, d. . 263 Francis H. Parsons, d) 205

Supervisors of the Check-List.

James L. Gibson, r.* Otis B. Merrill, d.

John E. Potter, r.* Samuel C. Hatch, d. Haven A. Quint, r.* William F. Thompson, d.

Moderator.

Levi C. Quint, r.* John B. Nash, d.

CORNISH. Representative to General Court.

Frank C. Jackson, r.* 113 Josiah Davis, d 53 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 209

Supervisors of the Chech-List.

George C, Huggins, r* William D. Dow, d. Frank L. Jolinson, r* Martin L. Walker, d. Freeman A. Johnson, r* William E. Deming, d. Moderator.

George E. Fairbanks, r.*

Charles E. Jackson, d.

CROYDON. Supervisors of the Check-List.

Gustavus F. Allen, r.* Hilliard R. Sanborn, r.* William H. Hall, r.*

Moderator.

George A. Wright, r.*

DALTON. Representative to General Court.

David Hurlburt, r 54 Sumner E. Farr, d.* 70

Supervisors of the Check-List. Elmer P. Kelso, r. David Doolan, d.* Oren B. Crouch, r. William B. Aldrich, d.* Joseph R. Weare, r. William J. Baker, d:* Moderator.

John M. Tillotson, Jr., r.

Charles Aldrich, d.*

DANBURY. Representative to General Court. Stillman Clark, r 74 Willis W. Walker, d.* 114 210 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List. Albert N. Chandler, r. Wilbur W. Webster, d* .John S. Allen, r. George W. Stuart, d* Phineas G. Sargent, r. Fred B. Braley, d.*

Moderator.

Arthur H. Perkins, /•.

Cyrus B. Jones, rf.*

DANVILLE. Representative to General Court.

Melburn J. Dimond, r.* 92 George W. March, d 27

Supervisors of the Check-List. Ernest J. Darbe, r.* James W. George, d. Frank P. Collins, r.* James W. George, d. .Charles F. Euee, d. Horace A. Ham, d.

Moderator.

George M. Anderson, r.* John Metivier, d.

DEERFIELD. Representative to General Court.

Elbridge F. Gerrish, r. . . . . . 156 Charles E. Rand, (/.* 167

Supervisors of the Check-List. Arthur M. Chase, r.* Fritz E. Kallenberg, d.

William F. Jones, r.* Alvah B. Chase, d. ?Wilber J. Eowell, r.* John S. Eobinson, d.

Moderator.

John M. Griffin, r.* George H. Towle, Jr., d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 211

DEKEY.

Representatives to General Court.

Charles W. Abbott, r* 392 George S. Eollins, r* 381 William H. Benson, d. . . . . . .284 Henry T. Wheeler, d 269

Supervisors of tlve CJieck-List.

John E. Webster, r.* Henry J. Chase, d.

William H. Jones, r.* Jonathan C. Sanders, d.

Horace A. Hill, r * Lemuel W. Collins, d.

Moderato*\

Joseph B. Bartlett, r.* George N. DeMott, d.

DEERING. Representative to General Court.

Henry Holton, r 28 Edward W. Colbum, d.* 97

Supervisors of the Check-List. William H. Patten, r. Harry D. Locke, d.* Albert L. Emerson, r. George F. Ellsworth, d.* Edwin C. Holton, r. Edwin F. Button, d.-

Moderator.

Dennis K. Chase, r.

James S. Craine, d.*

DOECHESTER; Representative to General Court. William E. Park, Jr., r.* 62 Abel Bailey, d 35 212 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Byron Eichardson, r.* Hazen H. Clough, d. Jaraes L. Colbum, r.* Caddie C. Eeed, d. Joseph E. Fellows, r.* Orrin H. Waldron, d.

Moderator.

Herman L. Poquett, r.* Warren W. Kowen, d.

DOVEE—WAKD 1.

Representatives to General Court.

Frank B. Clark, r.- 279 Charles Harry Thomas E. J. Morrill, r.*

Hodgdon, J. O'Neil, d (Z. ..... . 240 151 101

Supervisor of the Check-List. Edward L. Currier, r.* John P. White, d.

DOVEE—WAED 2.

Representatives to General Court.

Chesley Drew, r.* . 332 Joseph N. Holt, r.* 339 Thomas J. Eobinson, ?•.* 336 Frank M. Libbj', d. 229 Charles S. Benvie, d. 200 Charles H. Shapleigh, d 246

Supervisor of the Check-List.

John W. Eines, r.* James B. Hartford, d

DOVEE—WAED 3.

Representatives to General Court.

John A. Glidden, r* 335 Valentine Mathes, r.* 288 Charles S. Clifford, d 162 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. •213

Supervisor of the Check-List.

George G. Neal, r.* George E. Smart, d.

DOVER—WAED 4.

Representatives to General Court.

Allen D. Eichmond, r.* 425 Henry A. Worthen, r.* 410 Charles H. Morang, r.* 425 Thomas Nute, d 183 William P. Finn, d 183 Samuel Wicks, d 164

Supervisor of the Check-List. James H. Davis, v.* David H. Gage, d.

DOVEE—WAED 5.

Edvv'ard M. Qualey, r 214 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderator.

Henry D. Learned, r.*

DUISIIMER.

Representative to General Court.

Isaac C. Wight, r 45 Darton T. Wentworth, rf* 54

Supervisors of the Check-List.

John B. Lovejoy, r.* Charles H. Gates, d.

Isaac C. Wight, r.* Daniel Cole, d. George S. Twitchell, r.* Jesse I. Stiles, d.

Moderator.

John H. Chandler, ?•.*

Charles N.. Bickford, d.

DUNBAETON. Representative to General Court.

Henry Whipple, r* S. 91 James H. Waite, d 75 Benjamin W. Lord, p 2

Supervisors of the Check-List. Horace Caldwell, ?\* Aaron C. Barnard, d. Natt P. Hammond, r.* David P. Walker, d. Otis E. Whipple, r.* Henry P. Kelly, d.

Moderator.

Edward P. Page, r.* Charles F. M. Stark, d.

DUEHAM. Representative to General Court.

Walter C. Davis, Charles E. Hoitt, d.* r. ...... ..... . 78 362 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 215

Supervisors of the Check-List. David H. Fogg-, d. David H. Fogg, d.

Clarence W. Scott, r.* Edward H. Adams, d. Edward H. Adams, r* Clarence W. Scott, d. Moderator. Lucien Thompson, r.

Winthrop S. Meserve, d.*

EAST KINGSTON. Representative to General Court. Everett A. Tilton, r 48 William D. Ingalls, d.* CG

Supervisors of the Check-List. John H. Buswell, r. George F. Morrill, d. * Joseph D. Currier, r. Frank H. Hargraves, d.* Ulysses S. Tilton, r. Frank E. Morrill, d.*

Moderator.

Dana Webster, r. George W. Sanborn, d.*

EASTON. Supervisors of the Check-List. Hiram S. Bowles, (Z.* Leon G. Huntress, d.* Ora W. Noyes, d.* Mode7'ator.

Willis Bowles, d.*

EATON. Representative to General Court.

Caleb Shackford, r 49 Edwin Snow, d.* 61 Fred E. Thompson, p 11 216 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List. David M. Thurston, r. Leslie F. Stuart, (?.*

Charles S. Ellis, r. Charles M. Stanley, d* John C. Head, r. Mark R. Head, p. Frank M. Hatch, d* William H. Palmer, p. Ransom Harmon, p.

Moderator.

Joel Paul, r. Charles M. Stanley, d.* Nathaniel G. Palmer, p.

EFFINGHAM. Representative to General Court.

Cyrus P. Keay, r.* 80 Charles Parsons, d. 76

8uperviso7-s of the Check-List.

Lemuel C. Holmes, r * John P. Glidden, d. George E. Doane, r.* Albion D. Jones, d. Fred C. Glidden, r.* John E. Thurston, d. Moderator.

Charles S. Miles, r.* Charles Parsons, d.

ELLSWORTH. Svpc)-viso7-s of the Check-List.

Warren P. Buzzell, d.* Orrin Avery, d.* John Willey, d:*

Moderator.

Ira C. Downing, d.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 217

ENFIELD.

Representative to General Court.

Freeman S. Gordon, r 158 Zenas F. Lamb, d* 162

Supervisors of the Cheek-List.

Everett B. Huse, r.* Henry H. Wilson, d.

James McElwain, r.* Joseph S. Pillsbury, d.

Frank H. Webster, r.* Ezra Day, d.

Moderator.

Wyman Pattee, r.* George W. Burnham, d.

EPPING. Representative to General Court.

Albert M. P. Pearson, r 172 Abram W. Mit<j,liell, d.* 197

Supervi-sois of the Check-List.

Fred H. Johnson, r. Peter Ladd, d.* Joseph E. Knight, r. Edwin S. Folsom, rf* George H. Swain, r. Daniel W. Gate, d.*

Moderator.

Stephen E. Swain, r.* Fred P. Knox, d.

EPSOM. Representative to Genei-al Court.

Edgar E. Wells, r.* . . . , . .124 John A. Chesley, d S8 218 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List. James B. Tennant, r.* Samuel B. Cofran, d. Charles F. Haynes, r/' Samuel E. Yeaton, d. Alfred P. Bickford, r.* Walter J. Philbrick, d.

Moderator.

James W. Harden, r.* Warren Tripp, d.

EKEOL. Supervisors of the Check-List. Arthur E. Bennett, r. Ealph D. Thurston, d.* Auvern L. Davis, r. James L. Bragg-, (Z.*

Stephen E. Hanscom, r. Charles C. Bennett, d.*

Moderator.

Harry N, Ferren, r. Ealph D. Thurston, d.*

EXETEE. Representatives to General Vourt.

William P. Chadwick, r.*-' 724 John D. Lyman, r* 718 Sperry French, r.* 727 Arthur O. Fuller, r.«- 700 Joseph W. Towle, d .221 Sam. E. Peavey, d 230 George F. Haynes, (/ 232 Willie S. Day, d 239

Supervisors of the Check-List. Leonard F. Smith, r.* Andrew J. Brown, d.

Herbert L. Pettengill, r.* Thomas Smith, d. William Burlingame, r.* John H. Elkins, d.

Moderator. John E. Gardner, r.* Frederic A. Charles, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 219

FARMINGTON. Representatives to General Court

Elbritlge T. Averj^ r.* 391 Jolin P. H. French, r * 392 John S. Eoberts, r.* 388 William F. Thayer, d. 364 Benjamin F. Perkins, d 361 George E. Emerson, d 360

Supervisors of the Check-List.

John E. S. Hall, r.* Joseph L. Demeritt, d.

William M. Herring, r.* Ned L. Parker, d. Uriah S. Wiggin, r* Charles W. Johnson, d.

Moderator.

Henry S. Davis, r* Frank E. Marston, d.

FITZWILLIAM. Representative to General Court.

Walter E. Vance, r.- 104 Charles L. Haskell, d. 87

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Isaac H. Bnrbank, r* Elbridge Cummings, r.*

Charles D. Bigelow, r.- Samuel O. Bailey, d. Fred E. Boyce, d.

Moderator.

John M. Parker, f/.*

FEANCESTOWN. Representative to General Court.

John M. Morse, Charles A. Patch, d v.* .... ^ 112 58 220 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Charles E. Hopkins, r* Lyman II. Belcher, d.

Edward F. Eoper, r.* Walter S.Bailey, d. George A. Duncklee, r* Edward A. Newton, d.

Moderator.

Edson H. Patch, r* Jesse P. Woodbury, d.

FKANCONIA. Representative to General Court.

Ira Whipple, r 39 Henry H. Clark, d.* 87

Supervisors of the Check-List. Charles E. Whipple, r. George H. Burt, d.* Eugene E. Bowles, r. Willis J. Young, </.* Leonard M. Aldrich, r. Edward B. Parker, d.*

Moderator.

Hamlin E. Priest, r. Wilbur F. Parker, (/.*

FRANKLIN— WARD 1.

Representative to General Court.

Herman J. Odell, r.* . . . . '. .254 Fred A. Eastman, d 119

Supervisors of the Check-List.

James E. Barnard, r.* Edwin T. Taylor, d. Elmer W. French, r.* John O. Poor, d. Napoleon H. Plouff, r.* James H. Grayshan, d.

Moderator.

Charles H. Nichols, r.* Charles N. Emerson, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 221

FKANKLIN—WARD 2.

Representative to General Court.

William E. Carr, r 113

George E. Stone, d* 262

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Horace F. Giles, r. Seth W. Jones, d.* William H. Ainley, r. Robert J. Young, d.* Fred G. Gate, r. Hector Morin, rf.* Moderator.

Fred E. Flanders, r.

Thomas F. Dwyer, d.*

FEANKLIN—WAED 3.

Representative to General Court.

Charles C. Paige, r.* 213 Hendrick A. Currier, d 158

Supervisors of the Check-List. Frank L. Taylor, r.* Julius B. Hale, d.

Walter Burleigh, v.* George S. Knox, d. William S. Stewart, r.* Peter Gahagan, d.

Moderator.

Thurston O. Galley, r.* Parker C. Hancock, d.

FREEDOM. Representative to General Court.

Edgar L. Mills, r.* 110 William A. Bennett, d 95

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Otis E. Glidden, r. Christopher B. Chase, d.* Henry L. Floyd, r. John M. Parsons, (Z.*

Jesse I. Drew, r. Bertwell E. Eldridge, d.* 222 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderator.

Lewis C. Allard, r.

George T. Philbrick, d.*

FREMONT. Representative to General Court.

Harrison B. Ellis, r* 102 Wilcomb H. Benfield, d 28

Supervdsors of the Check-List.

George W. Emerson, r.* Walter H. Lyford, d. John W. French, r* Albert B. Robinson, d. Lincoln F. Hooke, r.* David Sanborn, d. Moderator.

Gyrus A. Gove, r.* David Sanborn, d.

GILMANTON. Representative to General Court.

William S. P. Sanderson, r 137 Thomas Cogswell, d* . . . . . . 185

Supervisors of the Check-List. Usher Parsons, r.* S. Elbridge G. Clough, d. Laural A. Blake, r.* Nahum Wight, d. Daniel H. Moulton, r.* Haven F. Gilman, d. Moderator.

Thomas Cogswell, d.*

GILFORD. Representative to General Court.

John B. Morrill, r.* 106 Frank B. Grant, d 88 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 223

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Harvey A. Jewett, J\* Charles W. B. Davis, d.

John L. Eollins, r.* Lucian INI. Folsom, d.

William S. Marston, r* Charles H. Gove, d.

Moderator.

Joseph H. Blaisdell, r* Joseph S. Sanders, d.

GILSUM.

Representative to General Court.

Francis C. IMinor, r.* 115 John S. Collins, d 50

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Lansing W. Wilder, 7-.* Lucius E. Guillow, d. Samuel L. Kingsbury, r.* Georg-e H. Leach, d. John Bliss, r.* Joseph M. Bundy, d. Moderator.

John A. Smith, r* John Bliss, d.

GOFFSTOWN. Representatives to Genej'al Court.

Arthur H. Parker, n* 271 Henry Moore, r 255 Charles G. Barnard, d 263 Charles F. George, d * 291

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Eodney Johnson, r.* James H. Bartlett, d. George W, Colby, r* Weston C. Davis, d. Gilman F. Eobertson, ?•.* Almon M. Corey, d. 224 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderator.

Henry Moore, r.*

George B. Stevens, d.

GOKHAM. Representative to General Court.

Albert S. Twitchell, r 139 Charles A. Chandler, d.* 184

Supervisors of the Check-List. Charles C. Libby, r. John J. Flaherty, d.* Thomas Wilkinson, r. Thomas H. Gifford, d.* Merton M. Willis, r. Ernest D. Kilgore, d.*

Moderator. John P; Dunham, r.

Thomas Gifford, 2d, d.*

GOSHEN. Representative to General Court.

Eugene I. Purington, ?•.* . , , . . 71 Hial F. Nelson, d 39

Supervisors of the Check-List. Fred N. Lowe, r.* Isaac F. Blodgett, d.

George F. Crane, r. John S. Pike, d.* John J. Richardson, r.* John F. Howlett, d.

Moderator.

Russell T. Maxfield, r.* William T. Thissell, d.

GRAFTON. Representative to General Court.

Carlos S. Martin, r 93 Ichabod S.Williams, d.* 110 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 225

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Val M. Hardy, r. Fred W. Barne}^ d* Eben Gove, r. Walter L. Braley, d* Frank A. IMartin, r. Warren L. Kobinson, d*

Moderator.

Val M. Hardy, r.

Henrv O. Eollins. d.*

GEANTHAM. Supervisors of the Check-List.

Moses P. Burpee, r. Guy H. Buswell, d.* William H. Miller, r. Horace F. Kimball, (7.*

Albert Collins, r. Lucius A. B. Smith, d.*

Moderator.

Rufus Hall, r.

Perley Walker, d*

GREENFIELD. Representative to General Court.

Georg'e P. Holt, r. . 8 John H. Reynolds, (/. 56 William E. Hopkins, i. d.* 72

Supervisors of the Check-List.

George F. Russell, r. George H. Putnam, d.* Willis D. Hardy, r. Frank E. Russell, d.* Frank A. Blanchard, r. Lawrence W. Flynn, d.*

Moderator.

Clarence M. Gipson, r. Fred W. Duncklee, d.* 226 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

GEEENLAND. Representatite to General Court.

Jolin P. Weeks, r.* 68

Supervisors of the Check-List. Abner Littlefield, ?.* Andrew P. Bodge, r.* Wilber O. Winn, r*

Moderator.

Charles H. Brackett, r.'-'

GEEENVILLE. Representative to General Court.

diaries L. Batchelder, r* 123 James H. Downes, d. 65

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Henry I. Whitney, r.* Camille S. Tralian, d. William H. Sanborn, r.* Daniel J. Brown, d. George C. Bobbins, r.* Henry P. Gainey, d.

Moderator.

Herbert J. Taft, r* Eobert Brown, Jr., d.

GEOTON. Supervisors of the Check-List.

Arthur C. Pollard, r. Mark B. Kidder, d.* Jacob S. Kelley, r. Charlie D. Jewell, d.* Willard H. Hunkins, r. Jerome D. L. Hall, d *

Moderator.

George E. Colburn, r.

Daniel Kidder, (Z.* CANDIDATES FOR TOAVN OFFICES. 227

HAMPSTEAD. Representative to General Court.

Walter A. Allen, r * 119 Edson S. Presse3^ (1 65

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Charles P. Tabor, r.* Charles B. Gilman, d. Clarence L. Sawj-er, r.* Nathaniel E. Bartlett, d.

Ethalbert B. Woodward, r.* Joseph U. George, d. Moderator.

Andre^v M. Moulton, ?'.* Josiah B. Eastman, d.

HAMPTON. Representative to General Court.

Samuel A. Towle, r.* 154 William S. Brown, d 127

Supervisors of the Cheek-List. Frank E. James, r.* Fred E. Sanborn, d.

Henry W. Emerjs ?-.* Edward S. Elkins, d.

John W. Mason, r.* Charles W. Eoss, d.

Moderator.

Samuel A. Towle, r.* Charles M. Batchelder, d.

HAMPTON FALLS.

Representative to General Court.

Henry E. Tilton, r.* 97

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Charles P. Akerman, r.* Edwin B. Pevear, r.* Lester B. Sanborn, r.* 228 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderato7\

Warren Brown, r*

HANCOCK. Representative to General Court.

Charles M. Sheldon, r.* 89 Clarence H. Ware, d 63

Supervisors of the Check-List. Almus F.Woodward, r.* William D. Fogg, d. John E. Hadley, r* Elmer S. Ware, d. Mason T. Whitaker, r* John R. Shea, d.

Moderator.

Charles H. Button, r.* Frank T.' Davis, d.

HANOVER. liepresentativcs to Oeneral Court.

Simon Ward, r.* 175 Henry J. Weston, r.* 186 Thomas W. D. Worthen, d John J). Bridgman, d. ...... 125 81

Supervisors of the Check-List. Frank W. Davison, r.* John H. Foster, d. Carlton N. Camp, r.* George M. Bridgman, d. Willard G. Hurlbutt, r.* Henry T. Fitts, d. Moderator.

Hamilton T. Howe, r.* John M. Fuller, d.

HARRISVILLE. Representative to General Court.

Thomas H. White, r.* 98 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 229

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Fred A. Stratton, r.* John H. Farwell, (/.*

Luke Bergeron, rf.* Moderator.

Samuel D. Bemis, d.*

HAET'S LOCATION. Representative to General Court.

Geoige H. Moray, ?".* Winfred I. Burnell, r. ...... 5 2

Supervisors of the Check-List.

I'reston P. Burnell, r.* Winfred I. Burnell, r.* Edward S. Walsh, r.*

Modc)-ator.

George H. Morey, r.*

HAVERHILL. Representatives to General Court.

Henry F. King, r.* 389 Morris E. Kimball, r.* 407 Samuel B. Page, d 373 Charles G. Smith, d 308

Supervisors of the Check-List. Ernest E. Craig, r.* James F. Leonard, d. Daniel E. Carr, r.* Enoch R. Weeks, d.

Harry W. Jewett, r.* William H. Morris, d.

Moderator.

George C. Butler, r.* Samuel B. Page, r. 15 230 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

HEBRON. Supervisors of the Check-List.

Joseph E. Keyes, r. Frank O. Morse, ri.*

Fred H. Tukey, r. Edwin J. Glines, (/.*

Justin T. McCIure, r. Cyrus Moore, (/.*

Moderator.

John F. Eogers, r.

William C. Eoss, d.*

HENNIKER. Representative to General Court.

Dana E. Huntington, r.* 204 Enos Carter, d 95

Supervisors of the Check-List.

George F. Pinkham, r* Willis N. Carnes, d. George W. Sargent, r.* Arthur C. Graves, d. William H. Bean, r.* George W. S. Dow, d.

Moderator.

Charles A. Wilkins, r.* William O. Folsom, d.

HILL. Representative to General Court.

Ellon S. Little, r.* . 8G Horace J. Campbell, d GO

Supervisors of the Check-List. Alfred M. Ivelley, r.* Asa D. Prescott, d.

George H. Cilley, r.* Henry P. Blake, d. Elmer H. Colby, r.* Ward W. Mason, d.

Moderator.

George A. Sumner, r.* Harrie M. Dickinson, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 231

HILLSBOEOUGH. Representatives to General Court.

Kobert B. Clement, r* 318 Sylvester Atwood, r.* 319 Frank M. Parker, d 233 Hinian A. Brockway, d 200

Supervisors of the Check-List. Ira W. Jackman, r.* Frank E. Merrill, d.

Orlando G. Burtt, r.* Mark McClintock, d. Frank D. Gay, r.* Daniel J. Harrigan, d.

Moderator.

William H. Manahan, ?\*

Edgar Hazeu, d.

HINSDALE. Representatives to General Court

George E. Robertson, r.* 257 Willis D. Stearns, r* 232 Hezekiah F. Horton, d. . . . . . . 74 Frank W. Eobertson, d 97

Supervisors of the Check-List. Edward Bergeron, r.* Edwin C. Eobertson, d.

George S. Wilder, ?'.* Edward Bishop, d. Gardner S. Howe, r.* John M. Shaw, d.

Moderator.

Edalbert J. Temple, r.*

HOLDEENESS. Representative to General Court.

Joseph W. Pulsifer, r.* 100 Lorin Webster, d. . 88 232 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Superviscrs of the Check-List. Noah P. Boynton, ?•.* John H. Perkins, d. Frank L. Piper, ?•.* Charles W. Palmer, d. Horace J. Bennett, r.^^' Curtis G. Burleigh, d.

Moderator.

Jason E. Sanborn, r.* Jonathan B. Huckins, d.

HOLLIS.

Representative to General Court.

Henry A. Goodwin, r.* 129 James A. Walch, p. 7

Supervisors of the Checlc-LiM. Franklin Worcester, r.* David N. Hayden, r.* John Woods, r.*

Moderator.

Silas M. Spalding-, r.*

HOOKSETT. Representatives to General Court.

Edwin A. Tyrrell, r.- . 196 James Thompson, 2d, ?\* 192 Norris C. Gault, d. . 155 Nathaniel Clark, d. 155

Supervisors of the Check^-Li St. Frank A. Thomas, r.* John F. Fuller, d. Albert F. Davis, r.* James Huse, d. Arthur Eacine, r.* James H. Barnes, d.

Moderator.

John W. Grey, r.* Samuel Head, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 233

HOPKINTON. Representativ.cs to Gcnci-al Court.

Cyril T. Webber, r 203 William C. Russ, r.* 207 William Tasker, d 204 George M. Putnam, d* 265

Supervisors of the ChecTv-List.

Frank I. Morrill, ?\" Herbert M. Kimball, d. Arthur J. Boutwell, r.* Warren B. Barton, d.

George E. Lord, r.* Fred H. Emerson, d.

Moderator.

Walter S. Davis, ?•.* Samuel T. Symonds, d.

HUDSON. Representative to General Court.

Henry O. Smith, r 98 John J. Baker, d.* 165

Supervisors of the Cheek-List.

Henry C. Brown, r.* Charles E. Cummings, d. James E. Merrill, r.* Pearl T. Thomas, d. Arden C. Cross, r* Henry F. Smith, d.

Moderator.

George W. Clyde, r* Willis P. Cummings, d.

JAFFREY.

Representative to General Co-urt.

Will Edward J. Mower, A. Coburn, r.* (Z. ...... I75 79 234 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List. Frederic J. Lawrence, r.- John M. Lamb, r.* Albert Annett, r* Charles H. Plumer, d.

Moderator.

Charles L. Eich, r* Edward C. Boynton, d.

JACKSON. Representative to General Court. Charles W. Gray, r.* 75 Andrew C. Harriman, d 72

Supervisors of the Check-List. Abrana B. Pratt, r. •

Willard A. Meserve, (Z.* Charles S. Meserve, r.* Charles S. Meserve, d. Silas D. Meserve, r. Daniel E. Perkins, (Z.*

Moderator.

Cyrus E. Gale, r. Cyrus F. Perkins, d.*

JEFFERSON. Representative to General Court.

Seldon C. Howe, r ' 105 John W. Crawshaw, d.* , . . . . .163 Supervisors of the Check-List. William H. Chamberlain, r. Nicholas Tuttle, d.* Elverton S. Gale, r. Eoyal C. Barnett, d.* Nathaniel M. Davenport, r. William B. Paschal, d.*

Moderator.

William J. Chamberlain, r.

Mannasah Perkins, d.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 235

KEENE—WAED 1.

Representatives to General Court.

Charles G. Shedd, r * 243 Herschel J. Fowler, r.* 241 Barnett P. Peters, d 151 William J. Callahan, d 147

Supervisor of the Cheek-List. Edward H. Fletcher, r.* William T. Hart, d.

KEENE—WAED 2.

Representative to General Court.

Flavel Beal, r* 154' George A. Gordon, d 126

Supervisor of the Check-List.

Henry W. Nims, r.* John M. Hovey, d.

KEENE—WAED 3.

Representative to General Court. Alfred T. Batehelder, r * 149 Albert E. Fish, d 142

Supervisor of the Check-List. Loren W. Adams, r.* William A. Connor, d.

KEENE— WAED 4.

Representative to General Court.

Sidney C. Ellis, r * 134 Thomas T. Eussell, d 81

Supervisor of the Check-List.

Joseph F. Emmons, r.* Daniel J. Ej^an, d. 236 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

KEENE— WARD 5.

Representative to General Court. John G. Lesiire, r 12G John Diehl, d* 159

Supervisor of the Check-List.

Ellery E. Kugg, r. James B. DufPy, d*

KENSINGTON. Representative to General Court.

Abraham Hilliard, r.* 84 Jeremiah Hilliard, d 73 * Supervisors of the Check-List.

Ellery C.Wadleigh, r.* Laroy S. Sanborn, d. Daniel Dearborn, r.* John P. Blake, d. John L. Eaton, r.* Harrison Eowe, d.

Moderator.

Wilber K. Parker, r.*

Joseph N. Austin, d.

KINGSTON. Representative to General Court.

Levi S. Bartlett, r.* . . . . . .179 Charles E. Marsh, Jr., d S3

Supervisors of the Check-List. Arthur H. Marshall, r.* Joshua E. G. Lyford, d.

Ezra Page, r.* Seth E. Nason, d. John H. S. Sanborn, r.* Eugene A. Prescott, d.

Moderator.

Benjamin F. Fifield, r.* Richard L. Prescott, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 237

LACONIA— WAED 1.

Representative to General Court.

John Smith, r* II. 65 Jacob Sanborn, d 42

LACONIA— WAED 2.

Representative to General Court.

Daniel C. Kellogg, r.* 156 Fred S. Whitten, d .132

LACONIA— WARD 3.

Representative to General Court.

George E. Stevens, r 93 Charles F. Story, d.* 129

LACONIA— WARD 4.

Representative to General Court.

Edwin H. Shannon, r 120 Robert S. Foss, d.* 183

LACONIA— WARD 5.

Representative to General Court.

William H. Philbrook, r 128 John W. Ashman, (Z.* 142

LACONIA—WARD 6.

Representatives to General Court.

Fred O. Goss, r.* 242 Edwin A. Badger, r 207 Ossian W. Goss, d 233 Charles L. Simpson, d.* 270 238 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

LANCASTER. Representatives to General Covrt

John H. Smith, r* 452 John Costello, r.* . 437 Charles A. Howe, r.* 431 Emmons D. Stockwell, d. 30)4

Francis F. Kellum, d. . 317 George A. Webster, d. . 280

Supervisors of the Clwck-List. William H. Shurtleff, r* John M. Farnham, d. James Peavey, r.* S. James S. Brackett, d.

Charles H. Wentworth, r* John M. Carr, d. Moderator.

Will P. Buckley, r. and d.*

LANDAFF. Supervisors of tlw Check-List.

Charles Sherman, r. Henry H. Noyes, cZ.*

George A. Elliott, r. George H. Young, d.* Murray E. Glazier, r. George D. McKean, d.* Moderator.

John E. Hall, r. Eussell T. Gordon, d.*

LANGDON. ReprcsenlativG to General Court.

Alvin S. Cram, 7-.* . 41 Charles M. Lufkin, d. 32

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Henry Prentiss, r.* Charles A. Jefts, d. Charles A. Holden, r* Eeuben A. Lucas, d. William H. Wilson, r.* Charles W. Graves, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 239

Moderator.

Henry M. Elwell, r* Charles M. Lufkin, d.

LEBANON. Representatives to General Court.

Frank C. Churchill, r.* 459 William F. Cowen, r.- . . . . . . 454 Leonard A. Estabrook, r.* . . , . . 480 Charles B. Eoss, d 219 John Byrne, d 182 Elmore H. Plummer, d 187

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Henry M. Day, r.* Carlos D. Smith, d. Charles A. Dole, v.* Joseph Contremarsh, d. Chester L. Rix, r.* David H. Butnam, d.

Moderator.

Harlan P. Goodrich, r.* Nathan C. Bridg-man, d.

LEE.

Representative to General Court.

George E, Chesley, r.* 84 Josiah T. Bartlett, d 82

Supervisors of the Check-List. Herbert E. Thompson, r.* Maurice N. Lane, d. Ben F. Davis, r.* Charles A. Fernald, d. William H. Thompson, r.* Herbert E. Jenkins, d.

Moderator.

Loren S. Fernald, r.* Hovpard M. Glidden, d. 240 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

LEMPSTER. Representative to General Court.

William E. Perry, r* 79 Andrew J. Parker, d 41

Supervisors of the Cheek-List.

James T. Nichols, 7-.* John F. Wheeler, d. Loren A. Noyes, r.* Frederick A. Richardson, d.

Charles W. Sabine, r* Ernest F. Cutler, d. Moderator.

William C. Sabine, r* Hiram Parker, d.

LINCOLN. Supervisors of the Check-List.

John H. Henry, r* Mason D. Dolloff, r* Reginald Machell, r.*

Moderator.

Walter E. Burke, v.*

LISBON. Representatives to General Court.

Frank E. Buck, r.* 288 '

Seth F. Hoskins, r.* . . . . . . .• 314 Ned G. English, d 150 Fred H. Bowles, d 145

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Augustus A. Woolson, r.* Carlos M. Cogswell, d.

David M. Aldrich, r.* Henry M. Suttie, d. James E. Richardson, r.* Leonard Bowles, d.

Moderator.

Augustus A. Woolson, r.* Samuel P. Ford, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 241

LITCHFIELD.

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Zachariah K. Whittemore, r.* Frederick L. Center, d.

David E. Leach, r.* Charles H. Chase, d. Milo A. Durant, r.* Isaac N. Center, d.

Moderator.

John Parker, r.* Norris C. Griffin, d.

LITTLETON. Representatives to General Court.

Daniel C. Eemich, r.* 498 William J. Beattie, r.* 518 Noah Farr, r.* 520 Frank C. Albee, d 107 F. P. Bond, d 121 J. H. Bailey, d 133

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Harry F. Howe, r.- Hiram E. Currier, ?•.*

Frank Venioii, r.*

Moderator.

Benjamin H. Corning, r.*

LIVEEMORE. No election.

LONDONDEEEY. Representative to General Court. Eosecrans W. Pillsbury, r.* 239 David W. Ela, d Ill 242 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of tJw Check-List.

Wallace P. Mack, r * Sidney A. Webster, d. Henry C. Smith, r.* Ehvin C. Peabody, d. Frank E. Eobie, r* Wilber E. Barrett, d.

Moderator.

Eoseci'ans W. Pillsbury, r,* Eobert K. Plummer, d.

LOUDON. . Representative to General Court.

Walter B. Maynard, r 94 Albert B. Sargent, d.* 170

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Horace F. Fletcher, r. Caleb D. Marston, d.* Lewis L. Towle, r. Edwin H. Sleeper, (Z.* Jonathan K. Dimond, r. Edmund P. Sanborn, (?.*

Moderator.

George W. Eowell, r. Joseph T. Sanborn, d.*

LYMAN. Representative to General Court.

William B. Hurd, r . . 61 John E. Clough, d.* 71

Superviso7-s of the Check-List.

James S. House, r. William H. McAlpine, d.* William H. Stephens, r. Eichard Dodge, d.* Arthur H. Aldrich, r.* . Ephraim Corej', d.

Moderator.

Osman P. Titus, r.

Joseph F. Sherman, d.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWis OFFICES. 243

LYME. Representative to GCnei-al Court.

Henry A. Bailey, r.* 149 Wesley N. Mayo, d 56

Sui)crvisors of the Check-List.

Bela Sawyer, r.* Nathan W. Hewes, d.

Lewis S. Derby, v.* Daniel A. Ware, d. Payson E. Fairfield, r.* George H. Belford, d.

Moderator.

William H. Dimick, r.'"

LYNDEBOEOUGH. Representative to General Court.

William E. Fiske, r 83 Fred B. Kichards, d * 101

Supervisors of the Check-List. - William T. Bowen, r.* Ira E. Brown, d.

Harry E. Hutchinson, r.* Charles H. Tarbell, d. John H. Goodrich, r.* Ethan A. Woodward, d.

Moderator.

Alfred L. Curtis, r* John C. Carkin, d.

MADBURY. Supervisors of the Check-List. Charles S. Kingman, r. Thomas W. Fernald, d.* Willis W. Hoitt, r. Albert D. Emerson, (Z.* Alonzo D. Nute, r. Martin T. H. Hayes, d.*

Moderator.

John B. Huckins, r.* Martin V. B. Felker, d. 244 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

MADISON.

Representative to General Covrt.

Langdon M. Atkinson, r.* . 86 James W. Tyler, d 5y

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Edward E. Hoyt, Jr., r* Edward E. Hoyt, Jr., d.

Eug-ene E. Alley, r.* Lewis N. Knox, d. Samuel J. Oilman, r.* Newell K. Forrest, d.

Moderator.

Langdon M. Atkinson, r.* Rcscoe G. Greene, d.

MANCHESTER—WARD 1.

Representatives to General Court

Lafayette A. Hays, r.* 375 John B. Cavanaugh, ?•.* 387 Joseph Tait, r.* 391 Michael J. Driscoll, d. 142 Fred J. Slack, d. . 147 George McGuire, d. 122

MANCHESTER— WARD '

2.

Representatives to General Court

Lyman W. Colby, r.* 751 Charles B. Brown, ?•.* 739 Edward L. Kimball, r* 745 Frank P. Carpenter, d. 280 David M. Pettengill, d. 263 William T. Nichols, d. 262 CANDIDATES FOIl TOWN OFFICES. 245

:\rAXCHESTER— WARD 3.

Representatives to General Court.

Aime E. Boisvert, /•.* . 630 Charles W. Cheney. /".* . 645 Cyrus H. Little, r.* 659 Edwin R. Robinson, r.* 612 Jesse B. Pattee, r* 651 Clarence E. Rose, r.* 647 William Corej', d. . 382 Richard H. Dillon, d. 351 John Cashman, Jr., (/. . 347 George B. True, d. . 368 Joseph W. Fellows, d. . 343 Joel Daniels, d. 366 Harrjr H. Acton, s. I. 16

MANCHESTER—WARD 4.

Representatives to General Court

Frederick Allen, r.* 682 Arthur Campbell, r.* S. 681 Jules Deschenes, r.* 677 Henry A. Farrington, r.* 678 Jerome J. Lovering, r.* 688 Harrie M. Young, r.* . 702 Patrick J. Stewart, d. . 277 John R. Smith, d. . 284 Michael R. Sullivan, d. . 272 Cyrille E. LeBrun, d. . 273 John J. McKenna, d. 274 Charles F. Nettleton, d. 266

MANCHESTER—WARD 5.

Representatives to General Court.

Eben T. James, r io:i

Charles H. Sprague, r. . 11] John H. Slater, /• 112 16 246 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL,

!Mie]iael Eowley, r. 101 Michael Burns, r. . 86 Patrick O'Gara, r. . 102 Garrett W. Cotter, (/.* 828 AVilliam F. Horan, r/." 830 John T. Kelley, rf." 828 Andrew J. JSIurray. (!.' 830 Patrick E. Eyan, r/.* 813 Michael J. Mahoney, (/. 827

MA.XCHESTEK—WARD 6.

Bcprcscittdlires to Genet al Court.

Herbert E. Richardson, / 914 Edwin N. Baker, r.* 886 Albert Blood, r.* . 853 Herbert S. Clongh, 7-.* 878 Benjamin F. Sleeper, '/ 724 !Moise 'S'errette, 0. . 702 James A. Broderlck, d. 790 IMartin T. McHngli, (/. 708

MANCHESTER—WARD 7.

Representatives to General Court.

Levi K. Snow, Joseph r.""

L. Siinplcins, r'" ...... 231 231

^rAXf'IlESTER—W^ARD 8;

Rc/in '<(iif(itircs to Genet al Court.

George A. Putnam, /•. 402 George L. Powell, r. 409 James Eied, r.'" 523 John P. Bartlett, </.* 515 Robert E. McKean, d- 500 Charles W. Qiiimby, (/. 386 John E. Mannsfeld, s. 1 112 Charles ISIiller, s. 1. 97 Lonis Binmner, v. I. 91 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 247

MANCHESTEE— WAED 9.

Representatives to Gcner al Court.

Albert IMontgomery, r 367 Augustin Filion, r. 376 George P. Ames, r. 422 Treffle Eaiche, r. . 369 Joseph D. Masse, rf.* 442 Joseph J. Moreau, f?.* 429 Lawrence W. Howarcl. u 449 Michael J. O'ConnoV, (/.* 475

MAELBOEOUGH. Representative to General Cowt.

James Knowlton, r.* . . . . . 173

Supervisors of the Vlieck-List.

Charles L. Bemis, r.- Erwln E. Ward, r.* Edward P. Eichardson, ?•.*

Moderator.

Clinton Collins, r.*

MAELOW. Representative to General Court.

Hiram F. Enssell, r.'-'' 93 Lucian D. Tinker, d. 56

Supervisors of the Cheek-List Eockwell F. Craig, r.* James A. Elliott, (7.

Arthur M. Davis, r. * Frank B. Farley, (/.

James M. Perkins, r.* Frederick E. Webster, d.

Moderator.

William G. Booth, r.*

Elgin A. Jones, d. 248 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

MASON.

Represeniative to General Court.

Albert O. Childs, r,"-- 51 Morton L. Bariett, d 26

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Marcellus R. Hodgman, r.* Luther A. Blood, d. Charles H. Wheeler, r.* Nelson L. Barrett, d. George C. Arnold, r.* Charles G. Amsden, d.

Moderator.

Benjamin F. March, r.* Edgar S. Kennedy, d.

MEREDITH. Representative to General Court.

Nathan G. Plummer, r 243 Joseph W. Lang, d.* 248

Supervisors of the Check-List. Edmund Quimby, r.* Lyman D. Moulton, d.* Dudley Leavitt, r. Edward P. Wiggin, d. Newton B. Plummer, r. Austin S. Moulton, d.*

Moderator.

George F. Smith, r.

Edwin Cox, d.*

MERRIMACK. Representative to General Court.

George W. Darrah, r 115 James B. Hoitt, d.* 128 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 249

Supervisors of tJie Check-List.

Luther Kittredge, r. Lewis J. Eead, d.* Harrison E. Herrick, r. Harrison E. Herrick, (7.*

Henry A. Harris, r* Charles H. Fields, (i.

Moderator.

Everett E. Parker, r. and d.*

MIDDLETON. Supervisors of the Check-List. Hiram S. Stevens, r.* Albert M. Stevens, d. Walter F. Leighton, r.* Charles F. Wallace, d. George S. Davis, r.* George W. Kimball, d.

Moderator.

James D. Moore, r.* Asa B. Kelley, d.

MILLSFIELD. No election.

MILAN. Representative to General Court.

Anthony Nay, r.* 100 Arthur T. Coffin, d 49

Supervisors of the Check-List. Alvinzo A. Higgins, r. Ealph Cole, d. Charles E. Fogg, r.* Orvice A. Tvi^itchell, d. Elmer B. Roberts, r.* Edson E. Rich, d. Moderator.

Dennis B. York, r.* Ransom A. Twitchell, d. 250 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

MILFOED. Representatives to General Court.

William P. Colbiirn. r* 418 Charles A. Laugdell, r/' 416 Arthur L. Kej^es, r.* . 414 John Hadlock, d. . 170 Darius S. Dearborn, d 167 Daniel F. Gainev, d 153

i^vperri'^ors of the Check-List.

Fred B. Bartlett, r.- George E. Connor, d. James H. Fay, r.* George N. AVoodward, d.

George A. Mclntire, r.* John T. ^Nfm-phy, d. Moderator.

John McLane, r.* Fred W. Barnes, d.

MILTON. Ii( I>r(seii4atire to General Court.

Freeman H. Lowd. Stephen M. Bragdon, /." d. .... . 264 83

Siipcrrisnrs of the Check-List.

Elbridge W. Fox. /•."- Xathaniel G. Pinkham, d.

George D. Canney, '.* John H. ]\raddox. d. William T. Wallace. /•.* (leoro-e H. Plumei", d.

Moderator.

John U. Simes. r.* Leroy F. Corson, d.

MONROE. Siiperiisors of the Check-List.

Edwin C. Emery. /•." Thomas ^Inrray, d.

Homer S. Smith, r.* William Ilinman, d. II.

Fred H. Gibson, /•.- Ivichard A. Moore, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 251

Moderator.

Willis S. Smith, r.* Willinni BroMii, (/.

MONT VERNOX. Reprcsetitativc to General Court.

Franlvlin !Marclen, r.*-' .... 1 o

Joseph H. Blood, (/ 50

Supervisors of the Cheek-List.

Jay ^r. Gleasoii, r.* George W. Averill. '/.

Leaiider F. Humphrey, r." Henrj' H. Trow, (/.

Wallace A. Eaymond, /•.* Harvey P. Stearns. '/.

Moderator.

William H. Kendall, r."

George C. Hadley, d.

MOULTOXBOROUGH. Representative to General Court.

James E. French, /•."=* 199 Isaac A. Moulton, d. 55

Supervisors of the Check-List. Leander Bryant, ?•.* John E. Locke, r.-

Edg-ar S. Goss, /•.*

Moderator.

James E. French, /•.•

NASHUA— WARD ].

Representatives to General Court.

Charles A. Roby. z." 329 William J. Putnam. /•.* .320

Benjamin F. Cotton, d 129 Edwin F. Knight, d .129 252 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

NASHUA— WARD 2.

Representatives to General Court.

Albert D. Melendy, r.* 196 Calvin E. Wood, »•* 210 James H. Blake, d 135 Benjamin L. Warde, d 120

NASHUA—WARD 3.

Representatives to General Court.

Benjamin I. Twombly, r. . . . . . 185 Fred O. Giddings. r 189 Henri T. Ledoux, fZ.* 207 John B. McGuire, rf.- 219

NASHUA—WARD 4.

Representative to General Cowt.

Frank B. Goodhue, r. . . '

. . . .121 Charles H. Morse, rf.* 129

NASHUA—WARD 5.

Uiincsentative to General Court.

Joseph T. Dowling-, r. . . . . . . 82 Michael H. Siske. d.* 141

NASHUA— WARD 6.

Representatives io C'')ieral Court.

Edward H. Wasou. r.* 150 Nathaniel Eaton, r Ill Charles D. Parker, d.* 125 Isaac N. Crimminqs, d. . . . . . . 116 CAKDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 253

NASHUA—WARD 7.

Represent'iiivcs to Gsneral Court.

Alfred M. Hills, r* 327 Horace W. Page, r 314 David A. Gregg, d 281 Charles H. Burke, d." 333

NASHUA—WARD 8.

Representatives to Gener al Court.

William J. Flatlier, r.* . 296 Mederie T. Lajoie, r. 262 Moses L. Truell, d.* 272 Horace D. Griswold, d. . 271

NASHUA—WAED 9.

Representatives to General Court.

Lotie I. Miuard, r 249 Frank C. McGlynn, r 208 Joseph T. Slattery, d* 252 Augustin C. Blain, rf.* 259

NELSON. Represf iitative to General Court.

John H. Osgood, r." 47 Henry E. Wilson, d> 11

Supervisors of the Check-List. Albert Davis, r.* Fred M. Brown, d. Wilmer C. Tolman, r,* Erskine S. Messenger, d. Harr^- R. Green, r. Harry R. Green, d.*

Moderator.

Eben C. Tolman, r.* William W. Dunn, d. 254 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

NEW BOSTON.

h'ciircsciitiiHrc la (liiicnil Court.

Eodney McLaiie, r.* 131 Albert Goodwin, (/ 120

.S'»/>f /("(so/'s iif the Cliick-Lisf.

Georg-e E. Robbiiis. /•.* Dennis C. Pea.slee, d.

John H. Johonnett, r.* (Jeorge C. Wan-en, d.

Allen A. Leach, r.* John J. Allen, d.

Modo'iifnr.

Charles H. Shedd, r.* Eben L. Bartlett, d.

NEWP.T'KY.

Representative to (!ciivr<il Court.

Wesley E. Cilley. r George W. Blodgett, d.'-' ..... '17

74

Siiperrisors: of the Check-List.

Nathaniel C. Lear, r. Benjamin F. Gillingham, f/.*

Giarles A. Snow. /•. Franklin P. Kemp, rf.* Ralph W. Johnson, r. Nathan B. Bly, rf.*

Moderator.

Amos E. Rollins, r.

George J. Cesser. «/.*

NEWCASTLE. Supervisors of the Check-List.

John E. Yeaton, r.'- Jndson Trefethen, </. Webster G. White, >"." Simeon C. Flanders, d. Conrad Push, r.* James W. Pridham, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 255

Moderator.

James M. Meloon. r."

George AV. Raiidall. d.

NEW DURHA^r. Riivrsciitatirt' to General Ccntrt.

Joseph D. Harding', r 85 William A. Towle, d.- 88

Supervisors of the Cheek-List.

Moses L. Wentworth, r, Cjriis C. Eollins, d.* Joseph, E. Berrj^ /•. Justin Dore, (i.*

George F. Eohan. r. Thomas S. Varney, d.*

Moderator.

Edward E. Eice, r.

Horatio G. Chamberlin, d.*

NEWFIELDS. Representative to General Court.

John Tor rev, r 78 Thomas Leddy, rZ.^- 120

Supervisors of the Cheek-List.

Daniel G. Neal, r.* George W. Pease, d.

H. Jenness Paul, r.- Charles E. Lyons, d.

George L. Chase, r.* Fred S. Foss, d.

Moderator.

Charles E. Smith, r.* Augustus W. Eichards, d.

NEW HAMPTON. Representative to General Court.

Francis A. Emerson, /• . 129 Noah S. Ward, d 129 256 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Charles E. Dickerman, »*.* Frank D. Sanborn, (f.

Charles H. Gordon, r.* Josiah S. Swain, d. Lucian J. Harper, r.* Frank B. Smith, d. Moderator.

Lewis P. Bickford, r.* Charles W. Coolidge. d.

NEWINGTOIST.

Representative to General Court.

Joseph Hoyt, r.* S. 56 Charles A. Badger, d 54

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Georg-e W. Pickering, r.* Amos Dame, d. Daxius Frink, ?•* Asa H. Wentworth, d. Fred'c W. de Eochemont, Jr., r * Albert E. Hodgdon, d.

Moderator.

Louis L. de Eochemont. r.* Daniel W. Badger, d.

NEW IPSWICH. Representative to General Court.

John Preston, r* 96 Charles H. Hardy, d 47

Supervisors of the Check-List. Charles L. Tarbell, r.* Joseph A. "Wheeler, r.* Frederic W. Jones, ?'.* Moses M. Balch, d.

Moderator.

Francis W. Prichard. r.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 257

NEW LONDON. Represnitatiie to General Court.

John K. LaAv, /•."• 116 Asa N. Todd, d. 97

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Charles S. ^^Tiitney, r.* William C. Leonard, di.

Allen 0. Crane, r* Mason AY. Emery, d.

Joseph M. Clough, /."•• Sydney A. Smith, d.

Moderator.

John K. Law, /.* Andrew J. Sargent, d.

NEWMARKET.

Ernest P. Pinkham, /•* 258 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List. Charles H. Matthews, /* Cliff F. Gile, d. Williain H. Noiirse, /•."'•' Tyler L. Barkei", d. James C. Grandy, r.* Fred Ganiash, d.

Moderator.

John B. Cooi^er, r.'^

Fred T. Pollard, d.

NEWTON. Representative to General Court.

Benjamin F. Wakefield, r.'-- 144 Everett M. Bartlett, (/ 101

Supervisors of the Check-List. Edwin G. Ivelle^', r.* John E. Hayford. d. William W. ]loswell, r* William W. Wilder, d. Elmer E. Kimball, /•.* George W. Marston. Jr., d.

Moderator.

A. J. Sawyer, r.* Frank B. Currier, (/.

NOETHFIELD. Rcprcsciitatirc to General Court.

William A. Gardner, r.* 148 Hiram Streeter, d 94

Superriso7:'< of the Check-List.

Charles F. Bnell, r.* J)aniel M. Page, (7.

Willis M. Baclielder, /•."- Samiiel T. Holmes, d.

Thomas E. Pay son, /'.* Kiehard B. Plummer, d. m

Moderator.

Otis C. Wyatt. r. and d.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 259

XORTH HAMPTON. Reprrsciitafire to (h'niral Vuint.

Stephen B. 'rarlton. r 99 George AV. Page. (/.* 104

Siiinrrisorx of the Clicck-Lisl.

George A. P.oyriton, v. Ebeii L. Dalton. rf.* Francis E. Drake, r. Cieorge D. Brown, iJ.- Morris H. Smith, r.* Herman L. ^Nlarston. (/.

Moderator^

Levi AV. Fogg. r.

Otis S. I'.rown, dJ'-

NOPvTHUMBERLAND. Representative to General Court.

Henry B. Gilkey, r 185 Thomas F. Butler, d" 203

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Frank N. Piper, r. William Hayes, (/.* James B. }»IcFarlancl, r. John M. Wilson, rf.* Milton E. Wilkinson, r. Forrlyce A. Hannaford. d.-

Moderator.

Frank G. McKillips. r. Canning H. Hatch. (/."

i\OETHWOOD. Representative to General Court.

Horace K. Emery, Laro}- W. Woodman, d ?•.* ...... 179 110 260 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Snpervisors of the Check-List.

James A. Biekford, r* Fred C. Giles, d. * Elbridge G. Boody, r Eoy H. Smith, d.

Joseph H. Koderick, r* Charlie C. Holmes, d.

Moderator.

Waldo A. Caswell, r.* Orrin M. James, d.

NOTTINGHAM.

Representative to General Court.

James F. Knowlton, Perley B. Batchelder, d r.* ..... 136 74

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Daniel Bracket!, r.* Johja H. Winslow, d.

Charles J. Rair-sdell, r.- Marcus M. Taylor, d.

Frank J. Holmes, r.* Hollis G. Daniels, d.

Moderator.

William F. Holmes, /•.*

John M. Tuttle, d.

ORANGE.

Svpervisors of the Check^List.

Charles H. Ford, r. Nathaniel Whittier, 4th, (/.*

David A. Dimond, r. Alfred A. Stevens, d.* Walter H. Ford, r. Fred D. True, A*

Moderator.

Charles H. Ford, /•.

John H. French, rf.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 261

ORFORD. Representative to General Court. Edwin C. Franklin, r* 97 John S. Weeks, d 41

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Ernest W. Cushman, r.* Charles E. Brock, d. Edwin Franklin, r.* C. Samuel N. Lamprey, d. Isaac Willard, r.* Thomas T. Savage, d.

Moderator.

Samuel R. Morrison, r.* William A. Cushman, d.

OSSIPEE. Repi-esentative to General Court.

Arthur L. Hodsdon, r.* 215 Frank K. Hobbs, d 178

Supervisors of the Check-List. Frank S. Lord, r.* William H. Lord, d. Edwin H. Stevens, r.* Inglis L. Pineo, d. Charles L. Sanders, r.* John H. Brown, d.

Moderator.

Daniel Abbott, r.* George P. Wiggin, d.

PELHAM. Representative to General Court. Forest E. Kelley, r 9t George C. Jackman, d:- Ill

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Gage A. Fox, r. Frank M. Woodbury, d.* Richard B. Hillman, r. Isaac C. Marshall, d.* Samuel Kelley, r. Ezekiel C. Gage, d. 17 262 NEW NAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderator.

George S. Butler, r.* Daniel Is". Atwood, d.

PEMBROKE. Representatives to General Court.

Addison N. Osgood, r. 329 Natt B. Emery, r.* 315 Thomas R. Holt, r.* 320 Frank P. Reed, d. . 218 John H. Raiuville, d. 233 Walter S. Cass, d. . 227

Supervisors of the Check-List. Levi L. Aldrich, r.* Stephen H. Flanders, d.

Thomas P. Holt, r.* Henry T. Fowler, d. Benjamin F. Worcester, ?•.* George B. Lake, d.

Moderator.

Charles P. ^lorse, ?'.*

George W. Fowler, d.

PETERBOROUGH. Representatives to Genei-al Court.

Charles B. Davis, r.- 234 Charles A. Jaquith, r.* . . . . '

. .213 Eldro Upton, (/ 168 Albert W. Noone, d. ... . . .113 Svpervisors of the Check-List. Eben W. Jones, r.* Samuel G. White, d. Arthur H. jNIiller, v.* Oeorge M. Kettelle, d. Arthur P. Smith, r.- Fred K. Longlej', d: Moderator.

Mortier L. Morrison, r.* Thomas B. Tucker, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 263

PIEKMONT. Representative to General Court. William H. Horton, r 77 Lyman M. Robie, d.* 105

Supervisors of the Check-List. John F. Simpson, r. Lennie B. Blodgett, d* John P. Metcalf, r* Orlo B. Stanley, d. Edward S. Rogers, r* Charles F. Morrill, d.

Moderator, Burgess C. Metcalf, r* Lewis E. Risley, d.

PITTSBURG. Representative to General Court.

James Hilliard, r I. 84 Willie N. Judd, d.* 99

Supervisors of the Check-List. Charles H. Johnson, r.* James E. Hilliard, d. Oliver M. Johnson, r.* Alfred E. Amey, d. H. Augustus Blanehard, r.* Elias A. Famham, d.

Moderator.

Oliver M. Johnson, r.* Charles I. Brainard, d.

PITTSFIELD. Representatives to General Court.

Sherbum J. Winslow, v.* 293 John T. Harvey, r 273 Walter E Joy, d.* 282 Edward K. Webster, d) 269 264 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List. Everett Jenkins, r. Eliphalet W. French, d.

Benjamin M. Tilton, r* Frank L. Elliott, d. M. Swain Clough, r* John M. Tucker, d* Moderator.

Album L. Page, r.* John A. Walker, d/.

PLAINFIELD. Representative to General Court.

Benjamin F. Porter, r.* 116 Curtis F. Lewin, d. 72

Supervisors, of the Checlc-List.

Henry C.Famtim, r.* Wallace P. Thrasher, d. Frank W. True, r.* Orra S. Bugbee, d. Frank L. French, r.* Joseph S. Stickney, d.

Moderator.

Daniel C. Westgate, r.* Wallace P. Thrasher, d.

PLAISTOW. Representative to General Court. '

Arthur E. Hoyt, r.* . . . . . .142 Arthur W. Sawyer, (/ 62

Supervisors of the Check-List.

James M. Davis, /*.* Danias Gosselin, d. Forrest S. Davis, r.* John W. Sleeper, d.

Marshall B. Peaslee, r.* William J. Merrifield, d.

Moderator.

Moses B. Dow, r.*

•George A. Denoncour, d. CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 265

PLYMOUTH. Representatives to General Court.

James A. Penniman, r,* 221 James K. Pierce, r 215 Haven Palmer, d 190 Enos Huekins, d* 235

Supervisors of the Check-List.

George H. Adams, r.* Heber W. Hull, d.

George D. Harriman, r.* Andrew E. Smith, d. Isadore N. Lunderville, r.* Moses A. Batchelder, d.

Moderator.

Alvin Burleigh, v.* Alvin F. Wentworth, d.

PORTSMOUTH— WAED 1.

Representatives to General Court.

Freeman R. Garrett, r.* 311 Clement M. Waterhouse, r.* 312 Ira C. Seymour, d 225 John E. Locke, d 220

PORTSMOUTH— WAED 2.

Representatives to General Court. Marcus M. Collis, r.* . . . 266 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

PORTSMOUTH—WARD 3.

Representative to General Court.

Charles H. Hayes, r 96 Frank E. Wliitman, d* 206 William Sladen, i. r 33

PORTSMOUTH—WARD 4.

Representative to General Court.

Allen A. Rand, r 95 John H. Dowd, d* 186

PORTSMOUTH— WARD 5.

Representative to General Court.

Michael Quinn, r 143 Francis E. Langdon, d* 186

RANDOLPH. Supervisors of the Check-List. John H. Boothman, r. James E. Mullavey, d.* Charles E. Lowe, Ji*., r. Sidney M. Brown, d.* Frank F. Reed, r. Ernest S. Wood, d.*

Moderator.

Charles E. Lowe, r.

Francis C. Wood, d>.*

RAYMOND. Representative to General Court.

Arthur R. Whittier, r 141 Charles W. Prescott, d* . . . . . 199 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 267

Sttpervisoys of the Check-List.

Sherburn Gove, r. Mark Scribxier, rf.*

Andrew C.Smith, r. Lewis O. Pollard, d* George L. Corson, r. J. Earl Ladd, (/.*

Moderator.

Henry L. Hardy, r. \

Wesley Poore, d.*

EICHMOND. Representative to General Court.

Siias O. Martin, r.* 53 Lewis R. Cass, d 39

Supervisors of the Check-List. Daniel B. Aldrich, r * Almon Twitchell, d. Danford W. Martin, r.* Stephen A. Bullock, d. Charles F. Pickering-, r.* Oliver A. Millner, d.

Mod'eratcr.

Leason Martin, >•.*

Asa H. Bullock, d.

RINDGE. Representative to General Court.

Herbert D. Wellington, r.* 119 Liberty M. Jewell, d 22

Supervisors of the Check-List. Arthur E. Taggart, r * William T. Donley, d. Elmer D. Goddard, r * iMartin L. Goddard, (/.

Clarence E. Tcwne, r* ^Villiam Hogan, d.

Moderator.

Calvin Allen, r.- Ned Thrasher, d. 268 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

ROCHESTER— WARD 1.

Representative to General Court.

Joseph O. Hayes, r.* 214 Benjamin H. Mooney, d 118

ROCHESTER—WARD 2.

Representative to General Court.

Frank I. Decatur, r.* 112 George W. Varney, d 94

ROCHESTER— WARD 3.

Representative to Genei'al Court. Hiram S. Osborn, r * : 166 Gideon Riehey, d 70

ROCHESTER—WARD 4.

Representative to General Court.

Ernest N. Goodwin, r 158 Frederic E. Small, rf* 237

ROCHESTER—WARD 5.

Representative to Genei'al Court.

Frank I. Smith, r.* 123

Eugene W. Emerson, d 83

ROCHESTER—WARD G.

Representative to General Court.

Charles E. Woodward, r* Eugene C. Foss, d ..... 191 128 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 269

ROLLINSFOED. Representatives to General Court.

James M. Bunker, r.* 167 Melvin Fall, Jr., r* 171 Melvin R. Ayers, d 160 William R. Garvin, d' 153

Supervisors of the Check-List.

William H. Aspinwall, /•.* Jeremiah. Mesldll, d.

Pardon N. Dexter, r.* Henry F. Dagan, d.

Simeon B. Roberts, r.* James P. Willey, d.

Moderator.

Edwin A. Stevens, r.

George W. Nutter, d.

ROXBURY. Supervisors of the Check-List. David B. Nims, r.* Almon A. Davis, r.* Henry Ellis, r.*

Mod'erator.

Almon A. Davis, r.*

RUMNEY. Representative to General Court.

William S. Learned, r.* 123

George C. Craig, d 116

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Oliver E. Simpson, r.* George D. Keniston, d.

Elmer B. Wallace, r. Freeman M. Collins, d.

William L. French, r.* John E. Downing, d.*

Moderator.

Charles A. Holden, r. Charles C. Smart, d.* 270 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

RYE.

Representative to General Court.

Jonathan J. Rand, r.* 152 Joseph W. Rand, d 101

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Edward S. Sawyer, r.* Wallace S. Goss, d.

John T. Harden, /* Walter W. Goss, d.

Ezra H. Walker, r.- Samuel A. Harden, d.

Moderator.

Charles S. Whidden, r.* Charles D. Garland, d.

SALEH. Representatives to General Court.

Forrest H. Hartin, r.* 226 Benjamin R. Wheeler, r.* 198 Charles S. Woodbury, (/• 149 Fred O. Wheeler, d 150

Supervisors of the Check-List.

James H. Hadley, r.* George W. Palmer, d. Eugene W. Stevens, r.* William E. Lancaster, d.

Howard L. Gordon, r.* Lester W. Hall, d.

Moderator.

Frank D. Davis, r.* Fred O. Wheeler, d.

SALISBURY. Representative to General Court.

Ernest C. Currier, r 105 Sherman P. Fellows, (i."-" 116 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 271

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Edward N. Sawyer, r. Frank H. Dunlap, d* Charles C. Holmes, r. George E. Fellows, d* Henry C. Buzzell, r. Edward A. Chafce, d* Mod'erator.

George P. Titcomb, r.

John Shaw, <?.*

SANBOENTON. Representative to General Court.

Frank H. Hunkins, r.* 151 Richard D. Johnson, (7 103

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Isaac B. Hoyt, r.* Charles S. Morrison, d.

Isaac G. Sanborn, ?•* Adna E. Hill, d.

Frank C. r* Bailey, Charles C. Woodman, d.

Mod'erator.

Orrin D. Huse, r* Joseph N. Sanbom, d.

SANDOWN. Representative to General Court.

Smith A. Eowell, r 41 James Hunkins, d.- 72

Supervisors of the Check-List.

John S. Colby, r. Alva S. Sanborn, d.* Clarence I. Drowne, r. Frank N. Pinsbur3% d.* .

John H, Grainger, r. John G. Goodwin, d.* Moihrator.

Edwin E. Brewster, r.

James F. Sargent, d.* 272 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

SANDWICH. Representative to General Court.

Nathaniel H. Burrows, r 131 Henry F. Dorr, <Z.* 189

Supervisors of the Check-List.

A. Bimay Tasker, r* Walter E. Blanchard, d.

James L. Marston, r.* Almon E. Carter, d. Charles K. Fellows, r.* George A. M. Grant, d.

Modierator.

Charles B. Hoyt, r.*

George W. Thompson, d.

SEABKOOK. Representative to General Court.

James M. Tucker, r S. 174 Lowell Boyd, d.* 187

Supervisors of the Check-List.

William T. Buswell, r.* James S. Eaton, d.

Francis C. Beckman, r.* Charles S. Dow, d.

George G. Small, r.* Henry C. Seamans, d.

Modierator.

James M. S. Tucker, r.

Emery N. Eaton, d.*

SHAKON. Supervisors of the Check-List. Samuel O. Ryan, r.* James Green, d.* Charles Bass, d.*

Moderator.

James Green, d.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 273

SHELBURNE. Representative to General Court.

John B. Head, /* 39 William M. Watson, d 8

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Henry E. Ingalls, r.* Roswell P. Peabody, d. Charles Hebbard, r.* C. Sylvester S. Hubbard, d.

Brainard C. Burbank, r.* Henrj^ E. Morse, d. Moekerator.

John B. Head, r.* Leslie P. Morse, d.

SOMERSWORTH—WARD 1.

Representative to General Court.

Henry Duford, r.* 138 Dudley N. Cheney, d 76

SOMERSWORTH— WARD 2.

Representative to General Court. Fred Wiesner, r.* 138 Haven Doe, d. 105

SOMERSWORTH— WARD 3.

Representative to General Court.

Harry H. Remick, r* 101 Paul A. Rainville, d) 85

SOMERSWORTH— WARD 4.

Representative to General Court.

Guy H. Locke, r.* 172 Joseph Labonte, d 129 274 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

SOMEKSWOETH—WARD 5.

Representative to General Court.

Oscax C. Lord, r 49 James A. Kearns, d.* 101

SOUTH HAMPTON. Representative to General Court.

Eoscoe H. Morrill, r.* 47 Gideon W. Evans, d 30

Supervisors of the Check-List.

George B. Palmer, r.* Prank 0. Towle, d. Smith N. Welch, r * Samuel M. Prescott, d. James M. Carr, r.* , Warren A. Woodman, d. Moderator.

Jacob Eaton, r.* Joseph J. J. Sawyer, d.

SPRINGFIELD. Representative to General Court.

Martin M. Wiggins, r 23 Euel L. Heath, d.* 104

Supervisors of the Check-List., Burton E. Sanborn, r. David P. Goodhue, d.* John F. Bailey, r. George H. Morgan, d.* Willard Reed, r. Henry Patten, d.*

Moderator.

Orin F. Hill, r.

Moses O. Boj'ce, d.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 275

STAEK. Representative to General Court.

George S. Blake, r 54 Charles A. Cole, d* 89

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Harry W. Stone, r. Charles A. Cole. (7 * Frank L. Blake, r. Albert H. Jackson, d.* Louis O. Pike, r. Henry Pike, d.^

Moderator.

James Montgomery', r.

William T. Pike, (?.*

STEWARTSTOWN. Representative to General Court.

Rollin H. Spencer, r 123 Andrew J. Jordan, d.- 132

Supervisors of the Check-List. * W. Wheatley B. Cook, r Georg-e Allen, d. Charles A. Heath, v.* Henry O. Yonng-, d. Willie M. Brown, r.* Herbert J. Owen, d.

Moderator.

Lorenzo Farnham, /.* Mason D. Flanders, d.

STODDARD. Supervisors of the Check-List. Frederick S. Reed, r.* Charles H. ]Merrill, d. Julius W. Reed, r.* Joel F. Whittemore, d. Alvah H. Corey, r.* Edward C. Taylor, d.

Moderator.

Cummings B. McClure, d.- 276 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

STEAFFORD. Representative to General Court.

Elmer A. Scribner, r* 188 Daniel S. Woodman, d. . . . . . . 166

Supervisors of the Check-List.

LeviW. Brown, r.* Clarence E. Parsons, d. Dana L. Drew, r.* Jesse M. Knowles, d. George E. Foss, v.* Charles M. Young, d.

Moderator.

Albert A. Hanson, r.*

George W. Boody, d.

STRATFORD. Representative to General Court.

Charles D. Piatt, r 52 John C. Hutchins, d.* 148

Supervisors of the Check-List. Edward W. Bauldwin, r. Joseph T. Connary, d.* Guy W. Johnson, r. Charles E. Clark, d.* Fred C. Waters, r. William H. Kimball, d.*

Moderator.

Garvin E. Magoon, r. Havilah B. Hinman, d.*

STRATHAM. Representative to General Court.

John N. Thompson, r.* 87 James T. Roby, d, 62 CANDIDATES FOK TOWN OFFICES. 277

Supervisw-s of the Check-List.

Gilbert A. Thompson, r.* John J. Smart, d. Willie L. Barker, r.* Horace J. Willej^ d.

Joseph iST. Wiggin, r.* Francis P. Harvey, d.

Moderator.

Joseph C. A.Wingate, r.* Isaac S. Wiggin, d.

SULLIVAN. Iiepref<ent((tirc to General Court.

.loseph X. Nims, r.* 46

Superrisorf^ of the Check-List.

Charles F. Jewett, r.* Addison X. Wilder, r* Almon P. Tyler, r.*

Moderator.

Lyman Davis, ?•.*

SUNAPEE. Representative to General Court.

Almeron B. Abbott, r.* 144 Joseph Eussell, d 107 Supervisors of the Cheek-List.

Irving G. Rowell, r.* Miirvin A. Bailej^ (7.

John L. Paige, r.* George E. Paul, d. Martin D. Muzzey, r.* Charles E. Boyce, d.

Moderator.

George H. Bartlett, r.* Charles A. Knowlton, d. 18 278 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

SURRY. Supervisors of the Check-List.

Charles H. Britton, r.- Myron H. Porter, r* Charles H. Blake, r* .

Moderator.

Mason A. Carpenter, »•.*

SUTTON. Representative to General Court.

George G. Wells, y." 134 Horace R. Chadwick, d 100

Supervisors of the Cheek-List. '

James B. SaAvyer, r.* Timoth\- B. Lewis, d. George C. Tilton, r.-^ William H. Chadwick, d. John O. Linscott, ?•.* George J. Johnson, d.

Moderator.

John j\I. Pressey. r.*

George C. Pillsbnry, d.

SWANZEY. Beprescittativc to General Conrt.

X/yman ]\I. Stone, r. . . . ... . 146 Arthnr A. Woodward, (/.• 169

8iipervlso7-s of the Cheek-List.

Erdix S. "Eastman, ?\""'' Obadiah Sprague, d.* Walter E. Marsh, r.* Hiram G. Hills, d. Lj^man M. Stone, r. Henry F. Whitcomb, d.

Moderator.

Norris C. Carter, r.

George E. Whitcomb, d.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 279

TAMWORTH. Representative to General Court.

George Henry C. Whiting, r B. Robinson, (7.* ...... 133 142

Supervisors of the Check-List.

George E. Nickerson, r.* Frank O. Hobbs, d. Frank A. Whiting, r.* Charles C. Smith, d.

Elbridge G. Tilton, r.* Ira B. Tilton, d.

Modcrdlur.

Arthur E. Wiggin, r. George F. Batt'liclder, (?.-

TEMPLE. Representative to Gcna-al Court.

Charles E. Charles Rockwood. W. Browne, d r.* ..... 51 21

8upei-viso7-s of the GheCk-List.

Nathan A. Brown, r.* Herbert 0. Hadley, d. Ernest G. Yonng, r.* James M. Cutter, d. John W. Edwards, r.* Frank P. Clement, d.

Moder'ator.

Arthur F. Rockwood, r.* Herbert O. Hadley, d.

THORNTON. Representative to Gena-al Court.

Frank L. Houston, r 83 Arthur C. Moulton, d.* 87

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Cyrus W. Drew, r. John Johnson, d.* Gardner T. C. Smith, r. Hiram Merrill, (/.* William P. Van Housen, r. Frank D. Lyford, d.* 280 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL,

Moderator.

Alburn H. Kendall, r. Frank A. Barnard, d.*

TILTON. Representative to General Court.

Frederick A. Holmes, r* 232 Ford T. Sanborn, d 199

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Alfred M. Foss. /* Gny B. Tilton, d.

Charles H. Smith, r.* Harris A. Morse, d. Lucien F. Batchelder, r.* Harry H. Bennett, d. Moderator.

Arthur "T. Cass, r* Fred A. Wilkins, d.

TROY. Representative to General Court.

Ora C. Mason, r 81 Oliver C. Whitcomb, d.* Ill

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Melvin T. Stone, r.* John N. Grimes, d.

James L. Stanley, r.* Frank S. Harris, d.

Harvey E. Gates, r* George H. Cohgdon, d.

Moderator.

Franklin Riple3% r.* George W. Mason, d.

TUFTONBOROUGH. Representative to General Court.

John D. Morrison, r.* 107 Frank A. Doe, d 82 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 281

Stipervisors of the Check-List. •

Lewis N. Frisbie, r.* Charles E. Hersey, d.

George M. Ladd, r.* Holace E. Fernald, d.

Daniel Libby, r* Howard E. Emery, d.

Moderator.

John A. Edgerly, r.* Herbert F. Hodgdon, d.

UNITY. Representative to General Court.

Schuyler G. Breed, r.* 86 Homer F. Wright, d 81

Superrdsors of the Checlc-List. Norman A. Smith, r.* Andrew Walker, d. Frank A. Grossman, r.* John H. Anderson, d. Chester W. Eeed, r.* George H. Jacobs, d. Moderator.

Charles A. Newton, r. and d.*

WAKEFIELD. Representative to General Covrt.

J. Frank Farnham. r.* 263 William M. Lord, d 135

Supervisors of the Check-List. W. Page, r.* Cliarles John F. Garland, d. Freeman D. Pike, r.* Daniel S. Davis, d. Llewellyn G, Waldron, r.* Hanson P. Gilman, d.

Moderator.

John W. Sanborn, v.*

George A. Yeaton, d. 282 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

WALPOLE. Representatives to General Court.

Edwin K. Seabury, r.* 229 John W. Cahalane, r 171 John C. Brown, d 174 Cornelius A. Sullivan, d* 232

Supervisors of the Check-List.

George B. Williams, Jr., r. Eussell G. Graces, d.* John Healey, r. Charles Beckwith, d.* Oliver J. Butterfield, r. William Wessell, d.*

Moderator.

Josiah G. Bellows, r.

John W. Prentiss, d.*

WAKNER. Representative to General Court.

John B. Rand, r* 198 John D. Colby, d 157

Supervisors of the Chech-List.

Edmund C. Cole, r* Frederick M. Colby, d.

Jacob C. Burbank, r* Charles Gove, d. Albert S. Eaton, r* John H. Frazier. df.

Moderator.

Mason T. Ela, r.* Walter P. Melvin, d.

WARREN. Representative to General Court.

Edward T. Caswell, r 101 Frank C. Clement, d.* 126 CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 283

Supervisors of the Vhcvk-List. D. Whitcher, rf * George H. L. Head, r. Henry Edward L. Houghton, r. Charles A. Upton, d* Henry A. Little, r. William F. Gale, d.*

Moderator.

Henry L. Cotton, r.

Joseph M. Little, (7."

WASHINGTON. Representatire to General Court.

Harry B. Adams, r. 62 Charles A. Lull, d* 81

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Charles A. Peasley, r. Frank E. Lull, d.- Charles W. J. Fletcher, r. Allan E. Follansbee, (Z* Willie D. Brockway, /•. George W. Carr, d* Moderator.

Sumner N. Ball, r. Frank P. Newman, d.-

WATEKVILLE. Supervisors of the CJicck-List.

George W. Ripley, r.* Truman A. Heath, r.^^

William C. Ripley, ?'.*

Moderator.

Arthur S. Browne, r."

WEARE. Representative to General Court.

Hiram R. Nichols, r.^ 196 John P. Melvin, d 141 284 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Oliver D. Sawyer, r.-" Edward G. Paige. (7.

Fred H. Straw, r.* George E. Marshall, (/.

Winfield S. Bailey, ?•.'• Eben B. Bartlett, d.

Moderator.

Edward T. Breed, r.* Eben L. Paige, d.

WEBSTER. Represciitatirr to (Icncral Court.

Eoger E. Foster, r 68 Luther C. Putney, (/.* 86

Supcrrisurs of flic Cticck-Lif'f.

Adelbert H. Cross, r.* Ira A. Call, d.

George H. Fairbanks, r.* Frank D. Blanchard, d.

Senter M. Goodhue, r." Albert F. Hardy, d.

Moderator.

Ira P. Whittier. /.« Joseph H. Noyes. d.

WENTWORTH. Representative to General Court.

...... .

Isaac M. Burnham. r. 35 Harry INI. Turner, */." 106

i^iiperrisors of tJie CJicck-L'iKt.

Charles T. Gove, r. Thomas Huckins, (7.*

Hiram D. Morey, r. Charles Turner, f?.*

George W. Boyd, r. Joseph S. Breek, rf.*

Moderator.

David Gove, r. '

John B. Foster, f?.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 285

WENTWORTH'S LOCATION. Supervisors of the GhecTc-List.

Edgar L. Bennett, d* Clarence A. Bennett, d.-

Benjamin B. Bennett, rf.*

Moderator.

Benjamin H. Flint, (?.*

WESTMORELAND. Representative to General Court.

Willard Bill, Jr., r.* . . '. . . . 113 '

Clement L. Mansfield, (/ 63

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Joseph E. Fuller, r.* Alba J. Buffum, d. Warren W. Shelley, r.* John R. Burt, d. Frank E. Aldrich, r.* Frank S. Wilber, d.

Moderator.

George R. Perry, ?•.••"

Oscar J. Ware, d.

WHITEFIELD. Representatives to General Court.

George L. Crockett, r 219 George W. Darling-, r 216 Herbert L. Robinson, (/.* 260 James Colbj^ d.* 258

Supervisors of the Check-List.

George L. Crockett, r.* Ezra E. Weeks, d. Charles F. Noyes, r.* Frank E. Sanborn, d. William E. Parker, r.* Milford F. Libbey, d. 286 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderator.

Bowker, r* :Mitchell H. David M. Aldrich, d.

WILMOT. Representative to General Court.

George B. Tewksbury, r 95 '

Atnos E. Johnson, d.* . . . . . . 100

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Wilfred J. Currier, r. Fred E. Goodhne, rf.* William R. Brown, r. John G. Currier, d.* Horace Pedrick, r. Samuel B. Morey, d.*

Moderator.

John M. Carr, r. Curtis Lang-ley, d.*

WILTON. Representatives to General Court.

Sumner B. Chandler, r Philip Amidon, r.* Michael P. Stanton, ....... (/.* 183 225 221 Joshua F. Frye, d •

. .166 Supervisors of the Check-List.

Fred B. Howe, r. Edwin A. French, d.* Charles W. Edwards, r. John R. Hickey, d.* Henry H. Livermore, r. Eugene F. Kennedy, rf."'"

Moderator.

David E. Proctor, r. George E. Bales, d.* CANDIDATES FOR TOWN OFFICES. 287

WINCHESTER. Representatives to General Covrt.

Alexander F. Peirce. r* 251 Levi Saben, r.* 262 Emory L. Holton, d 163 Andrew H. Woodbury, d 160

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Thomas G. Emerson, r.* La Fell Dickinson, d.

William E. Hutchins, r* William J. Ballon, d. David C. Stearns, 7\* Ebenezer S. Adams, d. Moderator.

George W. Pierce, ?•.* Sidney M. Morse, d.

WINDHAM. Representative to General Court.

George E. Seavey, >%* . . ... . . 85 William H. Armstrong, d 20

Supervisors of the Check-List. Albert W. Farmer, r.* Edwin N. Stickney, d. Charles O. Parker, r.* Frank W. Bean, d. George F. Armstrong, r.* Charles I. Woodman, d.

Moderator.

Horace Berry, ;.* John G. Bradford, d.

WINDSOR. Representative to General Court.

Joseph R. Nelson, 1* . . . . '.

Supervisors of the Check-List.

Joseph C. Chapman, f.* Melvin Temple, i.*

Albert J. Gray, i.* 288 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Moderator.

Joseph C. Chaiiman. i*

WOLFEBOEOUGH. Representatives to General Court.

Joseph Lewando, r.* Fred E. Hersey, r.* ...... 299

John A. Chamberlain, Albert B. Rust, d r.* .... 324 34Q 212 Eleazer D. Barker, (/ 180 Joseph H. Bickford, d 188

Supervisors of the Check-List.

William J. Mattison, r.* •

Perley E. Young, d.

John H. Chamberlain, r.* Charles E. Grant, (7.

Henry Shaw, r.* George A. Haines, d.

Moderator.

Sewall W. Abbott, r.* Levi T. Haley, d.

WOODSTOCK. Representative to G enteral Court.

Stephen Sharon, S. r 63 '

Scott N. Weeks, (/.* . . . . . . 85

Supervisors of the Check-List. Charles S. Butler, r. Charles M. Burpee, d.* Dennis J. Cavanangh, r. Harry E. Gordon, d.* Harry D. Emmons, r. Elbridge G. Sawyer. Jr., d.*

Moderator. Frank W. Selingham, r. and (?.* STATE GOVEENMENT, 1899-1901.

GOVERNOR. Frank W. Eoltjns, v.. Concord. January, 1899, to January, 1901. Salary, $2,000. I'erm, two years. COUNCIL.

Term, two years, January, ]899, to January, 1901.

First District.— Sumner Wallace, Eochester. v.,

Second District. — Stei^hen H. Gale, Exeter. r.,

Third/ District. — George F. Hammond, Nashua. r., Fourth District. — Harr.y ^I. Chenej', Lebanon. /•.,

Fifth District. — Henry F. Green, Littleton. r.,

SECRETARY OF STATE. Elected by the legislature. Term, two years. Ezra S. Stearns, r., Rindge. January, 1S91, to Janiiaiy. 1901. Salary, $800 and fees. DEPUTY SECRETARY OF STATE. Appointed by the secretary of state. Term, not limited. Samuel II. Stearns, r., Concord. Appointed, August 20, 1893. Salary, $1,200.

STATE TREASURER. Elected hy the legislature. Term, two years. Solon A. Carter, r.. Concord. July 1, 1872, to January, 1901 (ex- cept 1874). Salary, $1,800. DEPUTY STATE TREASURER. Appointed by the state treasurer. Term, not limited. Algernon Willis, r.. Concord. Appointed, August 23, 1898. Sal- ary, $1,200. 289 290 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

ADJUTANT-GENERAL.

Appointed by the governor. Term, two years. Augustus D. Ayling, r.. Concord. July 15, 1879, to January, 1901. Salary, $1,500.

SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION.

Appointed by the governor and council. Term, two years. Channing Folsom, r., Dover, September 6, 1898, to September 6, 1900. Salary, $2,500.

EDITOR AND COMPILER OF EARLY PUOVIjNCE AND STATE PAPERS.

Appointed by the governor and council. Term not limited. Albert S. Batchellor, d. Littleton. Appointed October 9, 1890.

PUBLIC PRINTER. Elected by the legislatiire. Term, two years. Arthur E. Clarke, v., Manchester, January, 1897, to January, 1899.

INSURANCE COMMISSIONER.

Appointed bj' the governor and council. Teriu, three jears. John C. Linehan, r.. Concord, September 25, 1890, to October 29, 1899. Salary, $2,000.

LABOR COMMISSIONER. Appointed b^- the governor and council. Term, three years. Julian r. Tra.sk, r., Laconia, May 4, 1896, to. May 4, 1899. Sal- ary, $1,500.

BANK COMMISSIONERS. Appointed by the governor and council. Term, three years. Alpheus W. Baker, v., Lebanon, September 1, 1890, to December 1, 1899. John Hatch, d., Greenland, August 21, 1893, to December 1, 1900. George W. Cummings, r., Francestown, December 1, 1898, to December 1, 1901. Salary, $2,000 and traveling expenses. STATE GOVERNMENT. 291

RAILROAD COMMISSIONERS.

Appointed by the governor and council. Term, three years. Henry M. Putney, r., chairman, Manchester, October 1, 1886, to January 1, 1902. Josiah G. Bellows, r., clerk, Walpole, January 1, 1894, to Jan- uary 1, 1900. Edward B. S. Sanborn, d., Franklin, June 1, 1894, to January 1,

1901. Salary of chairman, .$2,500; of clerk, $2,200; of third member, $2,000.

AUDITORS OF PtBLIC PRINTER'S ACCOUNTS.

Appointed by the g"ovei"nor and council. Term, one year.

Harry M. Cheney, r.. Lebanon, May 25, 1893, to June 28, 1899. Frank M. Eollins, d., Manchester, June 12, 189G, to June 28, 1899. Compensation, $3 per dienn and mileage. AUDITOR OF treasurer's ACCOUNTS.

Appointed by the governor and council. Term, one year. Ira Cross, r.. Xashua, December 1. 1898, to December 1, 1899. Salary, $200.

TRUSTEES OF STATE LIBRARY.

Appointed by the governor and council, one annually. Term, three years.

George C. Gihnore, r., Manchester, October 14, 188S, to October 7, 1900. William D. Chandler, r.. Concord, November 10, 1896, to Novem- ber 10, 1899. William W. 1 '.alley, Nashua, November 2, 1897, to November 25, 1901.

STATE LIBRARIAN.

Appointed by trustees of the state library. Term, not limited. Arthur H. Chase, r.. Concord. Appointed January ], 1895. Sal- ary, $2,300. 292 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

BOAKD OF AGRICULTURE. One member from each county, and a secretary.

Appointed hy the governor and council. Term, tliree years.

—Joseph B. Walker, Concord, iSovember Merrimack County. 2, 1897, to November 1900. 2,

Rockinghfim County. — John D. Lyman, Exeter, January 1885, 28, to May 1900. 11,

Belknap County. — (ieorg-e H. Wadleigh, Tilton. November 13, 1894, to November 2, 1900. Cheshire County. — Willard I'.ill. Jr.. Westmoreland, September 24, 1895, to October 12, 1901. — Carroll County. Charles B. Hoyt, Sandwich, November 2, 1897, to November 2, 1900. Strafford County. —Joseph D. Roberts. Rollinsford, October 12, 1898, to October 12, 1901.

Grafton County. — Edward E. Bishop, Bethlehem, November 2,

1897, to November 2, 1900. — Herbert O. Hadley, Temple, September 13, Hillsborouf/h County. 1897, to September 13, 1900. — Cods County. Loren J. Miner, Whitefield, July 28, 1S96, to July 28, 1899. Sullivan County. — William H. Sisson, Cornish, July 28, 189(), to July 28, 1899. Nahum J. Bachelder, Secretary, Andover. Term, not limited. Salary of secretary-, $1,500.

TRl'STEES ,OF THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND MECHANIC ARTS.

The governor and jiresident of the colleg^e, ex officio; one elected by the alumni and ten others appointed by the governor and council, one at least from each councilor district. Term, three years.

Frank W. Rollins, governor, ex officio. Rev. Charles ]Murkland, Ph. D.. president, c.c officio. S. Frederick P. Cummings, Lee, elected bj' alumni, April 18, 1893, to July 1, 1898. Roseci'ans W. Pillsbury, Londonderry, October 7, 1897, to Octo- ber 7. 1900. STATE GOVERNMENT. 293

John G. Tallant, Pembroke, July 28, 1892, to July 20, 1900. Charles W. Stone, Andover, September 21, 1887, to November 2,

1900. Lucien Thompson, Durham, July 28, 1892, to June 14, 1901. George B. Williams, Walpole, July 23, 1895, to June 14, 1901. Warren Brown, Hampton Falls, July 23, 1895, to June 14, 1901. George A. Wason, New Boston, July 12, 1883, to June 14, 1901. Frank Jones, Portsmouth, July 28, 1896, to July 28, 1899. John W. Sanborn, Wakefield, July 28, 1896, to July 28, 1899. Jeremiah W. Sanborn, Gilmanton, November 10, 1896, to Novem- ber 10, 1899. Lucien Thompson, secretary of the board.

TRUSTEES OF THE ASYLUM TOR THE INSANE.

Appointed by the governor and council, three annually. Term, four years. Asylum established, 1838.

Joseph B. Walker, Concord, August 9, 1847, to SejDtember 3, 1901. George W. Pierce, Winchester, April 6, 1897, to October 7, 1901. John E. Barry, Concord, March 6, 1S88, to September 3, 1901. Morris Christie, Antrim, July 8, 1890, to August 1, 1902. William F. Thayer, Concord, July 23, 1895, to August 1, 1902. Henry B. Qninby, Laconia, March 17, 1S97, to October 22, 1899. John A. Spalding, Nashua, October 22, 1895, to October 22, 1899. Charles H. Boynton, Lisbon, March 15, 1898, to October 22, 1899. John C. French, Manchester, September 17, 1892, to August 11,^ 1900. William G. Perry, Exeter, July 7, 1864, to August 11, 1900. James A. Edgerty, Somersworth, December 1, 1896, to August 11, 1900. One vacancy. TRUSTEES OF STATE NORMAL SCHOOL. The governor, ex officio, superintendent of public instruction, ex officio, and five others ajjpointed by the governor and council.

Term, two years. William H. Mitchell, Littleton, September 21, 1887, to December 1, 1899. 19 294 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

George H. Stearns, Manchester, September 8, 1889, to December 1, 1899. Alvin Burleigh, Plymouth, September 8, 1889, to December 1,

1899. Cyrus Sarg'eant, Plj^mouth, December 8, 1891, to December 1,

1899. Clifford T. Simpson, Portsmouth, December 1, 1897, to December 1, 1899. TRUSTEES OF THE INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL.

Appointed by the governor and council, two annually. Term, three years. Mrs. Olive Eand Clarke, Manchester, April 3, 1888, to February 3, 1900.

Orange S. Brown, Kollinsford, April 3, 1888, to August IS, 1901. George Holbrook, :\ranchester. May 23, 1894, to May 25, 1900. Albert S. Wait, Newport, June 13, 1894, to May 25, 1900. Nathan V. Hunt, Manchester, October 29, 1896, to October 29, 1899. William C. Marshall, Laconia, October 29, 1890, to October 29, 1899. •John C. Linehan, Concord, March 17, 1897, to December 7, 1900.

BOARD OF EQUALIZATION. Appointed by the supreme court and commissioned by the gov- ernor. Term, two years.

John M. Parker, Goff'stown, December 27, 1878, to April IG, 1899. Charles A. Dole, secretary, Lebanon, March 29, 1883, to April 16, 1899. John ]\I. Hill, prcsidnit. Concord, March 14, 1884, to April 16, 1899. Edwin Snow, Eaton, June 7, 1S94. to April 16, 1S99. Charles McDaniel, Springfield, April 16, 1895, to April 16, 1899. Compensation, $3 per diem and expeuses. Salary of secretary, .$600. COMMISSIONERS OF PIIARirACY.

Appointed by the governor and council. Term, three years. Charles A. Tufts, Dover, July 26, 1875, to November 10, 1899. Edward H. Currier, Manchester, July 13, 1882, to July 10, 1900. Ben O. Aldrich, Keene, November 10, 1896, to April 13, 1901. STATE GOVERNMENT. 296

BOARD OF HEALTH. The governor and the attorney-general, ex officio, with three physicians and one civil engineer.

Appointed bj' the governor and council. Term, four years. Frank West Itollins, Concord, governor, ex officio. Edwin G. Eastman, Exeter, attorney-general, ex officio. Granville P. Conn, M. D., president, Concord, September 16, 1881, to July 20, 1901. Irving A. Watson, M. D., secretary. Concord, September 16, 1881, to October 22, 1899. Robert Fletcher, Hanover, July 9, 1895, to July 20, 1901. Charles S. Collins, Nashua, October 22, 1895, to October 22, 1899, Salary of secretary, $2,500. FISH AND GAME COMMISSIONERS. Appointed bj' the governor and council. No salary prescribed by statute. Term, five years.

Nathaniel Wentworth, Hudson, December 2, 1892, to October 7, 1902. William H. Shurtleff, Lancaster, July 12, 1893, to June 14, 1903. Frank L. Hughes, Ashland, February 11, 1896, to Februarj- 11, 1901.

OFFICERS OF THE STATE PRISON.

Appointed by the governor and council. Term, one year. Sal- ary: warden $2,000; chaplain, $800; physician, $500.

Charles E. Cox, Manchester, toarden, December 1, 1896, to December 1, 1899. Rev. Elijah R. Wilkins, chaplain, June 16, 1898, to December 1, 1899.

Ralph E. Gallinger, Concord, physician, December 1, 1898, to December 1, 1899. Samuel D. Robinson, Pembroke, deputy warden. Appointed by the Avarden. Salary, $1,200. Term, unlimited. BOARD OF MANAGERS OF THE NEW HAMPSHIRE SOLDIERS' HOME. The governor and the commander of the G. A. R. for the De- partment of New Hampshire, ex officio, and five others, appointed, one annually, by the governor and council. Term, five years. 296 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Frank West Eollins, Concord, g'overnor, ex officio. A. S. Twitchell, Gorham, commander state G. A. K., ex officio. Charles E. Tiltou, Tilton, September 18, 1889, to August 31, 1899. Charles W. Stevens, Nashua, September 13, 1889, to October 7, 1902. Daniel Hall, Dover, September 13, 1889, to Ooctober 13, 1901. Thomas P. Cheney, Ashland, September 13, 1889, to September 9, 1900. Marcus M. Collis, Portsmouth, February 20, 1894, to August 18, 1903.

BOARD OF KEGISTRATION IN DENTISTRY. Appointed by the governor and council, one annually. Term, three years.

E. B. Gushing, Laconia, October 29, 1896, to July 1, 1898. W. R. Blaclvstone, Manchester, October 29, 1896, to October 29, 1899, G. A. Bowers, Nashua, June 16, 1897, to June 16, 1900.

LIBRABY COMMISSIONERS. State librarian, ex officio, and four others appointed by the gov- ernor and covmcil, two for two years and two for four years. Arthur H. Chase, Concord, librarian, ex officio. J. H. Whittier, Rochester, January 5, 1892, to December 23, 1899. Hosea W. Parker, Claremont, January 5, 1892, to March 1, 1902.

George T. Cruft, Bethlehem, February 2, 1892, to March 1, 1902. Edward II. Gilman, Exeter, October 11, 1892, to March 1, 1900.

BALLOT LAW COMMISSIONERS.

Appointed by the governor and council. Term, two years. Edwin G. Eastman, Exeter, attorney-general, ex officio. Edwin D. Ward, Laconia, August 12, 1S98, to August 12, 1900. John B. Nash, Conway, August 12, 1898, to August 12, 1900. INSPECTORS OF STEAMBOATS.

Appointed by the governor and council. Term, not limited. Fred S. Bean, Manchester. Appointed May 8, 1894. Charles W. McDaniel, Laconia. Appointed December S, 1896. STATE GOVERNMENT. 297

CATTLE COMMISSIONEKS.

This board is composed of three ex-officio members: the secre- tary of the state board of agriculture, master of the state grange, Patrons of Husbandr3% and the secretary of the state board of health. Term, not limited. f

Irving A. Watson, Concord, secretary state board of health. Nahum J. Bachelder, Andover, master of state grange. Nahnni J. Bachelder, Andover, secretary board of agriculture. FORESTRY COMMISSIONERS.

Appointed, one annually by the governor and council. Term, four years.

George H. Moses, Franklin, secretary. May 25, 1893, to April 6,

1901,

Napoleon B. Bryant, Andover, April 12, 1893, to May 8, 1902. James F. Colby, Hanover, April 12, 1893, to July 9, 1899. George B. Chandler, Manchester, April 25, 1893, to April 28, 1900. BOARD OF CHARITIES AND CORRECTION.

Appointed by the governor and council. Five members. Orig- and five years. Subsequently inal terms, one, two, three, four, one appointed annually for term of five years.

Mrs. John B. Varick, Manchester, July 9, 1895, to June 29, 1902. John Kivel, Dover, December 22, 1896, to June 14, 1903. Mrs. Alonzo P. Carpenter, Concord, July 9, 1895, to July 9, 1899. Oliver J. M. Oilman, Alton, July 9, 1895, to July 9, 1900. John M. Whipple, Claremont, January 13, 1898, to July 28, 1901. POLICE COMMISSIONERS.

Appointed, one every two years, for each of the following cities, by the governor and council. Term, six years. Concord.

Josiah E. Dwight, r., February 5, 1895, to March 1, 1903. Charles C. Danforth, r., March 7, 1893, to March 7, 1899. Giles Wheeler, d., March 7, 1893, to March 7, 1901. 298 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Manchester.

Noah S. Clark, r., January 1, 1894, to January 1, 1904. Frank P. Carpenter, d., January 1, 1894, to January 1, 1902. Harry E. Loveren, r., October 22, 189.5, to January 1, 1900. «^ Nashua. Charles H. Burke, d., December 22, 1891, to January 1, 1900. Frank D. Cook, /-., January 7, i896, to Januarj' 1, 1902. Ira Cross, r., January 1, 1891, to January 1, 1904.

Portsmouth. Alfred F. Howard, d., Aug-ust .3, 1897, to April 2, 1905. John E. Dimick, r., April 2, 1895, to April 2, 1901. John J. Laskey, r., April 2, 1897, to April 2, 190.3.

Exeter.

John E. Gardner, March 12, 1895, to March 12, 1903. George A. Wentworth, March 12, 1895, to March 12, 1901. Albion Burbank, September 13, 1897, to March 12, 1905.

Laconia.

Fred C. Sanborn, July 14, 189G, to March 27, 1899. Frank E. Busiel, March 27, 1895, to March 27, 1901. Charles W. Vaughan, April 1, 1897, to Aiiril 1, 1903.

BOARDS OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS.

Appointed l)v the governor and council, for one, two, three, four,and five years. Full term, five years.

Eepresenting the IS'^ew Hampshire Medical Society: George H. Shedd, Conway, May 11, 1S97, to INlay 11, 1903. George Cook, Concord, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1902. Arthur C. Hefiinger, Portsmouth, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1901. James T. Greeley, Nashua, May 11, 1897, to JNIay 11, 1900. John F. Eobinson, Manchester, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1899. Eepresenting New Hampshire Homeopathic Medical Society: Eobert H. Hazelton, Lebanon, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1903. George W. Flagg, Keene, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1902. Arthur J. Todd, Manchester, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1901. STATE GOVERNMENT. 299

K. V. Sweet, Rochester, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1900. G. H. Morrison, Whitefield, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1899.

Representing- the New Hamjishire Eclectic Society: E. C. Chase, Orford, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1903. F. L. Gerald, Laconia, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1902. W. H. True, Laconia, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1901. W. F. Templeton, Manchester, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1900. Enos Huckins, Plymouth, May 11, 1897, to May 11, 1899. JUDICIAEY DEPAETMENT.

SUPEEME COURT. Appointed by the governor and council. Term, until seventy 3 ears of age.

Name. JUDICIARY DEPARTMENT. 301

Straiford County. — George E. Durgin, Dover. Belknap County.— ^dwin P. Thompson, Laconia. — Carroll County. Aldo M. Runiery, Ossij)ee. — Merrimack County. Amos J. ShurtlefF, Concord. — Hillsborough County. Thomas D. Luce, Nashua. — Cheshire County. Lewis W. Holmes, Keene. Sullivan County. —John McCrillis, Newport. — Grafton County. Dexter D. Dow, Littleton. — Coos County. Moses A. Hastings, Lancaster.

SUPREME COURT. LAW TERMS.

At Concord, on the first Tuesday in Jime and December; also adjourned terms in March and August. TRIAL TERMS.

Rockingham County. At Exeter, on the third Tuesday of January and the second Tuesday of April; at Portsmouth, on the third Tuesday of Octo- ber.

Strafford County.

\l Dover, on the second Tuesdaj' of February and the first Tues- day of September. Belknap County. At Laconia, on the fourth Tuesday of March and September.

Carroll County.

At Ossipee, on the third Tuesday of April and October. Merriviack County.

At Concord, on the first Tuesday of April and October. Hillshorough County. At Manchester, on the first Tuesday of January and May; at Nashua, on the third Tuesday of September.

Cheshire County.

At Keene, on the first Tuesday of April and the third Tuesday of October. 302 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Sullivan County.

At Newport, on the fourth Tuesday of Maj' and the first Tues- day of November.

Ch'afton County.

At on the third Tuesday of March and September; Haverhill, at Plymouth, on the second Tuesday of May and November; at Lebanon, on the third Tuesday of Ajjril and October.

Coiis County. At Colebrook, on the first Tuesday of September and February; at Lancaster, on the third Tuesday of April and October.

JUDGES OF PEOBATE. Appointed by the governor and council. Term, until seventy years of ag"e.

Appoint- Sal- County. Name. Residence. ment. Limitation. ary.

Rockingham . Thomas Leavitt. Exeter . . . . July 18, 1876|Sept. 29, Strafford Chris. H. Wells.. Somersw'h. Mar. 1.5, 1898 July

Belknap Wm. B. Fellows . Tilton Apr. 11, ISOsjjnly Carroll Sewall W.Ahbott Wolfeboro' Dec. 27, 1889 Apr. Merrimack.... Arthur W. Silsby. Concord . . . Sept. 14, 1883 Aug. Hillsborough . Edw. E. Parker. Nashua June 3, 1879 Jan.

Cheshire John T. Abbott. Keene Jan. 17, 1894 Apr. Sullivan Edw. J. Tenney. Claremont Jan. , 5, 1891 Dec.

Grafton Tyler Westgate Haverhill... Feb. 20, 1890 Dec.

Coos Alfred R. Evans Gorhani... Jan. 1, 1895 Mar. JUDICIARY DEPARTMENT. 303

REGISTEKS OF PROBATE. Elected for two years.

TEEMS OF PROBATE COURTS. ROCKINGHAM COUNTY. At Exeter, on the Wednesday next following the third Tuesday of February, INIarch,and August, on the Wednesday next follow- ing the first Tuesday of April, and on the Wednesday next fol- lowing the second Tuesdaj^ of every other month; at Portsmouth, on the third Tuesday of March, and on the second Tuesday of January, May, July, September, and November; at Derr\-, on the third Tuesday of Februarj-, and on the second Tuesday of June and October; at Raymond, on the first Tuesday of Ajiril, on the third Tuesday of August, and on the second Tuesday of Decem- ber; at Hampton, on the fourth Tuesday of Februarj-, on the fourth Tuesday of August, and on the fourth Tuesdaj^ of Decem- ber. STRAFFORD COUNTY. At Dover, on the Tuesday of every month; at Farmington, first on the third Tuesdaj' of April. August, and December; at Roches- ter, on the third Tuesdaj' of January, March, June, and Octobei', and at Somersworth, on the third Tuesdaj' of February, Maj', July, September, and November. 304 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

BELKNAP COUNTY. At Lacoiiia. on the third Tuesday of every month. CARROLL COUNTS'. At Conway, on the first Tuesday of January, May, and Septem- ber; at West Ossipee, on the first Tuesday of Febniary, June, and October; at Ossipee Corner, on the first Tuesday of March, July, and November; at Sanbornville, on the first Tuesday of April, August, and December. MERRIMACK COUNTY. At Concord, on the second and fourtli Tuesdays of every month. HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY. At Manchester, on the third Tuesday of every month; at Nashua, on the fourth Tuesday of Febi'uary, April, June, August, October, and December; at Francestown, on the Friday next fol-

lowing- the fourthTuesday of August; at Amherst, on the Friday next following the fourth Tuesday of June and December; at Peterborough, on the Friday next following the fourth Tuesday of February, May, and November; at Greenville, on the Friday next following the fourth Tuesday of April and October; at Hills- Tues- borough Bridge, on the Friday next following the foui'th of January and July; and at Milford, on the Friday next day following the fourth Tuesday of IMarch and September. CHESHIRE COUNTY. At Keene, on the first and third Fridays of January, February, :March, April, May, June. September. October. November, and on the first of and on the third Friday of December, Friday July, August. SULLIVAN COUNTY. At Claremont, on the last Wednesday of January, March, May, July, September, and November; and at Newport, on the last Wednesday of February, April, June, August. October, and De- cember. GRAFTON COUNTY. At Lisbon, on the third Tuesday of April and October; at Ply- mouth, on the second Tuesday of May and November; at Canaan, JUDICIARY DEPARTMENT. 305

on the first Tixesdaj' of June and December; at Woodsville, on the third Tiiesdaj' of March and September; at Haverhill, on the first Tuesday of July; at Wentworth, on the third Tuesday of August; at Littleton, on the third Tuesday of January; at Lebanon, on the first Tuesday of March and September; at Orford, on the third Tuesday of February; and at Bristol, on the third Tuesday of July.

COOS COUNTY.

At Colebrook, on the fourth Tuesday of August and the fourth Tuesday of January; at Lancaster on the first Tuesday of Janu- ary, March, May, J'uly, and November; at Gorham, on the first Tuesday of April, and the first Tuesday of October; at Berlin, on the third Tiiesday of January' aud the third Tuesda^^ of June.

POLICE JUSTICES.

Appointed by the governor and council. Term, until seventy years of age. Alton.-— George H. Demeritt, April 14, 1S9G. Amherst. — Aaron M. Wilkins, ]May 12, 1896, to William D. Clark, special, June 11, 1896, to Aubum .—Alfred D. Emery, April 28. 1896, to Baf//.— Frank P. Moulton. -special. July 5, 1881. Berlin. — George F. Pvich, June 10, 1S95.

Irving Stearns, special, June 28, 1892, to November 5, 192.5. — Canaan. Warren B. Kichardson, June 18, 1895, to Charles 0. Barnej-, special, June 18, 1895, to Concord. —Benjamin F. Badger, December 9, 1886, to December 31, 1901. Amos J. Shurtleff, special, February 20, 1890, to July 13, 1919.

Derr//.— William W. Poor, May 21, 1895, to — Dover. George S. Frost, June 21, 1882, to June 4, 1914. William F. Nason, special, May 17, 1892, to November 22, 1927. Exeter.— Kenr J A. Shute, March 1, 1883, to November 17, 1926.

Farmington.—3o):in Tuttle. July 25, 1876, to December 11, 1903. — Franklin. James E. Barnard, March 28, 1893, to January 29, 1933. Samuel H. Kobie, special. May 15, 1893, to August 9, 1932. 306 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

GilfonJ.—'EUiah. H. Blaisdell, April 16, 1885, to October 22, 1900. John C. Young, special, July 6, 1887, to October 26, 1906. Hanover. — Thomas \Y. D. ^^orthen, April 13, 1898, to Harerh ill. —\\imam F. Westg-ate, July 2?,, 1895. Arthur E. Davis, special. July 23, 1895. Hillshoroiif/h. — Samuel W. Holman. April 5, 1892, to June 5, 1925. Mark AL Hadley, April 5, 1892, to November 14, 1909. special, Hudson.— George W. Clyde, April 14. 1896, to October 23, 1935. Kimball Webster, April 14. 1S9G, to — Kecne. Lewis AV. Holmes, April 7, 1891, to April 25, 1918. Charles C. EulTum, special, April 5, 1892, to Tebruary 4, 1919. — Laconia. George P. Everett, May 21, 1895, to Joseph L. Odell, April 1, 1896, to Lancaster.— V\'imnm H. Shurtletf, April 14, 1896, to Merrill Shurtleif, special, July 28, 1896. — Lebanon. Charles A. Dole, April 1, 1896, to June 20, 1904. William P. Burton, special, April 1, 1896, to December 2, 1898. Littleton.— George Farr, April 9, 1880, to February 12, 1906. Albert S. Batchellor, special, February 24, 1877, to April 22, 1920. 1/0 Hr/irs to'.—Isaac L. Heath, May 21, 1895, to August 22, 1910. George W. Prescott, special, June 10, 1895, to January 27, 1928. ilfi?/^ord.--Arthur L. Keyes, April 25, 1894, to December 2, 1932.

George A. Worcester, special, December 29, 1896, to June 5,

1922. 2Vos/mflf.— Charles W. Hoitt, April 25, 1889, to October 26, 1917. William O. Clough, special, July 2, 1878, to July 14, 1910. 'Nortlunnherland. —James II. Curtis, June 10, 1895, to December 9, 1904. A. D. Ellingwood, special, August 31, 1894, to — Pcmhrokc. John B. Haselton, September 5, 1876, to February 4, 1909. Peterborovoh.—Chiwles Scott, April 11, 1891, to April 14, 1899. Eben W. Jones, special, January 12, 1897. — Portsmouth. Samuel W. Emery, December 3, 1894, to March 30, 1933. Edward H. Adams, June 10, 1895, to JUDICIARY DEPARTMENT. 307

Rochester.— Steyiheu D. Wentworth, November 13, 1883, to No- vember 2. 1904. Horatio L. Gate, special, April 15, 1892, to June 5, 1928. SomersicortJi. —AVilliam D. Knapi), Julj^ 6, 1870, to October 17, 1900.

George E. Beacham, special, February 7, 1883, to May 12, 1922. Whitcfiel(I.—C. Edward Wright, April 1, 189G, to Elbridge W. Snow, special, April 1, 1896, to Wolfeborouffli. — Samuel D. Fox, May 24, 1872, to April 3, 1902. COUNTY OFFICERS.

KOCKINGHAM COUNTY. Elected Nov. 6, 1896. Elected Nov. 8, 1898. Term expires April 1, 1899. Term expires April 1, 1901.

Solicitor, $600. Louis G. Hoyt, r., Kingston. Louis G. H03 t, r., Kingston.

Sheriff, $600 and Fees. Geoi'ge W. Weston, r., Exeter. John Pender, r., Portsmouth.

Treasurer, $300.

Wm. H. C. Follansby, r., Exeter. Wm. H. C. Follansby, r., Exeter,

Eegister of Probate, $1,200.

Irving- M. Heath, r., Exeter. George F. Richards, r., Exeter.

Eegister of Deeds, Fees. William Morrill, r., Brentwood. William Morrill, r., Exeter.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses.

Washington Colby, r., London- Washington Colby, r., London- derry, derry. Louis L. de Eochemont, r., Louis L. de Eochemont, r., Nevv- Newington. ington. George W. Paul, v., Newfields. George W. Paul, r., Newfields.

STEAFFORD COUNTY. Elected Nov. 3, 1S9G. Elected Nov. S, 1898. Term expires April 1, 1S99. Term expires April 1, 1901.

Solicitor, $600.

William F. Nason, ?'., Dover. Walter W. Scott, r., Dover.

308 COUNTY OFFICERS. 309

Sheriff, $400 and Fees. Jas. E. Hayes, r., Farmington. Jas. E. Hayes, r., Farmington.

Treasurek, $200.

George D. Nowell, r., Eochester. George D. Nowell, r., Eochester.

Kegister of Probate, $600.

Wm. W. Martin, r., Somers- Wm. W. Martin, r., Dover, •worth.

Eegister of Deeds, Fees. Frank S. Tompkins, r., Dover. Frank S. Tompkins, r., Dover.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses. James A. Eeynolds, r., Dover. James A. Eeynolds, r., Dover. Jabez H. Stevens, r., Durham. Jabez H. Stevens, r., Durham. Geo. H. Yeaton, r., Eollinsford. Geo. H. Yeaton, r., Eollinsford.

BELKNAP COUNTY. Elected Nov. 3, 1896. Elected Nov. 8, 1898. Term expires April 1, 1899. Term expires April 1, 1901.

Solicitor, $400. Frank M. Beckford, r., Laconia. Frank M. Beckford, r., Laconia.

Sheriff, $200 and Fees. Charles F. Locke, r., Laconia. Charles W. Baldv^in, r., Laconia.

Treasurer, $150.

Mark M. Eobinson, r., Laconia. Mark M. Eobinson, i:, Laconia.

Eegister of Probate, $450.

Edward S. Cook, r., Laconia. True W. Thompson, r., Laconia.

Eegister of Deeds, Fees. Martin B. Plummer, r., Laconia. Martin B. Plummer, ;-., Laconia.

20 310 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses. George C. Parsons, r., Gilman- Oscar Foss, r., Barnstead. ton. Joseph F. Smith, r., Meredith. Orrin D. Huse, r., Sanbornton. Jonathan C. Shannon, d., La- Joseph F. Smith, r., Meredith. eonia.

CARROLL COUNTY. Elected Nov. 3, 1896. Elected Nov. 8, 1898. Term expires April 1, 1899. Term expires April 1, 1901.

Solicitor, $300.

A. Birnay Tasker, r., Sandwich. Josiah H. Hobbs, r., Madison.

Sheriff, $200 and Fees.

Langdon M. Atkinson, r., Mad- Frank P. Hobbs, d., Wolfebor- ison. ough.

Treasurer, $150.

John F. Farnham, r., Wakefield. Orlando Richardson, r., Tufton- borough. Register of Probate, $550.

Walter D. H. Hill, r., Ossipee. Walter D. H. Hill, r., Ossipee.

Register of Deeds, Fees.

Henry F. Abbott, r., Ossipee. Henry F. Abbott, r., Ossipee.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses. Francisco W. Barker, r., Ef- Francisco W. Barker, r., Effing- fingham. ham. Edvi^in F. Brown, r., Moulton- Stephen W. Clow, r., Wolfebor- borough. ough. Stephen W. Clow, r., Wolfe- Benjamin F. Clark, r., Conway. borough. MERRIMACK COUNTY. Elected Nov. 3, 1896. Elected Nov. 8, 1898. Term expires April 1, 1899, Term expires April 1, 1901. COUNTY OFFICERS. 311

Solicitor, $600.

George M. Fletcher, ?*., Concord. George M. Fletcher, r., Concord.

Sheriff, $600 and Fees. Frank G. Edgerly, r., Concord. Frank G. Edgerly, r., Concord.

Treasurer, $300.

Warren Abbott, r., Webster. Frank L. Gerrish, r., Boscawen.

Eegister of Probate, $1,200.

John P. Nutter, r.. Concord. John P. Nutter, r.. Concord.

Eegister of Deeds, Fees. Samuel N. Brown, r.. Concord. Samuel N. Brown, r.. Concord.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses. Michael Lorden, r., Salisbury. James B. Tennant, r., Epsom. True H. Maxfield, r., Pittsfield. John E. Kobertson, d..Concord. Loren S. Eichardson, r.. Con- Walter Burleigh, r., Franklin, cord. HILLSBOEOUGH COUNTY. Elected Nov. 3, 1896. Elected Nov. 8, 1898. Term expires April 1, 1899. Term expires April 1, 1901.

Solicitor, $800.

Jas. P. Tuttle, r.. New Boston. Jas. P. Tuttle, r.. New Boston.

Sheriff, $800 and Fees. Nathaniel Doane, r., Manchester.Nathaniel Doane, r., Manchester.

Treasurer, $300.

Frank C. Livingston, r., Man- Frank C. Livingston, r., Man- chester. Chester.

Eegister of Probate, $1,500.

Elbridge J. Copp, r., Nashua. Elbridge J. Copp, r., Nashua.

Eegister of Deeds, Fees. Dana W. King, r., Nashua. Dana W. King, r., Nashua. 312 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses. Stillman H. Baker, r., Hills- John F, Cloiigh, r., Manchester, borough. Stillman H. Baker, r., Hillsbor- John F. Clough, r., Manchester. ough. Webster C. Brown, r., Nashua. Webster C. Brown, r., Nashua.

CHESHIEE COUNTY. Elected Nov. 3, 1896. Elected Nov. 8, 1898. Term expires April 1, 1899. Term expires April 1, 1901.

Solicitor, $300. Charles H. Hersey, r., Keene. Charles H. Hersey, r., Keene.

Sheriff, $300 and Fees. William S. Tuttle, r., Keene. William S. Tuttle, r., Keene.

Treasurer, $200.

Jerome E. Wright, r., Keene. "\^'allace L. Mason, r., Keene.

Kegister of Probate, $500.

Wilton H. Spalter, r., Keene. Wilton H. Spalter, r., Keene.

Register of Deeds, Fees. Charles C. Buffum, r., Keene. Charles C. Buffum, r., Keene.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses. Warren H. Butler, r., Chester- Daniel E. Cole, r., Keene. field. Russell H. Kittredge, r., Jaffrey. Daniel R. Cole, r., Keene. Allen C. Wilcox, ?"., Swanzey. Russell H. Kittredge, r., Jaffrey.

SULLIVAN COUNTY. Elected Nov. 3, 1896. Elected Nov. 8, 1898. Term expires April 1, 1899. Term exj)ires April 1, 1901.

Solicitor, $300.

Burt Chellis, r., Claremont. Frank H. Brown, r., Claremont.

Sheriff, $200 and Fees. John V. Gunnison, r., Newport. John V. Gunnison, r., Newport. COUNTY OFFICERS. 813

Treasurer, $200.'

Hiram R. Neal, r., Acworth. Hiram E. Neal, r., Acworth.

Eegister of Probate, $450.

Elisha M. Kempton, r., Newport. Elisha M. Kempton, r., Newport. Eegister of Deeds, Fees. Albert L. Hall, r., Newport. Albert L. Hall, r., Newport.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses. Geo. H. Fairbanks, r., Newport. Isaac H. Long, r., Claremont. Isaac H. Long, r., Claremont. Wm. E. Westgate, r., Cornish. Wm. E. Westgate, r., Cornish. Edward M. Megrath, r., Charles- town.

GEAFTON COUNTY. Elected Nov. 3, 1896. Elected Nov. 8, 1898. Term expires April 1, 1899. Term expires April 1, 1901.

Solicitor, $600. Geo. H. Adams, r., Plymouth. George F. Morris, r., Lisbon.

Sheriff, $400 and Fees. Chas. 0. Hurlbutt, r, Lebanon. Manson S. Brown, r., Plymouth.

Treasurer, $300.

Geo. H. Turner, r., Bethlehem. Herbert W. Allen, r., Haverhill.

Eegister of Probate, $800.

Eussell T. Bartlett, r., Haverhill. Eussell T. Bartlett, r., Haverhill.

Eegister of Deeds, Fees.

George H. Kendall, r., Bristol. George H. Kendall, r., Bristol.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses. Henry F. Green, r., Littleton. Horace F. Hoyt, Hanover. r.,

Horace F. Hoyt, Jr., r., Hanover. James F. Huckins, Ashland. r.,

James F. Huckins, r., Ashland. George H. Turner, r., Bethlehem. 314 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

COOS COUNTY. Elected Nov. 3, 1896. Elected Nov. 8, 1898. '

Term expires April 1, 1899. Term expires April 1, 1901.

Solicitor, $400. Herbert I. Goss, r., Berlin. Herbert I. Goss, r., Berlin.

Sheriff, $200 and Fees. Thos. C. Beattie, r., Lancaster. Thos. C. Beattie, r., Lancaster.

Treasurer, $200.

Wm. H. McCarten, r., Lancaster. Wm. H. McCarten, r., Lancaster.

Register of Probate, $600.

Fielding Smith, r., Lancaster. Burleigh Roberts, r., Lancaster,

Register of Deeds, Fees.

Henry S. Hilliard, r., Lancaster. Henry S. Hilliard, r., Lancaster.

Commissioners, $3 Per Diem and Expenses. Perley Knapp, r., Stewartstown. Charles E. Philbrook, r., Shel- Austin W. Miner, r., Whitefield. burne. Charles E. Philbrook, r., Shel- Sherburn R. M. Ramsay, r., Cole- burne. brook. Henry B. Gilkey, r., Northum- berland.

CORONERS. Appointed by the governor and council. Term, five years.

ROCKINGHAM COUNTY. True M. Gould, Raymond, July 30, 1878, to February 7, 1899. Henry E. Newell, Derry, July 23, 1889, to August 1, 1899. John O'Neill, Exeter, March 31, 1891, to March 12, 1901. Thomas E. 0. Marvin, Portsmouth, April 15, 1891, to March 26, 1901. Aaron L. Mellows, Newmarket, December 31, 1897, to December 31, 1902. COUNTY OFFICERS. 315

Edwin B. Prime, Portsmouth, July 9, 1895, to July 9, 1900.^ H. Baketel, Derry, November 12, 1895, to November 12, 1900. S. John E. Eider, Portsmouth, March 26, 1896, to March 26, 1901. James Ayer, Salem, December 8, 1896, to December 8, 1901. William H. Nute, Exeter, June 16, 1897, to June 16, 1902.

STRAFFORD COUNTY. John Daniels, Kochester, August 9, 1887, to August 17, 1897. S. E. Dewitt Burnham, Eochester, November 5, 1896, to November 5, 1901. John Q. A. Wentworth, Eollinsford, September 3, 1897, to Sep- tember 3, 1902, Lindsey E. Grant, Somersworth, August 31, 1894, to August 31, 1899. BELKNAP COUNTY. Albert Colby, Laconia, September 1, 1891, to August 25, 1901. Frederick W. Fowler, Laconia, July 20, 1897, to July 20, 1902.

CARROLL COUNTY.

George W. Lougee, Freedom, January 27, 1897, to January 27, 1902. George H. Shedd, Conway, March 1, 1898, to March 1, 1903. James M. Leavitt, Effingham, January 27, 1897, to January 27, 1902.

MERRIMACK COUNTY. Arthur W. Silsby, March 12, 1896, to March 12, 1901.

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY. Harrison D. Lord, Manchester, July 28, 1885, to April 1, 1901. James H. Hunt, Nashua, March 23, 1897, to March 23, 1902. George S. Butler, Pelham, December 20, 1898, to December 20, 1903.

CHESHIRE COUNTY. Clark F. Eowell, Keene, June 14, 1880, to April 30, 1900.

SULLIVAN COUNTY. Frank T. Vaughan, Newport, February 26, 1895, to February 26, 1900. 316 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

GEAFTON COUNTY. Everett B. Huse, Enfield, May 31, 1898, to May 31, 1903. Isaac Willard, Orford, April 6, 1897, to April 6, 1902. Dexter D. Dow, Littleton, June 23, 1891, to June 11, 1901. Moody C. Dole, Campton,. April 28, 1896, to April 28, 1901. Francis M. Hughes, Ashland, December 29, 1896, to December 29, 1901.

COOS COUNTY.

Henry M. Leavitt, Colebrook, ISIarch 11, 1886, to August 25, 1901. Charles E. Allen, Lancaster, March 3, 1891, to February 11, 1901. Erastus V. Cobleigh, July 28, 1896, to July 28, 1901. John J. Flaherty, Gorham, April 15, 1898, to April 15, 1903.

SEALERS OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. Appointed by the governor and council, one for each county. Term, not limited. Merrimaclc County. — Samuel F. Morrill, Concord. Appointed May 2, 1877. Cheshire County. —Virgil A. Wright, Keene. Appointed May 2, 1877. Cods County. —Erastus V. Cobleigh, Lancaster. Appointed June 19, 1877. Rockingham County. —Joseph R. Clark, Derry. Appointed June 19, 1877. Sullivan County. —George W. Fitch, Claremont. Appointed Oc- tober 17, 1877. Grafton Comity. —Harland P. Goodrich, Lebanon. Appointed March 27, 1878. Strafford County. —William Millen, Dover. Appointed April 22, 1884. Carroll County. —Frank K. Hobbs, Ossipee. Appointed January 13, 1887. Belknap County. — William Nelson, Laconia. Appointed Jan- uary 10, 1899. Hillsborough County. — Charles S. Fisher, Manchester. Appointed May 3, 1898. COMMISSIONEES.

Commissioners, resident without the state, authorized to ac- knowledge deeds and to talce depositions to be used in this state. Appointments are made by the governor and council for the term of five years, and the several commissions expire on the dates stated. CALIFOENIA. William T. Blakely, Alameda, 2008 Pacific avenue. June 10, 19C0. James L. King, San Francisco. December 30, 1902. Joseph M. Nongues, San Francisco, 411^4 California street. No- vember 13, 1899. CONNECTICUT.

Livingston W. Cleaveland, New Haven. June 11, 1901. Henry E. Taintor, Hartford. November 10, 1901. GEORGIA. C B. Conyers, Atlanta. January 29, 1900.

ILLINOIS.

Charles C. Bartlett, Chicago, 153 La Salle street. May 8, 1899. Stuart Derby, Chicago, 115 Monroe street. July 9, 1900. Mark A. Foote, Chicago, 34 Chamber of Commerce. November 13, 1899. W. E. Humphrey, Chicago, 551 Monadnock block. June 10, 1900. Simeon W. King, Chicago, 164 Dearborn street, room 012. Feb- ruary 28, 1903. Silas S. Willard, Chicago, SO Dearborn street. October 6, 1902.

INDIANA. Frank N. Fitzgerald, Indianapolis. May 30, 1903.

KENTUCKY. Newton G. Rogers, Louisville. September 24, 1900.

317 318 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

LOUISIANA.

Meloney C. Soniat, New Orleans. June 28, 1902.

MAINE. Seth W. Fife, Fryeburg. August 25, 1901. Archie L. Talbot, Lewiston. July 11, 1903.

MARYLAND. J. Kemp Bartlett, Jr., Baltimore. Augnst 1, 1899. Harry Mathieu, Baltimore. September 5, 1903. C.

George McCaffray, Baltimore. November 1, 1902, MASSACHUSETTS. Charles Hall Adams, Boston, 5 Court street. December 30, 1902. Horace S. Bacon, Lowell, 107 Stevens street. May 8, 1899. Frank E. Barnard, Boston, Globe building. March 22, 1902. •Nathaniel C. Bartlett, Haverhill. December 6, 1902. Joseph B. Braman, Boston, Sears building-. June 13, 1899. Ella F. Braman, Boston, Sears building'. June 13, 1899. George W. Gate, Amesbury. June 13, 1903. George A. Emerson, Everett, CO Garland street. October 22» 1900. B. Marvin Fernald, Boston. February 1, 1902. William P. Fowler, Boston. September 24, 1900. George E. Fowler, Boston. September 24, 1900. Frank C. Hyde, Boston, 31 Milk street. March 26, 1901. Samuel Jennison, Boston. November 12, 1900. Edward J. Jones, Boston. September 3, 1902. Nelson Monroe, Boston, 31 Milk street. December C, 1902. Thomas Morrison, Boston. July 28, 1901. J. Elliott H. Peabody, Worcester. March 1, 1902. Augustine H. Eead, Boston, 20 Devonshire street. April 30, 1900. M. Perry Sargent, Merrimac. December 23, 1900. Ithamar B. Sawtell, Townsend. March 22, 1902. Frank B. Spalter, Winchendon. November 19, 1901. George R. Swasej', Boston. September 9, 1900. Arthur R. Torrey, Boston, 23 Court street. July 14, 1901. Georg-e :M. Whitney, Winchendon. February 1, 1902. Elmer E. Young, Boston, 222 Tremont street. March 1, 1002. COMMISSIONERS. 31&

MICHIGAN.

Herscliel Whitaker, Detroit. February 28, 1903.

MINNESOTA. A. F. Sweetser, Minneapolis. November 12, 1900. Ambrose Tighe, St. Paul. February 11, 1901. MISSOURI.

Charles D. Greene, Jr., St. Louis. May 14, 1900. Charles H. Haven, Joplin. August 31, 1899. Edward G. Keynolds, Kansas City. May 10, 1902.

NEW JEKSEY.

Albert M. Bradshaw, Lakewood. March 26, 1901. W. C. O'Leary, Lakewood. April 1, 1901. Dewey A. Whitehead, Newark, 2G8 No. 6th street. April 11, 1899.

NEW YORK. Armond C. Anderson, New York City, 13 Chambers street. Oc- tober 6, 1902. Joseph B. Braman, New York City. April 12, 1903. Ella F. Braman, New York Cify. September 5, 1903. Joseph C. Braman, New York City. May 23, 1899. Frederick A. Burnham, New York. November 30, 1899. William H. Clarkson, New York Citj^ 115 Broadway. April 11, 1899. James A. Carter, New York City, 115 Broadway. September 9, 1900. Thomas B. Clifford, New York City, 206 Broadway. December 1, 1901. Edwin F. Corey, New York City, 60 Wall street. December 28, 1903. George H. Corey, New York City, 60 Wall street. March 14, 1903. Thomas W. Folsom, New York City. February 1, 1902. Bernard Fowler, Brooklyn, 679 St. Marks avenue. March 13, 1900. Isaac E. Garvey, New York City, 40 Wall street. January 12, 1903. John A. Hillery, New York City. December 19, 1903. Eleazer Jackson, New York City. April 11, 1899. 320 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

William Johnson, Buffalo, 28 Erie street. October 6, 1902. Julius Krause, New York City, 262 E. 10th street. November 30, 1899. William F. Lett, New York City. May 2, 1903. Laurie L. Levey, New York City, 34 Nassau street. March 19, 1900. Charles C. Lunt, New York City. July 11, 1899. Alfred MacKay, New York City. June 11, 1901. Kufus K. McHarg, New York City, 137 Broadway. January 25, 1899. Charles Edgar Mills, New York City, 115 Broadway. March 7,

1899. Joseph P. Osborne, New York City. January 7, 1901. Vincent Rosemon, New York City, 227 Broadway. April 28, 1901.

George H. Taylor, New Y'ork City, 29 Nassau street. May 14, 1900. Alfred A. Wheat, New York City. January 12, 1903.

OHIO.

Joseph T. Harrison, Cincinnati! August 6, 1900. Lipman Levy, Cincinnati. November 30, 1899. PENNSYLVANIA. Edward H. Cloud, Philadelphia. August 31, 1899. William Jenks Fell, Philadelphia, 932 Prexel building. March 7,

1899. Eugene H. Frielander, Philadelphia, 306 Callowhill street. De- cember 12, 1899. •

J,

Thomas J. Hunt, Philadelphia. May 16, 1903. George W. Hunt, Philadelphia, 623 Walnut street. May 14, 1900. Samuel L. Tajdor, Philadelxjhia, 518 Walnut street. September 2, 1902.

RHODE ISLAND. Gilman E. Jopp, Providence. April 12, 1903.

TENNESSEE. Ben M. Binkley, Nashville. December 7, 1901. COMMISSIONERS. 321

VERMONT. Fred B. Lang, Woodsville, N. H. May 16, 1903. William S. Newton, Brattleboro. November 1, 1902.

Edgar W. Smith, Newbury. August 31, 1899. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.

Henry P. Blair, Washington. March 14, 1903. Charles Bundy, Washington. July 14, 1901. S. Terrence A. Duffy, Washington. June 10, 1900. E. II. Evans, Washington. May 8, 1899. Herbert A. Gill, Washington. February 28, 1903. Frank W. Hackett, Washington. May 14, 1903. John E. Mitchell, Washington, 1321 F street, N. W. April 28, 1901. Anson S. Taylor, Washington. October 29, 1901. William B. Thompson, Washington. August 11, 1901.

CANADA. John M. M. Duff, Montreal, Imperial building. June 28, 1902.

ENGLAND.

Hendry J. Burke, London. March 23, 1902. Alfred Heales, London, 45 Carter Lane. August 31, 1899.

Henry C. King, London. April 19, 1902. T. INI. Smith, West Hartlepool. December 28, 1901.

IRELAND. Michael Timmins O'Connor, Killarney, Kerry county. Febru- ary 11, 1901.

COMMISSIONERS FOR OTHER STATES, RESIDENT IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. Ira A. Chase, Bristol, commissioner for the state of Georgia; expires December 31, 1896. Calvin Page, Portsmouth, commissioner for the state of New York; expires September 14, 1900. Edward M. Brooks, Manchester, commissioner for the state of Wisconsin; expires October 14, 1899. GENERAL, FIELD, AND LINE OFFICERS

OF THE

NEW HAMPSHIRE NATIONAL GUAED.

His Excellency FRANK W. ROLLINS, Concord, Governoi' and Commander-in-Chief.

THE GOVERNOR'S STAFF.

Date of Name. Rank. Residence. Commis- sion.

Augustus D. AyHng. . Maj.-Gen. and Adjt.-Gen. Concord . . . JulvlS, 1879 Elbert AVheeler Brig.-Gen. and Insp.-Gen Nashua. . . . Jan. 5, 1899 William E. Spaulding Brig.-Gen. and Q. M. Gen Nashua Jan. 5, 1899 Harry H. Dud lev Brig.-Gen. and Com.-Gen Concord . . . Jan. 5, 1899 William P. Chad wick. Brig.-Gen. and J. A. Gen Exeter •Jan. 5, 1899 Ferdinand A. Stillings Brig.-Gen. and Surg. •Gen, Concord .Jan. 5,1899 . .

Walter R. Porter Col. and A. D. C... Keene Ian. 5, 1899 Carlos P. Day Col. and A. D. C... Berlin Jan. 5, 1899 Eugene S. He"ad Col. and A. D. c... Hooksett Jan. 5,1899 . .

William Marcotte Col. and A. D. c... Manchest'r Jan. 5, 1899 Sam D. Lewis Col. and A. D. c... Newport. Jan. 17, 1899 . .

Oscar C. Hatch Col. and A. D. c... Littleton Jan. 17, 1899 . .

John M. Sargent Col. and A, D. c... Belmont. Jan. 17, 1899 . .

Roger E. Foster Col. and A. D. c... Webster. Jan. 17, 1899 . .

322 MILITARY OFFICERS. 328

FIRST BRIGADE.

Date of Name. Rank. Residence. Commistjion.

George M. L. Lane Brigadier-General Manchester Feb. 19, 1894 Harry B. Cilley, Assist- ant Adjutant-General. Lieutenant-Colonel Manchester May 10, 1894 Edward H. Currier.t Medical Director Lieutenant-Colonel Manchester May 10, 1894 Lucius B. Snelling, As- sistant Inspector-Gen- eral Major Manchester , June 9, 1897 Arthur H. Chase, Judge- Advocate Major •. Concord May 10, 1894 Frank L. Kimball, In- spector of Rifle Prac- tice Major Nashua Feb. 27, 1894 Charles B. Bodwell, Quartermaster Captain Manchester , Jan. 19, 1898 Frank G. Dort, Com- missary Captain Keene May 9, 1895 Charles S. Murkland, Aide-de-camp Captain. , Durham . . . May 10, 1894 Arthur H. Knowlton, Aide-de-camp Captain Concord . . . May 10, 1894

FIRST REGIMENT. FIELD AND STAFF.

Walter W. Scott Colonel . . . . Dover Jan. 22, 1895 Edward H. Knight Lieut.-Col . Manchester Apr. 13, 1898 Mederique R. Maynard Major Manchester Oct. 26, 1896 John F. Eagan Major Manchester Apr. 13, 1898 A. Gale Straw, Surgeon Major Manchester Mar. 22, 1895 William H. Dyer, Asst. Surgeon Captain . . . Dover Mav 3, 1898 Frederick J. Shepard, Paym'r. . Captain . . . Derry Mai-. 22, 1895 George E. Hall, Chaplain Captain . . . Dover Mar. 22, 1894 Charles J. Senter, Adjutant First Lieut Manchester Mar. 8, 1897 Herbert C. Grime, Quartermst'r First Lieut Dover June 7, 1897 R. Emmet Walsh, Insp. R. Prac. First Lieut Manchester June 7, 1897

* Brevet Major-General. t Brevet Colonel. 324 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Company A.

Xame. MILITARY OFFICERS. 325

Company K.

NAME. 326 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Company E.

NAME. MILITARY OFFICERS. 327

THIRD REGIMENT. FIELD AND STAFF.

Date of Name. Rank. Residence. Commission.

Robert H. Rolfe Colonel Concord . . May 15, 1894 William C. Trenoweth Lieut.-Col Concord.. Mav 8, 1894 Eduumd Tetley Major Laconia . . May 8,1894 William Tutherly Major Concord . . Mav 15, 1894 Robert Burns, Surgeon Major Plymouth Mav 28, 1894 Arthur K. Day, Asst. Surgeon. Captain 1 Concord . . Mav 28, 1894 George H. Colby, Paymaster. . . Captain I

Plymouth MaV 28, 1894 George D. Waldron, "Adjutant . First Lieut Concord . . May 16, 1893 Harley B. Roby, Insp. R. Prac. First Lieut . . . . | Concord . . May 13, 1896

Company A.

Lemuel Pope, Jr Captain Portsmouth Oct. 8,1897 Winslow E. Mills First Lieut . . Portsmouth Mav 1898 5, Frank E. Little. . Second Lieut Portsmouth Jan. 25, 1897

Company C.

Charles H. Staniels . Concord , Dec. 2, 1895 Arthur F. McKellar. Concord Dec. 2, 1895

Company D.

Jiilius C. Timson. Captain Claremont . Dec. 24, 1894 Walter F. Walker First Lieut . . Claremont . May 23, 1895 Fred J.Miller.... Second Lieut Claremont . May 8,1896

Company E.

Otis G. Hammond. Captain Concord ,

May 23, 1895 Thomas F. Clifford First Lieut . . Concord ,

May 23, 1895 Charles L. Mason. . Second Lieut Concord ,

May 23, 1895 328 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

COMP-\NY G.

Name. Residence. Date of Commission.

Frank W. Russell . . Captain ,

Plymouth May 3, 1898 Daniel H. Gienty. . . First Lieut Concord . May 10, 1898 Laurence J. Coogan Second liieut . Lebanon . Mar. 18, 1898

Olin H. Chase | Captain Fred P. Carr First Lieut Eugene H. Coffin j Second Lieut . . EXECUTIVE AND LEGISLATIVE DEPARTMENTS. STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE.

EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT

N0.3

»»)»»

I 2nz2mA

^^^^^S^ Governor I ROLLINS, g

GOVEENOB. FEANK WEST KOLLINS, Concord Home COUNCIL.

2?'irs« Dtsfricf.— SUMNER WALLACE, Rochester Eagle Hotel Second District— STEPHEN H. GALE, Exeter Eagle Hotel Third District.— GBOBGE F. HAMMOND, Nashua. .Eagle Hotel .

Fourth District.—nARRY M. CHENEY, Lebanon Eagle Hotel Fifth District.—KUNRY F. GREEN, Littleton Eagle Hotel Republicans, 5.

MESSENGER. Charles C. Wright.

330 GOVERNOR AND STAFF. 1899-I901.

His Excellency FRANK WEST ROLLINS, Concord, Commander- in-Chief .

Ma.t.-Gen. AUGUSTUS D. AYLING, Concord, Adjutant-General. Brig.-Gen. ELBERT WHEELER, Nashua, Inspector-General. Brig.-Gen. "WILLIAM E. SPALDING, Nashua, Quartermaster- General. * Brig.-Gen. HARRY H. DUDLEY, Concord, Commissary-General. Brig.-Gen. WILLIAM P. CHADWICK, Exeter, Judge-Advocate- General. Brig.-Gen. FERDINAND A. STILLINGS, Concord, Surgeon- General. CoL. WALTER R. PORTER, Keene, Aide-de-Camp. CoL. CARLOS P. DAY, Berlin', Aide-de-Camp. COL. EUGENE S. HEAD, Hooksett, Aide-de-Camp. CoL. WILLIAINI MARCOTTE, ISIanchester, Aide-de-Camp. CoL. JOHN M. SARGENT, Belmont, Aide-de-Camp. Col. SAM D. LEWIS, Newport, Aide-de-Camp. CoL. ROGER E. FOSTER, Concord, Aide-de-Camp. Col. OSCAR C. HATCH, Littleton, Aide-de-Camp.

STATE OFFICERS. Secretary of State, Ezra S. Stearns Rindge. Deputy Secretary of State, Samuel H. Stearns Concord. State Treasurer, Solon A. Carter Concord. Deputy State Treasurer, Algernon Willis Concord. Adjutant-General, Augustus D. Ayling Concord. Attorney-General, Edwin G. Eastman Exeter. State Librarian, Arthur H. Chase Concord. Supt. of Public Instruction, Channing Folsom Dover. Insurance Commissioner, John C. Linehan Concord. Labor Commissioner, Julian F. Trask Laconia. Secretary State Board of Health, Irving A. Watson Concord. Sec. State Board of Agriculture, Nahum J. Bachelder. .Andover. Editor of State Papers, Albert S. Batchellor Littleton. Public Printer, Arthur E. Clarke Manchester. Bank Commissioners, Alpheus W. Baker Lebanon. John Hatch Greenland. George W. Cummings Francest'n. Railroad Commissioners, Henry M. Putney Manchester. Josiah G. Bellows Walpole. E. B. S. Sanborn Franklin.

331 QQQOOOOaO p/ // LEGISLATIVE DEPARTMENT.

SENATE. President. —Thomas N. Hastings, Walpole, Eagle Hotel. Clerk.—William E. Jarvis, Claremont, Assistatit Clerk. — Thomas F. Clifford, Concord, Bergeant-at- Arms.—3 oab N. Patterson, Concord, Messenger. —Louis A. Thorpe, Manchester, Doorkeeper. —Charles B. Bodwell, Llanchester, SENATORS. District No. 1.—Frank P. Brown, Whitefield, 2. — Oscar C. Hatch, Littleton, 3. —George H. Gordon, Canaan, 4. —George H. Adams, Plymouth, 5. —James F. Safford, Farmington, 6. — Stephen Jewett, Laconia, S. 7. — Frederick Jewett, Claremont, 8. —Thomas N. Hastings, Walpole, 9. —Walter Putney, Bow. 10. — Charles C. Danforth, Concord, 11. — George E. Miller, Pembroke, 12.— Elbridge W. Fox, Milton, 13. — Bertram Ellis, Keene, 14. — Freder'k B. Pierce, Chesterfield, 15.— David E. Proctor, Wilton, 16. — John L. Sanborn, Manchester, 17. — Charles M. Floyd, Manchester, 18. — Joseph P. Chatel, Manchester, 19. — Frank W. Maj^nard, Nashua, 20.—John H. Field, Nashua, 21. —Alfred A. Collins, Danville, 22. —Nathaniel Horn, Dover, 23. — Charles A. Morse, Newmarket, 24. —Henry A. Yeaton, Portsmouth, Eepublicens, 22; Democrats, 2.

338 STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE.

Judiciary. —Senate Reception Room. Senators S. S. Jewett, District No. 6, Fox, Adams, Ellis, and Safford.

Revision of Laics. —Senate Reception Room. Senators Adams, Safford, Danforth, Hatch, and Ellis.

Railroads. — Senate Reception Room. Senators Maynard, Hatch, Fox, Collins, and Chatel. Banks. —Senate Reception Room. Senators Hatch, Yeaton, Brown, Floyd, and Field. Finance. —Room 6.

Senators Ellis, Adams, Proctor, Hatch, and Yeaton. Agriculture. —Room 11,

Senators Pierce, Collins, Horn, Frederick Jewett, District No. 7,

and Putney. Education. — Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction. Senators Floyd, Safford, Horn, Adams, and Maynard.

Incorporations. —Room 11.

Senators Safford, Danforth, S. S. Jewett, District No. 6, Field, and Floyd. Military Affairs. —Adjutant-GeneraVs Office.

Senators Proctor, Maynard, Brown, Floyd, and Adams. Claims. —Room 11.

Senators Fox, Gordon, Putney, Frederick Jewett, District No. 7,

and Collins.

Towns and Parishes. —Rooin 11. Senators Colling, Miller, Morse, Proctor, and Fox.

334 JOINT STANDING COMMITTEES, . 385

Roads, Bridges, and Canals. —Senate Reception Room. Senators Yeaton, Brown, Pierce, Gordon, and Sanborn.

State Prison and Industrial School. —Adjutant-OeneraVs Office.

Senators Field, S. S. Jewett, District No. 6, INIiller, Morse, and Danforth. Elections. —Room 11.

Senators Chatel, Putney, Danforth, Miller, and Horn.

Asylum for the Insane. —Room 6.

Senators Danforth, Frederick Jewett, District No. 7, Morse, Brown, and Yeaton. Labor. —Labor Commissionei'^s Room. Senators Sanborn, Putney, Pierce, Safford, and Chatel.

Manufactures. —Senate Reception Room. Senators ^Miller, Sanborn, Field, Chatel, and Collins. — Soldiers' Home. Adjutant-GeneraVs Office.

Senators Putney, Proctor, Horn, Miller, and Sanborn. Fisheries and Game. —State Library. Senators Brown, Maynard, Pierce, Gordon, and Ellis.

JOINT STANDING COMMITTEES.

Engrossed Bills.— Office of Secretary of State. Senators Morse and S. S. Jewett, District No. 6.

State Library. —State Library. Senator Gordon.

State House and State-House Yard.— State Library. Senator Frederick Jewett, District No. 7. RULES OF THE SENATE.

1. Journal— when read. 20. Titles of bills. 2. Conversation of senators — when pro- 21. Senate, acting as committee of whole. hibited. Bills on second reading—last question. 3. Conduct of members when speaking. How amended on thiid reading. 4. Members allowed to spealc twice. 23. Amendments entered on journal. 5. President shall recognize whom. 24. President to sign bills and warrants. 6. Member called to order question ; — 2.5. Standing committees. how decided. 26. Who appoints committees. 7 Member absenting himself. 27. Joint committees. Number senate en- 8. Motion seconded reduced to writing ; titled to. when. Message to house sent by clerk. 9. Precedence of motions motion not ; 29. Governor's message, when received. allowed at same stage of bill. 30. Members — to vote division of senate, 10. — Question when divided. when. 11. Dispute about reading paper— how de- 31. Visitors to senate allowed when. cided. 32. Hours of meeting. 12. Roll call ; every one must vote. 33. No debate on motions to adjourn. 13. Secret sessions of senate. 34. How to suspend or rescind standing 14. Vote decided how reconsidered. ; rules of senate. 15. Petitions, etc.— how introduced. 35. All bills and joint resolutions printed 16. Notice of bills. except private acts — how forwarded. 17. Progress of bills. Headings of bills and joint resolu- 18. What resolutions treated as bills. tions. 19. Bills read second time by their titles.

1. chair, and a quorum being The president having taken the present, the journal of the preceding day shall be read, and any erroneous entry shall be corrected. 2. IS'o member shall hold conversation with another during the

reading of the journal, or while a member is speaking in debate. ?>. Every member, rising to speak, shall address the president, and when he has finished shall sit down. 4. No member shall speak more than twice on the same ques- tion, on the same day, without leave of the senate. 5. More than one member rising to speak at the same time, the president shall decide who shall speak first. 6. If anj- member transgress the rules of the senate, the presi- dent shall, or any member may, call him to order; in which case — the member so called to order shall sit down, and the senate, if

336 RULES OF THE SENATE. 337

appealed to, shall decide in the case; but if there be no appeal, the decision of the president shall be conclusive. 7. No member shall absent himself without permission .from the senate. 8. A motion shall be seconded before it is debated, and if re- quired by the president or any member, it shall be reduced to writing". 9. When a question is under debate, no motion shall be received but to adjourn, to postpone indefinitely, to lay on the table, to postpone to a certain day, to commit, or to amend, which several motions shall take precedence in the order in which they are arranged. And no motion to postpone indefinitely, to postpone to a certain day, or to commit, being- decided, shall be in order at the same stage of the bill or proposition until after an adjourn- ment. 10. If the question under debate will admit of division, any member may have it divided; and in filling bRinks, the longest time and the largest sum shall be put first. 11. When the reading of a paper is called for, and the same is objected to, it shall be decided by a vote of the senate, and with- out debate. 12. When the yeas and nays are required, each member shall declare his assent or dissent to the question, unless for special reasons he be excused by the senate. 13. When a motion is made to shut the doors of the senate, on the discussion of any business which in the opinion of any mem- ber may require secrecy, the president shall require the gallery to be closed; and the doors shall remain closed until the subject is disposed of. 14. After a motion has been decided, it shall be in order for any member who voted with the majority, or if the senate be equally divided, any member voting on the side prevailing, to move for a reconsideration thereof, unless the bill, resolution, report, amend- ment, or motion on which the vote was taken, has gone from the possession of the senate; but no motion to reconsider shall be in order unless made the same day on which the vote was taken, or the next day after that on which the vote was taken, on which the senate shall be in session. 15. Before any petition or memorial address to the senate shall be received and read, a brief statement of the contents thereof shall be made by the member introducing the same. 16. Any member, on giving notice of asking leave to bring in a bill, shall state the nature of the bill he proposes to introduce, and at least one day's notice shall be given before a motion for leave shall be in order. 17. Every bill shall be read three times before its passage, and the president shall give notice at each time whether it be the first, second, or third reading; and no bill after it has been read a sec- ond time, shall have a third reading before an adjournment. 338 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

18. All resolutions which may require the signature of the governor shall be treated in the same manner as bills. 19. When a bill shall have been read a first time and ordered to a second reading, it shall be immediately read a second time by its title, and by the president referred to the appropriate stand- ing committee, unless otherwise ordered by the senate. 20. All bills introduced in the senate, to repeal or modify an existing statute, shall refer to the act proposed to be repealed or modified by the title and session at which it was passed; and no bill shall refer to any statute by the number of the chapter of the pamphlet laws. 21. The senate may resolve itself into a committee of the whole at any time on motion made for that purpose; and in forming a committee of the whole, the president shall leave the chair, and appoint a chairman to preside in committee. The president may at any time name any member to perform the duties of the chair; but such substitution shall not extend beyond one legislative day. 22. The last question, upon the second reading of a bill or reso- — lution, shall always be. Shall it be read a third time? and no amendment shall be received or discussed on the third reading of any bill or resolution unless by consent of sixteen members pres- ent, but it shall at all times be in order, before the final passage of a bill or resolution, to move its commitment; and should such commitment take place, and an amendment be reported, the bill or resolution shall again be read a second time, and considered as in committee of the whole. 23. The titles of bills, and such parts thereof as may be af- fected by proposed amendments, shall be entered on the journals. 24. All bills, resolutions, and addresses, after passing the sen- ate, shall be signed by the president; and all warrants and other processes issued by order of the senate shall be under his hand and seal, attested by the clerk. 25. The following standing committees, to consist of five mem- bers each, shall be appointed at the commencement of any ses- sion, with leave to report by bill or otherwise: A committee on the judiciary; a committee on incorporations; a committee on labor; a committee on military affairs; a committee on roads, bridges, and canals; a committee on claims; a committee on rail- roads; a committee on banks; a committee on agriculture; a committee on manufactures; a committee on elections; a com- mittee on education; a committee on finance; a committee on state prison and industrial school; a committee on asylum for the insane; a committee on revision of the laws; a committee on towns and parishes; a committee on Soldiers' Home; and a com- mittee on fisheries and game. 26. All committees shall be appointed by the president, unless a member request that the appointment shall be by ballot, in which case it shall be so done. 27. When the senate shall concur with the house of representa- tives in the appointment of a joint committee, consisting of not RULES OF THE SENATE. 339

more than five members of the house, two members shall be added on the part of the senate; but when more than five, three mem- bers of the senate shall be added. 28. Messag-es shall be sent to the house of representatives by the clerk of the senate. 29. Messages from the governor or house of representatives may be received at all times, except when the senate is engaged in putting the question, in calling the yeas and nays, in counting the ballots, or in reading the journal. 30. All questions shall be put by the president, and each mem- ber of the senate shall signify his assent or dissent by answering yea or nay. If the president doubts, or a division is called for, the senate shall divide. Those in the affirmative of the question shall first rise from their seats and stand till they be counted, and afterwards those in the negative shall rise and stand till they be counted. The president shall then rise and state the decision of the senate. 31. No person except the members of the executive, or mem- bers of the house of representatives and its oificers, shall be ad- mitted within the bar of the senate, except by invitation of the president, or some member with his consent. 32. The senate shall adjourn to meet at eleven o'clock in the morning and three o'clock in the afternoon of each day unless the senate shall otherwise order. 33. Motions to adjourn shall be decided without debate. 34. No standing rule of the senate shall be suspended unless two thirds of the members present vote in favor thereof, and no rule shall be rescinded unless one day's notice of the motion has been given and two thirds of those present vote therefor. 35. Every bill and joint resolution, except private acts, orig- inating in the senate, which has been favorably reported upon by the committee having it in charge, shall be declared by the presi- dent laid upon the table, and the clerk directed to procure a suffi- cient number of printed copies thereof for the use of the senate; and that when said bills and joint resolutions are printed and distributed, the clerk shall cause a copy of the same to be laid on the president's table, and they shall be taken up in their order without motion, and disposed of in the same manner as they would have been had th'^y not been declared laid on the table. And every bill or joint resolution so introduced shall be headed senate bill, or joint resolution, as the case may be. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.

JANUARY SESSION, 1899.

OFFICERS.

Speaker.

FRANE: D. currier, Canaan, Eagle Hotel.

Clerk.

HENRY E. BROCK, Conway, 6 Blake St.

Assistant Clerk.

WILLIAM H. TOPPING, Manchester.

Sergeant-at-Arms.

CHARLES E. BUZZELL, Laconia, 24 So. Main St.

Chaplain.

Rev. JOSEPH E. ROBINS, Dover.

Doorkeepers of House.

EDWIN P. HUNT, Harrisville, Commercial House. CHARLES W. TORR, Dover, Commercial House. JOHN WOODWARD, Littleton, Insurance Building. 22

341 342 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Doorkeeper of Committee Rooms. MAETIN L. PIPEK, Auburn. Warden of Cloak Room. GEORGE W. JOHNSON, Concord.

Assistant Warden of Cloak Room.

CHARLES T. HUNTOON, Concord, 47 Franklin St.

Pages of the House. ARTHUR G. DECATUR, Rochester, Jackson House. JAMES F. ESTES, Meredith, Green St. 55 LYMAN ROLLINS, Concord, South St. 17 CHARLES D. ROWE, Ashland, Commercial House. HERBERT J. STOWELL, Berlin, 68 Warren St.

Library Messengers. ANDY HOLT, Lyndeborough, Insurance Building. VAN B. GLAZIER, LandafP, 21 Broadway. Stenographer of Judiciary Committee. ERNEST S. WOODAMAN, Walpole, 172 No. Main St.

Tellers.

Division 1, Gray of Jackson. Division 2, Clement of Warren. Division 3, Young of Manchester. Division 4, French of Moultonborough. Division 5, Abbott, G. W., of Concord.

Reporters.

Concord Evening Monitor, H. C. Pearson. People and Patriot, Fred Leighton. Manchester Union, G. W. Fowler, John E. Coffin, W. J. Shanessy. Mirror and American, Willis T. Dodge, Harry B. Cilley. Portsmouth Times, H. H. Metcalf. Boston Herald, A. H. Robinson. Boston Globe, I. Eugene Keeler. Associated Press, H. C. Pearson. Senate Reporter, Solomon B. West. MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE.

KOCKINGHAM COUNTY.

Atkinson, Gilman Greenough d Newmarket, Benjamin F. Dame — r Auburn, Thomas F. Dodge r Ernest P. Pinkham ...r

Brentwood, Daniel O. Waldron r Newton, Benjamin F. Wakefield .. r Candia, Francis D. Rowe r North Hampton, George W. Page. ..d Chester, George S. West r Northwood, Horace K. Emery r Danville, Melburn J. Dimond r Nottingham, James F. Knowlton ...r Deei-field, Charles E. Rand d Plalstow, Arthur E. Hoyt r Derry, Charles W. Abbott r Portsmouth, George S. Rollins r Ward 1, Freeman R. Garrett r East Kingston, William D. Ingalls..fZ Clement M. Waterhouse ..r

Epping, Abram W. Mitchell d Ward 2, Maicus M. CoUis r Exeter, William P. Chadwick r Joseph H. Gardiner r John D. Lj'man r Albert C. Anderson r Sperry French r Ward Frank E. Whitman 3, d Arthur O. Fuller r Ward4, John H. Dowd d Fremont, Harrison B. Ellin r Ward5, Francis E. Langdon d Greenland, John P. Weeks r Raymond, Charles W. Prescott d Hampstead, Walter A. Allen r Kye, Jonathan J. Rand r Hampton, Samuel A. Towle r Salem, Forrest M. Martin r Hampton Falls, Henry E. Tilton — r Benjamin R. Wheeler r Kensington, Abraham Hilliard r Sandown, James Hunkins d Kingston, Levi S. Bartlett r Seabrook, Lowell Boyd d Londonderry, South Hampton, Roscoe H. Morrill. .r Rosecrans W. Pillsbury r Stratham, John N. Thompson r Nevrflelds, Thomas Leddy d Windham, George E. Seavey r Newington, Joseph S. Hoyt r

Republicans, 37. Democrats 12.

STRAFFORD COUNTY.

Barrington, Dover, William E. Waterhouse.... r Ward 3, John A. Glidden r Dover, Valentine Mathes r Ward 1, Frank B. Clark r Ward 4, Allen D. Richmond r Charles .1. Morrill r Henry A. Worthen r Ward 2, Chesley Drew r Charles H. Morang r Joseph N. Holt r Ward 5, John J. McCann d Thomas J. Robinson r Francis E. Mulligan d

343 344 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE.— Stkafford COVSTY. — Co7itinued. Durliam, Cbai-les E. Hoitt d Rochester, Farmington, Elbridge T. Avery — r Ward 5, Frank I. Smith r John P. H. French r Ward 6, Charles E. Woodward r John S. Roberts r James M. Bunker Rollinsford, r Lee, George E. Chesley r Melvin Fall, Jr r Milton, Freeuiiin H. Lowd r Somei^worth, New Durham, William A. Towle d Ward 1 Henry Duford , r Rochester, Ward 2, Fred Wiesner r Ward 1, Joseph O. Hayes r Ward 3, Harry H. Remick r Ward 2, Frank I. Decatur r Ward 4, Guy H. Locke r Ward 3, Hiram S. Osborn r Ward 5, James A. Kearns d Ward 4, Frederic E. Small d Strafford, Elmer A. Scribner r

Republicans, 28. Democrats, 6.

BELKNAP COUNTV. Alton, William R. Clough r Laconia, Barnstead, Herbert A. Garland d Ward 4, Robert S. Foss d Belmont, Frank K. Johnson r Ward 5, John W. Ashman d Center Harbor, Smith F.Emery r Ward Fred O. Goss 6, r GiHord, John B. Morrill r Charles L. Simpson d Gilmanton, Thomas Cogswell d Meredith, Joseph W. Lang d Laconia, New Hampton, Ward 1, John H. Smith r Francis A. Emerson r Ward 2, Daniel C. Kellogg r Sanbornton, Frank H. Hunkins r Ward 3, Charles F. Story d Tilton, Frederick A. Holmes r

Republicans, 10. Democrats, 7.

CARROLL COUNTY. Albanj',Hiram S.Currier d Madison, Langrlon M. Atkinson r Bartlett, Alvah W. Burnell r Moultonborough, James E. French.. r Brookfield, John E. Witham r Ossipee, Arthur L. Hodsdon r Chatham, Charles S. Chandler d Sandwich, Henry F. Dorr d Conway, Joel E. Morrill r Tamworth, Henry B. Robinson d Frank W.Russell r Tuftonborough, John D. Morrison.. r Eaton, Edwin Snow d Wakefield, J. Frank Farnham r Eflangham, Cyrus P. Keay r Wolfeborough, Joseph Lewando. ..»• Freedom, Edgar L. Mills r Fred E. Hersey r Hart's Location, George H. Morey..?- John A. Chamberlain r . .

Jackson, Charles W. Gray r

Republicans, 16, Democrats, 5.

MERRIMACK COUNTY. Allenstown, Almon A. Blodgett r Bow, Warren C. Saltmarsh r Andover, Henry A. Weymouth d Bradford, Edward C. Messer d Boscawen, Anson C. Alexander r Canterbury, Fred H. Blanchard MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE. 345

MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE —Merrimack Covtsty. —Contimied.

Cliicbester, Abraham L. "West r FraiiJclin, Concord, Ward 3, Charles C. Paige r Ward John E. Harden 1, d Henniker, Dana E. Huntington r George W. Abbott r Hill,Ellon S. Little r Ward 2, George A. Hoit d Hooksett, Edwin A. Tyrrell r Ward 3, James W. Welch d James Thompson, 2d r Ward 4, Fred S. Johnson r Hopkinton, William C. Russ r John G. McQuilkin r George M. Putnam d Granville P. Conn r Loudon, Albert B. Sargent d Ward 5, Frank Battles r Newbury, George VA^. Blodgett d Ferdinand A. Stillings — r New London, John K. Law r Ward G, Edgar A. Clark r Northfleld, William A. Gardner r Walter E. Darrah .r Pembroke, Addison N. Osgood r Wai'd 7, Henry E. Conant r Natt B. Einery r * George T. Abbott r Joseph R. Holt r Ward S, Oliver J. Pelren d Pittsfield, Sherburn J. Winslow r Ward 9, John Jordan d Walter E. Joy d Danbury, Willis W. Walker d Salisbury, Sherman P. Fellows d Dunbarton, Henry S. Whipple r Sutton, George G. Wells r Epsom, Edgar E. Wells r Warner, John B. Rand r Franklin, Webster, Luther C. Futney d Ward 1, Herman J. Odell r Wilmot, AmosR. Johnson d Wai-d 2, George R. Stone d

Republicans, 32. Democrats, IG.

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY.

Amherst, Eugene C. Hubbard. Manchester, Antrim, Franklin G. Warner d Ward 1, Lafayette A. Hays r Bedford, Quincy Barnard d John B. Cavanaugh r Bennington, Fred H. Kimball r Joseph Tait r Brookline, Frank L. Willoby r Ward 2, LjMiian W. Colby r Deering, Edward W. Colburn d Charles B. Brown r Francestown, John M. Morse »• Edward L. Kimball r Goffstown, Arthur H. Parker r Ward 3, Aime E. Boisvert r Cliarles F.George d Charles W. Cheney r Greenfield, William E. Hopkins. .»'. d Cyius H. Little r Greenville, Charles L. Batchelder. .r Edwin R. Robinson r Hancock, Charles M. Sheldon r Jesse B. Paltee r Hillsborougli, Robert B. Clement. . .r Clarence E. Rose r Sylvester Atwood...^- Ward 4, Frederick Allen r Hollis, Henry A. Goodwin r Arthur S. Campbell r Hudson, John J. Baker d Jules Deschenes r Lyndeborough, Fred B. Richards. ..rf Henry A. Farrington r * Deceased. 346 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE.— HILLSBOROUGH COVtiTY. — Contimied.

Manchester, Naslma, Ward 4, Jerome J. Lovering r Ward 1, Charles A. Roby r Harrie M. Young r William J. Putnam r Ward 5, Garrett W. Cotter d Ward 2, Albert D. Melendy r William F. H oran d Calvin R. Wood r John F.Kelley d Ward 3, Henri T. Ledoux d Andrew J. Murray d John B. McGuire d Patrick B. Ryan d Ward 4, Charles H. Morse d Michael J. Mahoney d Ward 5, Michael H. Siske d Ward 6, Herbert E. Richardson. ..r Ward 6, Edward H. Wason r Edwin N. Baker r Charles D. Parker d Albert Blood r Ward 7, Alfred M. Hills r Herberts. Clough r Charles H. Burke d Ward 7, Levi K. Snow o- Ward 8, William J. Flather r

-Joseph L. Simpkins r Moses L. Truell d Ward S, John P. Bavtlett d Ward 9, Lotic I. Minard r Robert E. McKean d Augustine C. blain d James Ried r New Boston, Rodney McLane r Ward 9, Joseph D. Masse... d New Ipswich, .John Preston r

Joseph J. Moreau . .d Pelham, George C. Jackman d Lawrence W. Howard ...d Peterborough, Charles B. Davis r Michael J. O'Connor d Charles A. Jaquith..r Mason, Albert O. Childs r Temple, Charles E. Rockwood r

Merrimack, James B. Hoitt d Weare, Hiram R. Nichols r Wilton, Michael P. Stanton d Milford, William P. Colburn r Charles A.Langdel! r Philip F. Amidon r Arthur L. Keyes -r Windsor, Joseph R. Nelson r Mont Vernon, Franklin Marden r

Republicans, 54. Democrats, 31. Independent Democrat, 1.

CHESHIRE COUXTY.

Alstead, Charles H. Cooke r Keene, d Ward John Diehl d Chesterfield, Sem L. Stowell 5,

Dublin, Charles F. Appleton r Marlborough-, James Knowlton r

Marlow, Hiram F. Russell r Fltzwilliam, Walter R. Vance r Nelson, John H. Osgood r Gilsum, Francis C. Minor r White Richmond, Silas O. Martin r Harrisville, Thomas H. r r Rindge, Herbert D. Wellington r Hinsdale, George E. Robertson r Sullivan, Joseph N. Niras r Willis D. Stearns. Jaffrey, Will J. Mower r Swanzey, Arthur A. Woodward d Keene, Troy, Oliver C. Whitcomb d r Ward 1, Charles G. Shedd r Walpole, Edwin K. Seabury Cornelius A. Sullivan d Herschel J. Fowler r Westmoreland, Willard Bill, Jr r Ward 2, Flavel Real r Ward 3, Alfred T. Batchelder r Winchester, Alexander F. Pierce... r Levi Saben r Ward 4, Sidney C.Ellis r 23. Democrats, 5. Republicans, MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE. 347

MEMBEKS OF IHE HOVSE.- Co iitiTuied. SULLIVAN COUNTY.

Acworth, Hiram N. Hay ward r Langdon, .Alvin S. Cram r Charlestowu, Wm. E. Butterfleld. . .?• Lempster, William E. Perry r Claremont, Frank P. Maynard r Newport, Rotheus E. Bartlett r George T. Stockwell — r John H. Glynn... r Pascal P. Coburn r Plainfleld, Benjamin F. Porter »•

David R. Roys r Springfield, Ruel L. Heath d Ira F. Rowell r Sunapee, Almeron B. Abbott r CornisL, Frank C. Jackson r Unity, Schuyler G. Breed r Goshen, Eugene I. Purington r Washington, Charles A. Lull d Republicans, 16. Democrats, 2.

GKAFTON COUNTY.

Alexandria, Everett W. Tucker — d Lebanon William F. Cowen r Ashland, George B. Stevens r Leonard A. Estabrook .. .r Bath, George B. Hazen r Lisbon, Frank E. Buck r Bethlehem, George T. Cruft r Seth F. Hoskins r Bridgewater, Harris W. Hammond. (i Littleton, Daniel C. Remich r Bristol, Orlando B. French r William J. Beattie r Campton G eorge H Little , r. Noah Farr >•

Canaan, Frank D. Currier r Lyman, John E. Clough d Dorchester, William R. Park, Jr r — Lyme, Henry A. Bailey r Enfield, Zenas F. Lamb d Orford, Edwin C. Franklin r Franconia, Henry H. Clark d Piermont, Lyman M. Robie d Grafton, Ichabod 8. Williams d Plymouth, James A. Penniman r Hanover, Simon Ward r Enos Huckins d Henry J. Weston r Rumney, William S. Learned r Haverhill, Henry F. King r Thornton, Arthur C. Moulton ... —d Morris E. Kimball r Warren, Frank C. Clement d Holderness, Joseph W. Pulsifer r Wentworth, Harry M. Turner d Lebanon, Frank C. Churchill r Woodstock, Scott N. Weeks d

Republicau.s, 24. Democrats, 12.

coos COUNTY'. Berlin , Dalton, Sumner E. Farr d Ward 1, Joseph II. Wight /• Dummer, Darton T. Wentworth d Ward 2, Philippe E. Beaudoin r Gorham, Charles A. Chandler d Ward 3, Edward Lambert r Jefferson,John W. Crawshaw d Carroll, Duncan McMillan r Lancaster, John H. Smith r Clarksville, Irving G. Young d John Costello r Colebrook, Reuben H. Gould d Charles A. Howe r Columbia, x\.nson II. Wallace r Milan, Anthony Nay r 348 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE— Coos COUNTY.— Continued.

Northnmbeiland, Stewartstown, Andrew J. Jordan. .d Thomas Judd F. Butler — d d Stratford, John C. Hutchins .

d Pittsburg, "Willie N. Whitefield, Herbert L. Robinson... .d Shelburne, John B. Head r James Colby r Stark, Charles A. Cole , ...d

Republicans, 11. Democrats, 12. STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE.

ox AGBICtTLTURE. —OFFICE OF SECRETABY OF BOARD OF AGRI- CtTLTUBE.

Lyman of Exeter, Costello of Lancaster, Ellis of Keene, Atwood of Hillsborough, Putnam of Nashua, Rockwood of Temple, Tilton of Hampton Falls, Putnam of Hopkinton, Roberts of Farmington, Tucker of Alexandria, Witham of Brookfield, Garland of Barnstead.

ox AGRICXTLTURAL COLLEGE. — OFFICE OF SECRETARY OF THE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. White of Harrisville, Little of Campton, Whipple of Dunbarton, Allen of Manchester, Dimond of Danville, Breed of Unity, West of Chester, Baker of Hudson, Hunldns of Sanbornton, W^alker of Danbury, Chesley of Lee, Hammond of Bridgewater.

ON APPROPRIATIONS. —^ROOM 5.

Young of Manchester, Richmond of Dover, Abbott (G. W.) of Concord, Abbott of Sunapee, Conn of Concord, Wakefield of Newton, McLane of Ncav Boston, Weeks of Woodstock, Bill of Westmoreland, Foss of Laconia, Farnham of Wakefield, Hutchins of Stratford.

ON ASYLUM FOR INSANE. —ROOM 5.

Waterhouse of Harrington, Purington of Goshen, Weymouth of Andover, Keay of Effingham, ilarden of Mont Vernon, Seavey of Windham, Johnson of Concord, Lamb of Enfield, Lovering of Manchester, Langdon of Portsmouth, Shedd of Keene, Gould of Colebrook. 349 350 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL,

ON BANKS. —BANK COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE.

Stillings of Concord, Woodward of Eochester, Cruft of Bethlehem, Thompson of Stratham, .

Maynard of Claremont, Burke of Nashua, Seabury of Walpole, Bartlett of Manchester, Worthen of Dover, Ashman of Laeonia, Hodsdon of Ossipee, Young- of Clarksville.

ON CLAIMS. —KOOM 7.

Atkinson of Madison, Abbott (G. T.) of Concord, McQuilkin of Concord, Langdell of Milford, Emery of Northwood, Keams of Somersworth, Lambert of Berlin, Eand of Deerfield, Park of Dorchester, George of Gofistown, Kellogg of Laeonia, Murray of Manchester.

ON COUNTY AFFAIRS. —ROOM 8.

Gardiner of Portsmouth, Butterfield of Charlestown, Hills of Nashua, Wiesner of Somersworth, Beaudoin of Berlin, O'Connor of Manchester, Clough of Alton, Stowell of Chesterfield, Robinson of Manchester, Clement of Warren, Saltmarsh of Bow, Robinson of Tamworth.

ON EDUCATION. —OFFICE OF SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC IN- STRUCTION.

Preston of New Ipswich, Beal of Keene, Howe of Lancaster, Dame of Newmarket, Burnell of Bartlett, Eobie of Piermont, Waldron of Brentwood, Johnson of Wilmot, Hayward of Acworth, Putney of Webster, Richardson of Manchester, Towle of New Durham. ON ELECTIONS. —ROOM 4.

Cruft of Bethlehem, Parker of Goffstown, Gardiner of Portsmouth, Emerson of New Hampton, Morey of Hart's Location, Williams of Grafton, Deschenes of ISIanchester, Ingalls of East Kingston, Wells of Sutton, Jordan of Stewartstown, Cooke of Alstead, Kelley of Manchester. HOUSE STANDING COMMITTEES. 351

ON FISHERIES AND GAME. — STATE LIBRABT.

Battles of Concord, Smith of Laconia, Hoyt of Plaistow, Estabrook of Lebanon, Morse of Francestown, Clement of Hillsborough, Roys of Claremont, Wentworth of Dummer, Morrison of Tuftonborough, Hiickins of Plymouth, Wallace of Columbia, Whitcomb of Trov. ON rORESTBY. —ROOM 7.

Howe of Lancaster, Stevens of Ashland, Ellis of Fremont, Little of Hill, Rowe of Candia, Butler of Northumberland, Hubbard of Amherst, Hopkins of Greenfield, Blodgett of Allenstown, Farr of Dalton, Martin of Salem, Chandler of Chatham.

ON INCORPORATIONS. —ROOM 9.

Jaquith of Peterborough, Mower of Jaffrey, Odell of Franklin, Johnson of Belmont, Hersey of Wolfeborough, Page of North Hampton, Robinson of Dover, Turner of Wentworth, Allen of Hampstead, Heath of Springfield, Kimball of Bennington, Cole of Stark.

ON INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL. —ROOM 9.

Roby of Nashua, Sheldon of Hancock, .Appleton of Dublin, Hazen of Bath, Knowlton of Nottingham, Head of Shelburne, Smith of Rochester, Welch of Concord, Morang of Dover, Currier of Albany, Dodge of Auburn, Hoitt of Merrimack.

ON INSURANCE. —INSURANCE COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE.

Keyes of Milford, Mills of Freedom, Huntington of Henniker, Knowlton of Marlborough, Pinkham of Newmarket, Kimball of Haverhill, Emery of Centre Harbor, Lull of Washington, Tyrrell of Hooksett, Judd of Pittsburg, Lowd of Milton, McCann of Dover. 352 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

ON JOURNAL OF THE HOUSE. —REPRESENTATIVES' HALL. Speaker. Parker of Nashua. Wight of Berlin, ON JUDICIARY. —ROOM 1.

Batchelder of Keene, Wason of Nashua, Little of Manchester, Bartlett of Manchester, Pillsbury of Londonderry, Cogswell of Gilmanton, Chadwick of Exeter, Stone of Franklin, • Eemich of Littleton, Churchill of Lebanon, Wight of Berlin, Snow of Eaton.

ON LABOR. —LABOR commissioner's office. Cheney of Manchester, Rowell of Claremont, Minor of Gilsum, Morrill of South Hampton, Goss of Laconia, Mulligan of Dover, Hilliard of Kensington, Jordan of Concord, Nichols of Weare, Clough of Lyman, Wells of Epsom, Chandler of Gorham. — ON LIQUOR LAWS. ROOM 9. Bunker of Rollinsford, Glidden of Dover, Weeks of Greenland, Collis of Portsmouth, Farrington of Manchester, McKean of Manchester, Franklin of Orford, Robinson of Whitefield, Russell of Conway, Richards of Lyndeborough, Wellington of Eindge, Cotter of Manchester.

ON manufactures.—ROOM 9.

Maynard of Claremont, Colby of Whitefield, Flather of Nashua, Fowler of Keene, Buck of Li.sbon, Duford of Somersworth, Rose of Manchester, Story of Laconia, Chamberlain of Wolfeborough, Joy of Pittsfield, Waterhouse of Portsmouth, Marden of Concord.

ON mileage —ROOM 10.

Pierce of Winchester, Jackson of Cornish, Wiesner of Somersworth, Pulsifer of Holderness, Hoyt of Newington, Dorr of Sandwich, Simpson of Laconia, Farr of Dalton, Ried of Manchester, Hoit of Concord, Robertson of Hinsdale, Horan of Manchester. HOUSE STANDING COMMITTEES. 353

ON MILITARY AFFAIRS. —ADJUTANT-GENERAL'S OFFICE.

Lewando of Wolfeborough, Cowen of Lebanon, Glynn of Newport, Cram of Langdon, Towle of Hampton, Goodwin of Hollis, Law of New London, Abbott of Derry, Hayes of Kochester, Hunkins of Sandown, Davis of Peterborough, Minard of Nashua.

ON NATIONAL AFFAIRS. —STATE LIRRARY.

Clough of Alton, Atkinson of Madison, Fuller of Exeter, Little of Manchester, Waterhouse of Barrington, Osgood of Pembroke, Eemich of Littleton, Ledoux of Nashua, Pillsbury of Londonderry, Hutchins of Stratford, Appleton of Dublin, Woodward of Swanzey. ON NORMAL SCHOOL. —ROOM 10.

Alexander of Boscawen, Blanchar'd of Canterbury, French of Exeter, Campbell of Manchester, Penniman of Plymouth, Eand of Eye, French of Farmington, Saben of Winchester, Coburn of Claremont, Clarke of Franconia, Colbum of Milford, Morse of Nashua. ON PURLIC HEALTH. —ROOM 5.

Clark of Concord, Mitchell of Epping, Emery of Pembroke, Warner of Antrim, Clough of Manchester, Moulton of Thornton, Eollins of Derry, Masse of Manchester, Decatur of Eochester, Sargent of Loudon, Simpkins of Manchester, Sullivan of Walpole.

ON PURLIC IMPROVEMENTS. —ROOM 7.

Morrill of Dover, Brown of Manchester, King of Haverhill, Whitman of Portsmouth, Mathes of Dover, Prescott of Eaymond, Nay of ililan, Blodgett of Newbury,' Euss of Hopkinton, Truell of Nashua, Perry of Lempster, Eyan of Manchester. 354 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. ON BAILBOADS. —ROOM 4 French of Moultonboroug'h, Wellington of Rindge, Clark of Dover, Stockwell of Claremont, Beattie of Littleton, Smith of Lancaster, Kimball of Manchester, Pelren of Concord, Willoby of Brookline. Leddy of Newfields, Winslow of Pittsfield, Lang of Meredith.

ON RETRENCHMENT •AND REFORM. —ROOM 10.

Bailey ofLyme, Glidden of Dover, Hodsdon of Ossipee, Holt of Pembroke, Anderson of Portsmouth, Langdell of ISIilford, Hays of Manchester, Story of Laconia, Snow of Manchester, Crawshaw of Jefferson, Hilliard of Kensington, Whitcomb of Troy.

ON REVISION OF STATUTES ROOM 2.

Fuller of Exeter, Thompson of Hooksett, Pattee of Manchester, West of Chichester, Cavanaugh of Manchester, Holmes of Tilton, Ledoux of Nashua, Weston of Hanover, Parker of Nashua, Locke of Somersvs'orth, Ljman of Exeter, Small of Rochester. ON ROADS, BRIDGES, AND CANALS. —ROOM 8.

Gray of Jackson, Scribner of Strafford, Wheeler of Salem, Melendy of Nashua, French of Bristol, Stearns of Hinsdale, Gardner of Northfield, McGuire of Nashua, Bartlett of Kingston, Messer of Bradford, McMillan of Carroll, Howard of INIanchester. ON RULES. —representatives' HALL. Speaker. Cogswell of Gilmanton, Batchelder of Keene, Burke of Nashua. Little of Manchester,

ON soldiers' home. —adjutant-general's office. Collis ofPortsmouth, Learned of Rumney, Conant of Concord, Childs of Mason, Martin of Richmond, Dorr of Sandwich, Holt of Dover, Hoit of Concord, Ward of Hanover, Colburn of Deering, Rand of Warner, Jackman of Pelham. HOUSE STANDING COMMITTEES. 355

ON STATE PRISON. —ROOM 8.

Wood of Nashua, Fall, of Rollinsf ord, Vance of Fitzwilliam, Avery of Farmington, Darrah of Concord, Barnard of Bedford, Batchelder of Greenville, Fellows of Salisbury, Farr of Littleton, Blain of Nashua, Osgood of Nelson, Dowd of Portsmouth, ON TOWNS .- -ROOM 8.

Park of Dorchester, Porter of Plainfield, Blood of Manchester, Hoyt of Newingtoni' Osborn of Rochester, Eemick of Somersworth, Eussell of Marlow, Nelson of Windsor, Nims of Sullivan, Siske of Nashua, Osgood of Pembroke, Stanton of Wilton. ON UNFINISHED BUSINESS. — ROOM 10. Boisvert of Manchester, Buck of Lisbon, Tait of Manchester, Lambert of Berlin, Baker of Manchester, Boyd of Seabrook, Drew of Dover, Diehl of Keene, Little of Hill, Mahoney of Manchester, Morey of Hart's Location, Moreau of Manchester. SPECIAL COMMITTEE. ON APPORTIONMENT. ROOM — 10 Morrill of Gilford, Pierce of Winchester, Amidon of Wilton, Paige of Franklin, Colby of Manchester, Bartlett of Newport, Morrill of Conway, Greenough of Atkinson, Garrett of Portsmouth, hoitt of Durham, Hoskins of Lisbon, Crawshaw of Jefferson.

JOINT STANDING COMMITTEES. ON ENGROSSED BILLS. —OFFICE OF SECRETARY OF STATE. Famham of Wakefield, | Churchill of Lebanon. ON STATE HOUSE AND STATE HOUSE YARD. —STATE LIBRARY. Johnson of Concord, Clement of Warren. Flather of Nashua, ON STATE LIBRARY. —STATE LIBRARY. Ilemich of Littleton, Cogswell of Gilmanton. Bartlett of Kingston, COUNTY CONVENTIONS.

ROCKINGHAM COUNTY. Chairman, Marcus M. Collis, Portsmouth; clerk, Arthur E. Hoyt, Plaistow. STRAFFOKD COUNTY. Chairman, Henry A. Worthen, Dover; clerk, Charles E. Wood- ward, Bfochester. BELKNAP COUNTY. Chairman, Thomas Cog-swell, Gilmanton; clerk, Charles F. Story, Laconia. CARROLL COUNTY. Chairman, Joel E. Momll, Conway; clerk, Alvah W. Burnell, Bartlett. MERRIMACK COUNTY. Chairman, George K. Stone, Franklin; clerk, Frank Battles, Concord. HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY. Chairman, Jesse B. Pattee, Manchester; clerk, Charles D. Parker, Nashua. CHESHIRE COUNTY.

Chairman, Willard Bill, Jr., Westmoreland; clerk, Charles G. Shedd, Keene. SULLIVAN COUNTY. Chairman, George T. Stockwell, Claremont; clerk, Hiram N. Hay- ward, Ac worth. GRAFTON COUNTY. Chairman, Frank C. Churchill, Lebanon; clerk, Henry J. Weston, Hanover. coos COUNTY.

Chairman, Joseph H. Wight, Berlin; clerk, Herbert L. Kobinson, Whitefield. 356 Membeks of the House of Eepeesentatites.

JAIsTUARY SESSION, 1899. 23 358 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. ALPHABETICAL LIST OF THE HOUSE. 359 360 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

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»3 C O^03 u a a ti '^ S3Qoa JOINT RULES

SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.

1. Convention of senate and house. 8. Bills, titles and contents of.

2. Messages, by whom sent. 9.Bills rejected by one house. 3. Messages, when received. 10. Each house to transmit papers. before what 4. Messages, by whom announced. 11. Bills to be transmitted houses. time. 5. Bills, between the bills. 12. Bill, when defeated. 6. Engrossed 7. Joint committees. 13. Time for introducing bills.

1. a convention of the two houses is to be formed, When whether by a requirement of the constitution, or by a vote or resolve of the two houses, a message shall be sent from the house of representatives to the senate, giving notice when the house will meet the senate in convention. As soon thereafter as the convenience of the senate will permit, they will attend in the house. The speaker of the house shall be chairman of the con- vention, and shall state the reasons for forming the convention. "When the house and senate are thus formed in convention, the rules adopted as the rules of the house shall be considered the rules of the convention, so far as they may be deemed applicable, and the convention shall accordingly be governed thereby. 2. Messages shall be sent by such person or persons as each house may deem to be proper. Messages from either house shall be received from the other ?,.

at all times, except when engaged in putting a question, in calling the yeas and nays, in counting the ballots, or in reading the journal. 4. When a message shall be sent from either house to the other, it shall be announced at the door of the house to which it may be sent, by the door-keeper. 368 JOINT RULES. 369

5. While are on their passag-e between the two houses, bills

they shall be under the sig-nature of the clerk of each house re- spectively. 6.There shall be a committee for the purpose of engrossing bills, consisting of two members of each house. All bills that pass both houses shall be delivered to said committee, be by them engrossed, carefully examined, and reported to the respective houses; and shall be signed first by the speaker of the house of representati\'es, and then by the president of the senate. 7. There shall be a committee, to consist of three members of the house and one of the senate, on each of the following sub- jects, to wit: On all matters relative to the state library, and on all matters relative to the state house and state-house yard. 8. Every bill or joint resolution, repealing or modifying any act or statute, shall refer to the same by the chapter, title, and section of the general laws, if contained therein, otheinvise by its title and the session of the legislature when the same was

passed, and shall also be expressed in words clearlj^ so that it shall not be necessary to refer to any other act or statute to ascertain the meaning thereof; and it shall be the duty of the presiding officer of each branch of the legislature to require all such bills and resolutions to be made in conformity therewith, before putting any vote thereon, except to commit or amend. 9. When a bill or resolve which shall have passed in one house is rejected in the other, notice thereof shall be given to the house in which the same shall have passed. 10. Each house shall transmit to the other all papers on which any bill or resolve may be founded. 11. Each house shall transmit to the other all bills which have passed their several stages in the house in which they originated, at least twenty-four hours before the time fixed for adjournment. 12. After each house shall have adhered to its disagreement, a or resolve shall be considered lost. bill No bill, joint resolution, claim outstanding on the first 13.

day of the session, or petition relating to new business shall be received in either branch of the legislature after the third week of the session, unless reported from a committee; provided, that this rule may be suspended in either house whenever two thirds of the whole number of members shall, on division taken, vote in favor thereof, and not othenvise. RULES OF THE HOUSE.

THE DUTY or THE SPEAKER. 32. Member excused from committee ser- vice. 1. Shall call the house to order, when. 33. Member, absent only by leave. L". Shall preserve decorum and order ; 34. Tellers, duties of. appeal. 3. Shall put questions in prescribed form. Oy COMMITTEES AND THEIB DUTIES. 4. Shall rise to put question. committees enumerated 35. Standing ;

5. Shall appoint committees, unless. number serving on and each, stated, 6. Shall refer acts, etc., to committees, duties defined. nnless. All other committees, number of. 36. 7. Shall not vote, unless. 37. Relating to meetings of committees. 8. Shall sign all acts, resolutions, writs, 38. Committee, chairman of ; reports of. etc. 39. Special committees. !•. May clear galleries, lu. May admit to floor of house. OF BILLS. 11. May substitute member for one day. 40. How introduced ; notice of. 41. Shall be clearly expressed. Ol'- DECORUM AND DEBATE. 42. Shall have three readings ; progress 12. Member shall rise and address speaker. of; time for second and third read- 13. Questions of order ; appeal. ings. 14. Member first rising shall speak first. 43. Amended only on second reading 15. Member not to speak more than twice, bills and resolutions, how filed.

etc. 44. Assistant clerk may carry bills to 16. Members, decorum of. senate. 17. Members shall not vote, when. 45. Shall be numbered. 18. Member shall vote, unless. 46. House bills printed, distributed, and ly. Motion reduced to writing, seconded, disposed of. stated. 47. Appropriating money, to whom re- 20. Relating to petitions. ferred. 21. Motion when in possession of house. 48. Rules of house ; how rescinded or '22. Motions, order of precedence. suspended. 23. Previous question, how put, etc. OF THE COMMITTEE OF TUE WHOLE 24. Previous question, debate upon. HOUSE. 25. Previous question, if decided in nega- tive. 49. House may resolve itself into com- 26. Indefinite postponement. mittee ; chairman of. 27. Division of question amendment. ; 50. Procedure in. 28. Commitment and amendment. 51. Rules of. 29. No substitute, under color of amend- ment. ORDER OF BUSINESS OF THE DAY. 30. Keconsideration, motion for. 52. Petitions, reports of committees, etc. 31. Objection to reading paper, how de- 53. Unfinished business shall have prefer- termined. ence.

370 RULES OF THE HOUSE. 371

OF THE DUTY OF THE SPEAKER.

1. The speaker shall take the chair at precisely the hour to which the house shall have adjourned, and shall immediately call the members to order. 2. Heshall preserve decorum and order, may speak on points of order in preference to other members, rising from his seat for that purpose, and shall decide questions of order, subject to an appeal to the house by any two members. 3. Questions shall be distinctly put in this form, to wit: "As many as are of opinion that (as the case may be) say Aye"; and after the affirmative vote is expressed, "Those of a contrary opin- ion saj^ No." If the speaker doubts, or a division is called for, the house shall divide. Those in the affirmative of the question shall first rise from their seats and stand till they be counted, and afterwards those in the negative shall rise and stand till they be counted. The speaker shall then rise and state the decision of the house. 4. Heshall rise to put a question, but may. state it sitting. 5. All committees shall be appointed by the speaker unless otherwise directed by the house. 6. The speaker shall designate to which of the standing com- mittees all memorials, petitions, accounts, or other matters shall be referred, unless otherwise ordered by the house. 7. The sjieaker shall not be called upon to vote unless the house be equallj' divided, or unless his vote, if given to the minority, will make the division equal; and in case of such equal division the question shall be lost. 8. All acts, addresses, and joint resolutions shall be assigned by the speaker; and all writs, warrants, or subpoenas, issued by order of the house, shall be under his hand and seal, attested by the clerk. 9. In case of any disturbance or disorderly conduct in the galleries, the speaker or chairman of the committee of the whole house, shall have the power to order the same to be cleared. 10. No person but the members and officers of the house, mem- bers of the council, and members of the senate, the secretary of the state, treasurer, and clerks of the senate, shall be admitted within the door of the representatives' chamber unless by invi- tation of the speaker, or some member of the house \vith the 372 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

consent of the speaker, except in public hearings, parties, their counsel and witnesses, imder the direction of the speaker. 11. The speaker shall have XJOwer to substitute any member to perform the duties of the chair, such substitution not to ex- tend beyond one legislative day.

OF DECORUM AND DEBATE.

12. When any member is about to speak in debate, make a motion, or deliver any matter to the house, he shall rise from his seat and respectfully address himself to the speaker. 13. If any member transgress the rules of the house, the

speaker* shall, or any member maj', call him to order; in which case the member so called to order shall immediately sit down, and the question of order shall then be distinctly stated from the chair; and in all cases where a member shall be called to order for uttering disrespectful words, upon the request of any member the words objected to shall be reduced to writing by the member so calling to order; after which the member so called to order may explain, and the question shall be open to debate, as in other cases, and decided by the speaker, whose decision shall be submitted to imless an appeal be made to the house, by a member, in which case the only question shall be "Is the speaker's decision correct?" which shall be decided without debate. If the decision be in favor of the member called to order, he may proceed; if otherwise, and the case may require it, he shall be liable to the censure of the house. 14. In all cases the member first rising shall speak first. When two members rise at the same time, the speaker shall name the person to speak. 15. No member shall speak more than twice on the same ques- tion without leave of the house; nor more than once until every member choosing to speak shall have sjioken. 16. While the speaker is putting any question, or addressing the house, no one shall walk out of or across the house; nor in such case, or when a member is speaking, shall entertain private discourse; nor, while a member is speaking, shall pass between him and the chair; nor shall any member leave his seat while the yeas and nays are calling. 17. No member shall vote on any question in the event of which he is directly interested; nor in any case where he was not RULES OF THE HOUSE. 373

present when the question was put; nor sit upon any committee when he isdirectly interested in the question under consideration. In case of such interest of a member of a committee, the fact shall be reported to the house, and another person substituted on that question in his place. 18. Every member who shall be in the house when a question is put shall give his vote, unless the house, fo;- special reason, shall excuse him. 19. No motion shall be debated until the same shall be seconded and stated from the chair; and when a motion shall be made and seconded, it shall be reduced to writing, if desired by the speaker or any member, and delivered at the table, and read by the speaker, before the same shall be debated. 20. No petition shall be received bj'' -the house unless it be presented by a member thereof, and upon motion made for that purpose; nor until the substance of said jDetition be concisely minuted, and the name of the member, and the town he repre- sents, recorded upon the back thereof; and it shall be the duty of the speaker, whenever any motion relative to a petition is to be stated to the house, to state, in the first place, the substance of the petition as minuted on the back thereof. 21. After a motion is stated by the speaker, it shall be in pos- session of the house, but may be withdrawn at any time before an amendment. 22. When any question is under debate, no motion shall be received, but, first, to adjourn; second, to lay on the table; third, for the previous question; fourth, to postpone indefinitely; fifth, to postpone to a certain day; sixth, to commit; and seventh, to amend; which several motions shall have precedence in the order in which they are arranged. Motions to adjourn, to lay on the table, and to take from the table, shall be decided without debate. 23. The speaker shall put the previous question in the follow- ing form: "Shall the main question now be put?" and all debate upon the main question shall be suspended until the previous question has been decided. After the adoption of the previous question, the sense of the house shall forthwith be taken upon pending amendments, in their regular order, and then upon the main question. 24. On the ijrevious question no member shall speak more than once without leave; and all incidental questions of order, arising 24 374 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

after a motion for the previous question shall be decided without debate, excepting on appeal, and on such api^eal no member shall be allowed to speak more than once without leave of the house. No member shall be allowed to speak more than five minutes on the motion, nor on appeal on questions of order. 25. If the previous question is decided in the negative, it shall not be again in order till after adjournment, but the main ques- tion shall be left before the house and disposed of as though the previous question had not been put. 26. When a question is postponed indefinitely, the same shall not be acted upon during the session except by unanimous consent. 27. Any member may call for a division of the question when the sense will admit of it; and upon a motion to amend, a refusal to strike out words shall neither jDreclude amendment to such words nor a motion to strike out and insert. 28. A motion for commitment, until it is decided, shall pre-

clude all amendment to the main question, and all motions and reports may be committed at the pleasure of the house. 29. No new motion shall be admitted, under color of amend- ment, as a substitute for the motion under debate. 30. No vote shall be reconsidered, unless the motion for recon- sideration be made by a member who voted with the majority, nor unless the notice of siich motion be given on the same day on which the vote passed, or on the next day on which the house shall be in session, between the hours of 10 and 12 o'clock. 31. When the reading of a paper is called for and objected to by any member, it shall be determined by a vote of the house. 32. Any member may excuse himself from serving on any committee at the time of his appointment, if he is then a member of two other committees which have not reported. 33. Each member shall seasonably and punctually attend to his duty in the house, and no one shall absent himself from the service of the house unless he have leave, or be sick and unable to attend. 34. The speaker shall appoint a teller for each division of the house, whose duty it shall be to report to the chair the state of the vote, whenever a division of the house is called for. OF COMMITTEES AND TIIEIK DUTIES. 35. The following standing committees shall be appointed early in the January session: RULES OF THE HOUSE. 375

A committee on revising and compiling- the laws of the state; a committee on national affairs; a committee on elections; a com- mittee on the judiciary; a committee on banks; a committee on the state prison; a committee on insurance; a committee on the state agricultural college; a committee on agriculture; a com- mittee on manufactures; a committee on appropriations; a com- mittee on retrenchment and reform; a committee on military affairs; a committee on education; a committee on the state nor- mal school; a committee on incorporations; a committee on towns; a committee on county affairs; a committee on labor; a committee on the asylum for the insane; a committee on rail- roads; a committee on roads, bridges, and canals; a committee on unfinished business; a committee on mileage; a committee on fisheries and game; a committee on the industrial school; a com- mittee on soldiers' home; a committee on claims; a committee on forestry; a committee on public health; a committee on public improvements; a committee on liquor laws, to consist of twelve members each; a committee on journal of the house, to consist of three members, one of whom shall be the speaker; a committee on rules, to consist of five members, one of whom shall be the speaker. It shall be the duty of the committee on revising and compiling the laws to consider all matters relating to those subjects, and recommend such changes, modifications, and additions as may be desirable; also to consider all bills, resolutions, and reports of committees relating to those subjects which may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on national affairs to consider all matters of national concern, all matters referred to the state by the general government, and all matters pertaining to our federal relations, that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on elections to examine and report upon the certificates or other credentials of the elec- tion of the members returned to serve in this house, and to take into consideration all petitions and other matters in relation to elections or returns as shall be presented, or come into question, and shall be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on the judiciary to take into consideration all matters in relation to the judiciary system of the state; and all matters where a constitutional question is involved. All applications for acts of incorporation which under 76 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

the rules -would be referred to the committee on incorporations or manufactures, shall first be referred to the committee on the the applicants cannot judiciary to inquire whether the object of be obtained by voluntary incorporation under the general laws of the state, and shall report accordingly. It shall be the duty of the committee on banks to consider all applications for the incorporation of banks, and all subjects relating to such institutions that may be referred to it. It shall be the of the committee on the state prison to take duty into consideration all matters in relation to the state prison, to examine all reports and accounts that may be submitted by the warden, or that may be otherwise referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on insurance to consider all applications for the incorporation of insurance companies, and all subjects relating to insurance companies, domestic and foreign, and whether life, fire, marine, accidental, or of any other character that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on the state agricultural

college to examine into the rules and government of the New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts, and all matters connected therewith, and all such other matters as may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on agriculture to take into consideration all matters concerning the agricultural in- terests, and the incoriioration of agricultural societies that shall be referred to it.

It shall be the duty of the committee on manufactures to con- sider all matters concerning the manufacturing interests of the state, and all apijlications for incorporation for manufacturing purposes, which shall be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on appropriations to examine and take into consideration the state of the treasury, to report what sum it may be necessary to raise as a state tax, and on every subject touching the' financial interests of the ^tate that maybe referred to) it. be the duty of the committee on retrenchment and It shall reform to take into consideration the public expenditures and all questions relating thereto; and also to consider all questions

relating to the subject of administrative reforms in the various departments of the state government that may be referred to it. RULES OF THE HOUSE. 377

It shall be the duty of the committee on military affairs to consider all applications for altering- and amending laws regu- lating- the militia of this state, and for the removal of military officers that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on education to consider all subjects relative to the regulation of school districts and

schools, and all matters concerning education that may be re- ferred to it.

It shall be the duty of the committee on the state normal school to examine in relation to the government of the state normal school, and all matters connected therewith, and all such other matters as may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on incorporations to con- sider all applications for acts of incorporation, and all other matters which may come in question relative to bodies corporate, that may be referred to it, excepting those relating to towns, soci- parishes, turnpikes, railroads, canals, banks, agricultural eties, and factories. It shall be the duty of the committee on towns to consider all applications for the alteration of town lines by the annexation of one jjortion of a town to another, and all applications for incor- poration of towns by division of towns, or otherwise, that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on coiinty affairs to con- sider all applications for the alteration of county lines or the creation of new counties, the salaries of county officers, the set- tlement of paupers, and all other matters relating to county affairs that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on labor to consider all

petitions relating to labor and wages, and all other matters relat- ing thereto that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on the asylum for the insane to examine all accounts of the asylum, particularly of those relating to the expenditure of moneys appropriated by the state; to examine into the rules and government of the institu- tion, and all matters of general interest connected therewith, and all such matters as shall be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on railroads to consider all petitions for the incorporation of railroads, for alterations, and all matters relative thereto that may be referred to it. 378 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

It shall be the duty of the committee on roads, bridges, and canals to consider all applications for the incorporation of turn- pikes, bridges, or canals, and for the alteration of tolls, and all matters relative thereto that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on unfinished business to examine and report, from the journals of the last session, all such matters as were then jaending and \indetermined. It shall be the duty of the committee on mileage to ascertain the distance traveled by each member of the house, and report to the house the names of the several members and the mileage allowed to each. It shall be the duty of the committee on fisheries and game to consider all matters concerning the location, growth, cultivation, protection, improvement, and preservation of fish and game within the state and all matters relative thereto, which may be referred to it.

It shall be the duty of the committee on thei industrial school to examine the rules and government of the institution, and all matters of general interest connected therewith, and all such matters as may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on soldiers' home to con- sider all the matters pertaining to the soldiers' home that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on forestry to consider all matters relating to the forests of thel state and public parks that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on public health to con- sider all matters relating to the health of the inhabitants of the state and vital statistics that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on public improvements to consider all matters pertaining to public improvements in the state that may be referred to it. It shall be the duty of the committee on claims to audit, adjust, and report on all accounts and claims that may be presented for allowance, except accounts for printing, military accounts, and accounts for engrossing bills. It shall be the duty of the committee on journal of the house, from day to day, and before the commencement of the morning session, to examine the journal of the preceding day, and report to the house at once any errors; provided, however, that the RULES OF THE HOUSE. 379

read at the opening of any journal of the preceding day shall be morning session whenever requested by any ten mernbers. It shall be the duty of the committee on liquor laws to consider all matters pertaining to the liquor traflSc that may be referred to it.

be the duty of the committee on rules to consider all It shall matters pertaining to the rules of pi-ocedure of the house that may be referred to it. 36. All other committees shall consist of three members, unless otherwise ordered. 37. The standing committees shall attend at their respective committee-rooms two hours before the meeting of the house in the morning, and at such other times as the house shall order; and no committee shall sit during the sitting of the house unless when the speaker shall consider it necessary. The committees shall promxjtly consider and report on all matters referred to them. 38. The first named member of any committee appointed by the speaker of the house shall be chairman; and in case of his absence, or being excused by the house, the next named member, and so on, as often as the case may happen, unless the committee, by a majority of the number, elect a chairman. And when any committee shall report otherwise than by bill, they shall, if the subject admit of it, subjoin to their report a resolution making such disposition of the matter committed to them as to the com- mittee shall seem expedient. 39. Whenever it shall not be convenient for any standing com- mittee to attend properly to all the business which may be properly referred to it, the speaker ma}% on a vote of the house to that effect, appoint an additional committee on the same subject, to consist of the same number of members as the original com- mittee, whose duty it shall be to take into consideration all mat- ters in relation to that subject which shall be referred to it by the house, and to report thereon. OF BILLS. 40. Every and joint resolution shall be introduced by mo- bill tion for leave, or by an order of the house on the report of the committee; and no bill or joint resolution shall be introduced by any member (except on the report of a committee) unless he shall 380 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

have given at least one day's notice of intention, and of the object of the bill or joint resolution to be introduced. 41. Every bill and resolution originally introduced into the house shall be expressed in words clearly, so that it shall not be necessary to refer to ajiy ather act or statute to ascertain the meaning thereof. 42. Every bill shall have three several readings in the house

previous to its passage. The first reading shall be for informa- tion; and thereupon, when the bill shall have been introduced by a committee, if not rejected or otherwise disposed of, a time shall be assigned for a second reading; and upon the second reading, if not rejected or otherwise disposed of by the house, a time shall be assigned for a third reading. When a bill shall have been introduced by a member upon leave, or bj' message from the senate, and read a first time, if it be not rejected or otherwise disposed of by the house, the question shall be, "Shall the bill be read a second time?" An.d if ordered to a second reading it shall immediately be read a second time by its title, and be by the speaker referred to the appropriate standing committee, unless otherwise ordered by the house. No bill after it has been read a second time, shall have a third reading until after an adjournment. The time assigned for the second and third read- ings of bills and resolutions shall be eleven o'clock in the fore- noon and three o'clock in the afternoon, unless otherwise ordered by the house. 43. No amendment shall be made but upon the second reading of a bill or joint resolution; and all bills and resolutions shall be in writing, with the name of the member and the town he repre- sents on the back thereof. The orders of the day for the reading of bills and joint resolutions shall hold for every succeeding day until disposed of. 44. All bills, and all votes and resolutions that are necessary to be carried to the senate for their concurrence, may be sent by the assistant clerk. 45. Every bill shall be marked on the first page "house bill," and every joint resolution shall be marked "house joint resolu- tion," and each bill and resolution shall be regularly numbered, beginning with No. 1, and continuing consecutively, as each bill or joint resolution is introduced into the house. 46. Every bill and joint resolution originating in the house. RULES OF THE HOUSE. 881

which has been favorably reported upon by the committee having it in charge, shall be declared by the speaker laid upon the table, and the clerk shall procure a sufficient number of printed copies thereof for the use of the house, and cause the same to be dis- tributed to the members; and the clerk shall cause said bills and joint resolutions to be jirinted on paper of uniform size; and Avhen said bills and joint resolutions are so printed and distrib- uted, the clerk shall after one day cause the same to be laid on the speaker's table, and they shall be taken up in their order, without motion, and disposed of, in the same manner as they would have been had they not been declared laid on the table. 47. All bills and joint resolutions appropriating money, re- ported from any committee, shall be referred to the committee an appropriations for revision. 48. No standing rule or order of the house shall be rescinded w^ithout one day's notice being given of the motion therefor; nor suspended, unless by a vote therefor of two thirds of the members present. OF THE COMMTTEE OF THE WHOLE HOUSE.

49. The house may resolve itself into committee of the whole house at anj^ time, on the motion of a member made for that purpose; and in forming a committee of the whole house the speake:^ shall leave the chair, and a chairman to preside in com- mittee shall be appointed by the speaker. 50. Upon bills and resolutions committed to a committee of the whole house, the bill or resolution shall first be read through- out by the clerk, and then again read and debated by clauses, leaving the preamble of the bill to be last considered; the body of the bill or resolution shall not be defaced or interlined, but all amendments, noting the page and line, shall be dulj'^ entered by the clerk on a separate paper, as the same shall be agreed to by the committee and so reported to the house. After report, the bill or resolution shall again be subject to be debated and amended by clauses, before a question to pass it to a third read- ing be taken. 51. The rules of proceeding in the house shall be observed in committee of the whole house, so far as they may be applicable, except the rule limiting the time of speaking. 382 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

ORDER OF BUSINESS OE THE DAY. 52. The speaker shall call for petitions from members of the house. The petitions having- been presented and disposed of, reports, first from the standing and then from the select com- mittees, shall be called for and disposed of. And the above busi- ness shall be done in no other part of the day, except by permis- sion of the house. 53. The unfinished business in which the house was engaged at the last preceding adjournment, if called for by any member, shall have the preference over all other business except the gen- eral order of the day; and no motion, or any other business except the general order of the day, shall be received without special leave of the house, until the former is disposed of. CONSTITUTION OF THE

STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE.

PART FIRST.-BILL OF RIGHTS. Article

Article 21. Only qualified persons to serve as Ju- 1. Equality of men ; origin and object of rors, and to be fully compensated. government. 22. Liberty of the press. 2. Natural rightP. 23. Retrospective laws prohibited. Society, its organization and purposes. ?. 24. Militia.

4. Rights of conscience unalienable. 25. Standing armies. 5. Religious freedom recognized. 26. Militarj-, subject to civil power. 6. Public worship of the Deity to be en- 27. Quartering of soldiers. couraged right of electing religious ; 28. Taxes to be levied only by the people teachers ; free toleration ; existing or legislature. contracts not atTected. 29. Suspension of laws by legislature only. 7. State sovereignty. 30. Freedom of speech. S. Accountability of magistrates and ofiB- 31. Meetings of legislature, for what pur- cers to the people. pose. 9. No hereditary office or place. 32. Rights of assembly, instruction, and 10. Right of revolution. petition.'^ k 11. Elections and elective franchise. 33. Excessive bail, fines, and punishments 12. Protection and taxation reciprocal ; prohibited. private property for public use. 34. Martial law limited. 13. Conscientiously scrupulous not com- 35. The judiciary tenure ; of oflBce. pellable to bear arms. 36. Pensions. 14. Legal remedies to be free, complete, 37. The legislative, executive, and judicial and prompt. departments to be kept separate. 15. Accused entitled to full and substan- 38. Social virtues inculcated. tialstatement of charge not obliged ;

to furnish evidence against himself ; PART SECOND.— FORM OF GOVERN- may produce proofs and be fully MENT. heard, etc. 16. No person to be again tried after an 1. Name of body politic.

acquittal trial by jury in capital ; 2. Legislature, how constituted. cases . 3. General court, when to meet and dis-

17. Criminal trials in county, except in solve. general insurrection. 4. Power of general court to establish 18. Penalties to be proportioned to offenses; courts. true design of punishment. 5. To make laws, elect officers, define 19. Searches and seizures regulated. their powers and duties, impose 20. Trial by jury in civil causes ; excep- fines, and assess taxes. tions. 6. Valuation of estates.

383 384 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL,

Article Article 7. Members of legislature not to take 36. Senate to elect their own officers fees or act as counsel. quorum. 8. Legislature to sit with open doors. 37. Senate to try impeachments ; mode of proceeding. HOUSE OF KEPKESENTATIVES. 38. Judgment on impeachments limited. 39. Chief justice to preside on impeach- 9. Eepresentatives elected biennially ra- ; ment of governor. tio, of representation. 10. Small towns may elect a proportionate EXECUTIVE POWER— GO VERNOK. part of time. 40. Title of governor. 11. Biennial election of representatives in 41. Election of governor ; return of votes November. ;

electors ; no choice, legislature to if 12. Qualifications of electors. elect one of two highest candidates ; 13. Eepresentatives, tiow elected, and qualifications tor governor. qualiflcations of. 42. In case of disagreement, governor to 14. Compensation of legislature. adjourn or prorogue legislature if 15. Vacancies in house, how filled. ;

infectious distemper or other causes 16. House to impeach before the senate. exist, may convene them elsewhere 17. Money bills to originate in house. 43. Veto of governor to bills, provisions 18. Pow-er of adjournment limited. as to. 19. Quorum, what constitutes. Resolves to be treated like 44. bills. 20. Privileges of members of the legis- 45. Governor and council to nominate and lature. appoint officers nomination three ; 21. House to elect speaker and officers, days before appointment. settle rules of proceeding, and pun- 46. Governor and council have negative ish misconduct. on each other. 22. Senate and executive have like pow- 47. Field officers to recommend, and gov- ers ; imprisonment limited. ernor to appoint, company officers. 23. Journal and laws to be published ; yeas 48. President of senate to act as governor and nays, and protests. when office vacant. SENATE. 49. Governor to prorogue or adjourn legis- lature and call extra sessions. 24. Senate, how constituted ; tenure of 50. Power and duties of governor as com- office. mander-in-chief ;limitation. 25. Senatorial districts, how constituted. 51. Pardoning power. 26. Election of senators. 52. Militia officers, removal of. 27. Senators, how and by whom chosen 53. Staff and non-commissioned officers,

right of suffrage. by whom' appointed. 28. Qualification of senators. 54. Division of militia into brigades, regi- 29. Inhabitant defined. ments, and companies. 30. Inhabitants of incorporated places ; 55. Money drawn from treasury only by their rights, etc. warrant of governor pursuant to 31. Biennial meetings, how warned, gov- law. erned, and conducted return of ; 56. Accounts of military stores, etc., to be votes. rendered quarterly. 32. Governor and council to count votes 57. Compensation of governor and coun- for senators and notify the persons cil.

elected. 58. Salaries of judges. 33. Vacancies in senate, how filled. COUNCIIi. 34. Senate judges of their own elections. 35. Adjournments limited, except in im- 59. Councilors, mode of election, etc. peachment cases. 60. Vacancies, hpw filled, if no choice. CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 385

Article Article 61. Occurring afterward ; new election ; 79. Jurisdiction and terms of probate governor to convene ; duties. courts. 62. Impeachment of councilors. 80. Judges and registers of probate not to 63. Secretarj- to record proceedings of act as counsel. council. CLERKS OF COURTS. 64. Councilor districts provided for. 65. Elections by legislature may be ad- 81. whom appointed. Clerks of courts, by journed from day to day order thereof. ;

ENCOURAGEMENT OF LITERA- TURE, ETC. SECRETARY, TREASURER, COM- 82. Encouragement of literature, etc. MISSARY-GENERAL, ETC. C6. Election of secretary, treasurer, and OATHS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS, EX- commissary -general. CLUSIONS FROM OFFICE, ETC. 67. State records, where kept dutj' of ; 83. Oath of civil officers. secretary. 84. Before w'hom taken. 68. Deputy secretary. 85. Form of commissions. 69. Secretary to give bond, 86. Form of writs. COUNTY TREASURERS, ETC. 87. Form of indictments, etc. 88. Suicides and deodands. 70 County treasurers and registers of 89. Existing laws to continue in force, if probate, solicitors, sheriffs, and reg- not repugnant to constitution. isters of deeds elected. 80. Habeas Corpus. 71. Counties may be divided into districts 91. Enacting style of statutes. for registering deeds. Governor and judges prohibited from JUDICIARY POWER. holding other ofHces. 93 Incompatibility of offices only two ;

72. Tenure of office to be expressed in offices of profit to be holden at same commissions judges to hold oflBce ; time. during good behavior, etc.; remov- 94. Incompatibility of certain offices. able by address. 95. Bribery and corruption disqualify for 73. Judges to give opinions, when. office. 74. Justices of the peace commissioned 96, Value of money, how computed. for five years. Constitution, when to take effect. 75. Divorces and appeals, where tried. 98, Revision of constitution provided for. 76. Jurisdiction of justices in civil causes. 99. Question on revision to be taken every 77. Judges and sheriffs, when disqualified seven years. by age. 100. Enrollment of constitution. 78. Judges and justices not to act as coun- sel.

PART FIEST.

BILL OF RIGHTS.

Article men are born equally free and independent; 1. All therefore government of right originates from the people, is all founded in consent, and instituted for the general good. Art.* 2. All men have certain natural, essential, and inherent rights, among which are the enjoying and defending life and 386 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

liberty, acquiring-, possessing, and protecting property, and, in a word, of seeking and obtaining hai^piness. Akt. 3. When men enter into a state of society they surrender up some of their natural rights to that society in order to insure the protectio?! of others; and, without such an equivalent, the sur- render is void. Art. 4. Among the natural rights, some are in their very na- ture unalienable, because no equivalent can be given or received for them. Of this kind are the rights of conscience. Art. 5. Every individual has a natural and unalienable right to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience and reason; and no subject shall be hurt, molested, or restrained, in his person, liberty, or estate, for worshiping God in the manner and season most agreeable to the dictates of his own conscience, or for his religious profession, sentiments, or persuasion, provided he doth not disturb the public peace or disturb others in their religious worship. Art. 6. As morality and piety, rightly grounded on evangelical principles, will give the best and greatest security to government, and will lay in the hearts of men the strongest obligations to due subjection, and as the knowledge of these is most likely to be propagated throug'h a society bj'' the institution of the jjublic worship of the Deity and of public instruction in morality and religion, therefore, to promote these important purposes, the peo- ple of this state have a rig-ht to empower, and do hereby fully empower, the legislature to authorize, from time to time, the sev- eral towns, parishes, bodies corporate, or religious societies within this state to make adequate provision, at their own expense, for the support and maintenance of public Protestant teachers of piety, religion, and morality. Providci], notwiilistanding, that the several towns, parishes, bodies corporate, or religious societies shall at all times have the exclusive right of electing their own public teachers, and of contracting with them for their support and maintenance. And no person of any one particular religious sect or denomination shall ever be compelled to pay towards the support of the teacher or teachers of another persuasion, sect, or denomination. And every denomination of Christians, demean- shall be ing themselves quietly and as good subjects of the state, under the protection of the law; and no subordination of equally any one sect or denomination to another shall ever be established CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 387

bj^ law. And notliing- herein shall be understood to affect any former contracts made for the support of the ministry; but all such contracts shall remain and be in the same state as if this constitution had not been made. Akt. 7. The people of this state have the sole and exclusive right of governing themselves as a free, sovereign, and independ- ent state, and do, and forever hereafter shall, exercise and enjoy every power, jurisdiction, and right pertaining thereto which is not or may not hereafter be by them expressly delegated to the United States of America in congress assembled. Aet. S. All power residing originally in, and being derived from, the people, all the magistrates and officers of government are their substitutes and agents, and at all times accountable to them. Art. 9. No office or i^lace whatsoever in government shall be hereditary, the abilities and integrity requisite in all not being t]-ansmissible to iDosterity or relations. Art. 10. Government being instituted for the common benefit, protection, and security of the whole community, and not for the private interest or emolument of any one man, family, or class of men, therefore, whenever the ends of government are j)erverted and public liberty manifestly endangered, and all other means of redress are ineffectual, the people may, and of right ought to, reform the old or establish a new government. The doctrine of non-resistance against arbitrary power and oppression is absurd,^ slavish, and destructive of the good and happiness of mankind. Art. 11. All elections ought to be free; and every inhabitant of the state, having the proper qualifications, has equal right to elect and be elected into office. Art. 12. Every member of the community has a right to be protected by it in the enjoyment of his life, liberty, and property. He is, therefore, bound to contribute his share in the expense of such protection, and to yield his personal service, when jaecessary, or an equivalent. But no part of a man's property shall be taken from him or applied to piiblic uses without his own consent or that of the representative body of the people. Nor are the inhab- itants of this state controllable by any other laws than those to which they or their representative body have given their consent. Art. 13. No person who is conscientiously scrupulous about the lawfulness of bearing arras shall be compelled thereto, pro- vided he will pay an equivalent. 388 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

Art. 14. Every subject of this state is entitled to a certain remedy, by having recourse to the laws, for all injuries he may receive in his person, property, or character; to obtain right and justice freely, without being obliged to purchase it; completely and without any denial; promptly, and without delay; conform- ably to the laws. Art. 15. No subject shall be held to answer for any crime or offense until the same is fully and plainly, substantially and for- mally, described to him, or be compelled to accuse or furnish evi- dence against himself. And every subject shall have a right to produce all proofs that may be favorable to himself, to meet the witnesses against him face to face, and to be fully heard in his defense by himself and counsel. And no subject shall be arrested, imprisoned, despoiled, or deprived of his property, immunities, or privileges, put out of the protection of the law, exiled, or de- prived of his life, liberty, or estate, but by the judgment of his peers or the law of the land. Art. 16. No subject shall be liable to be tried, after an acquit- tal, for the same crime or offense; nor shall the legislature make

any law that shall subject any person to a capital punishment (excepting for the government of the army and navy, and the militia in actual service) without trial by jury. Art. 17. In criminal prosecutions, the trial of facts in the vicinity where they happen is so essential to the security of the life, liberty, and estate of the citizen, that no crime or offense

'ought to be tried in any other county than that in which it is committed, except in cases of general insurrection in any partic- ular county, when it shall apjjear to the judges of the superior court that an impartial trial cannot be had in the coimty where the offense may be committed, and, upon their report, the legis- lature shall think proper to direct the trial in the nearest county in which an impartial trial can be obtained. Art. 18._ All penalties ought to be proportioned to the nature of the offense. No wise legislature will affix the same punishment to the crimes of theft, forgery, and the like, which they do to those of murder and treason. Where the same undistinguishing severity is exerted against all offenses, the people are led to for- get the real distinction in the crimes themselves and to commit the most flagrant with as little compunction as they do the light- est offenses. For the same reason, a multitude of sanguinary CONSTITUTION OF JCEW HAMPSHIRE. 389

laws is both imiDolitic and unjust, the true design of all punish-

ments being to reform, not to exterminate, mankind. Art. 19. Every subject hath a right to be secure from all un- reasonable searches and seizures of his person, his houses, his l>apers, and all his i)Ossessions. Therefore, all warrants to search suspected places or arrest a person for examination or trial, in prosecutions for criminal matters, are contrary to this right, if the cause or foundation of them be not previously supported bj' oath or affirmation, and if the order, in a warrant to a civil officer, to make search in susj)eeted places or to arrest one or more sus- pected persons or to seize their property, be not accompanied with a special designation of the person or object of search, arrest, or seizure; and no warrant ought to be issued but in cases and with the formalities iDrescribed by law. Art. 20. In all controversies concerning property and in all suits bet"«'een two or more persons, except in cases in Avhich it has been heretofore otherwise used and practised, and except in cases in which the value in controversy does not exceed one hun- dred dollars and title of real estate is not concerned, the parties have a right to trial by jury; and this method of' jirocedure shall be held sacred, unless, in cases arising on the high seas and such as relate to mariners' wages, the legislature shall think it neces- sary hereafter to alter it. Art. 21. In order to reap the fullest advantage of the inesti- mable privilege of trial by jury, great care ought to be taken that none biit qualified persons should be appointed to serve; and such ought to be fully compensated for their travel, time, and attend- ance. Art. 22. The liberty of the press is essential to the security of freedom in a state; it ought, therefore, to be inviolably preserved. Art. 23.Retrospective laws are highly injurious, opj)ressive, and unjust. No such laws, therefore, should be made, either for the decision of civil causes or the punishment of oifenses. Art. 24. A well-regulated militia is the proper, natural, and sure defense of a state. Art. 25. Standing armies are dangerous to liberty, and ought not to be raised or kept up without the consent of the legislature. Art. 26. In all cases and at all times, the military ought to be under strict subordination to, and governed by, the civil power. Art. 27. Xo soldier, in time of peace, shall be quartered in any 35 ^90 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

house without the consent of the owner: and, in time of war, such quarters ought not to be made but by the civil magistrate, in a oianner ordained by the legrislature. Art. 2S. Xo subsidy, charge, tax. impost, or duty shall be es- "tablished. fixed, laid, or levied, under any pretext whatsoever, •without the ccnsent of the people or their representatives in the legislature, or authority derived from that body. Abt. 29. The power of suspending the laws or the execution of them ought never to be exercised but by the legislature, or by authority derived therefrom, to be exercised in such particular cases onlj" as the legislature shall expressly provide for. Aet. 30. The freedom of deliberation, speech, and debate in •either house of the legislature is so essential to the rights of the people, that it cannot be the foundation of any action, complaint, or prosecution in any other court or place A%hatsoever. Aet. 31. The legislature shall assemble for the redress of pub- lic grievances and for making such laws as the public good may

require. Art. 32. The people have a right, in an orderly and peaceable manner, to assemble and consult iipon the common good, give instructions to their representatives, and to request of the legis- lative body, by way of petition or remonstrance, redress of the wrongs done them, and of the grievances they suffer. Art. 33. Xo magistrate or court of law shall demand exces- sive bail or sureties, impose excessive fines, or inflict cruel or unusual punishments. Art. 34. Xo person can in any case be subjected to law mar- tial or to any pains or penalties by virtue of that law, except those employed in the army or navy, and except the militia in actual service, but by authority of the legislature. Art. 35. It is essential to the preservation of the rights of every individual, his life, liberty, property, and character, that there be an impartial interpretation of the laws and administra- tion of justice. It is the right of every citizen to be tried by judges as impartial as the lot of humanity will admit. It is, therefore, not only the best policy, but for the security of the rights of the people, that the judges of the supreme judicial court should hold their offices so long as they behave well, subject, how- ever, to such limitations on account of age as may be provided by CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, 391

the constitution of the state; and that they should have honor- able salaries, ascertained and established by standing laws. Aet. 36. Economy being a most essential virtue in all states, especially in a 3'oung one, no pension should be granted but in consideration of actual services; and such pensions ought to be granted with great caution by the legislature, and never for more than one year at a time. Akt. 37. In the government of this state, the three essential — powers thereof to wit, the legislative, executive, and judicial — ought to be kept as separate from, and independent of, each other as the nature of a free government will admit or as is consistent with that chain of connection that binds the whole fabric of the constitution in one indissoluble bond of union and amity. Aet. 38. A frequent recurrence to the fundamental principles of the constitution and a constant adherence to justice, modera- tion, temperance, industry, frugality, and all the social virtues, are indispensably necessary to preserve the blessings of liberty and good government. The people ought, therefore, to have a particular regard to all those principles in the choice of their officers and representatives; and they have a right to require of their lawgivers and magistrates an exact and constant observ- ance of them in the formation and "execution of the laws necessary for the good administration of government.

PART SECOND. FORM OF GOVERNMENT. Article The people inhabiting the territor3' formerly- called 1.

The Province New Hampshire do hereby solemnly and mutually of agree with each other to form themselves into a free, sovereign, and independent body politic, or state, by the name of The State OF New Hampshire. GENERAL COUET. Aet. 2. The supreme legislative power within this state shall be vested in the senate and house of representatives, each of which shall have a negative on the other. Aet. 3. The senate and house shall assemble biennially, on the first Wednesday of January and at such other times as they may 392 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

judge necessary, and shall dissolve and be dissolved seven days next preceding- the said first Wednesday of January biennially, and shall be styled The Gekeral Court of New Hampshire. Art. 4. The general court shall forever have full povper and authority to erect and constitute judicatories and courts of rec- ord or other courts, to be holdeu in the name of the state, for the hearing-, trjing, and determining- all manner of crimes, offenses, pleas, processes, plaints, actions, causes, matters, and things -whatsoever, arising- or happening -within this state, or between or concerning persons inhabiting, or residing, or brought within the same, or whether the same be criminal or civil, or whether the crimes be capital or not capital, and whether the said pleas be real, personal, or mixed, and for the awarding and issu- ing execution thereon; to which courts and judicatories are here- by given and granted full power and authority, from time to time, to administer oaths or affirmations for the better discovery of truth in any matter in controversy or depending before them. Art. 5. And, further, full power and authority are hereby given and granted to the said general court, from time to time to make, ordain, and establish all manner of wholesome and reason- able orders, laws, statutes, ordinances, directions, and instruc- tions, either with penalties or without, so as the same be not repugnant or contrary to this constitution, as they may judge for the benefit and welfare of this state and for the governing and ordering thereof and of the subjects of the same, for the neces- anrj support and defense of the government thereof; and to name and settle biennially, or provide by fixed laws for the naming and settling all civil oflicers -within this state, such ofiicers ex- cepted the election and appointment of whom are hereafter in this form of government otherwise provided for; and to set forth the several duties, powers, and limits of the several civil and mili- tary officers of this state, and the forms of such oaths or affirma- tions as shall be respectively administered unto them for the exe- cution of their several offices and ijlaces, so as the same be not repugnant or contrary to this constitution; and, also, to impose fines, mulcts, imprisonments, and other punishraents; and to impose and levy proportional and reasonable assessments, rates, and taxes upon all the inhabitants of, and residents within, the said state, and upon all estates within the same, to be issued and disposed of by warrant, under the hand of the governor of this CONSTITUTION OF NEW^ HAMPSHIRE. 393

state for the time being-, with the advice and consent of the coun- cil, for the public sei-vice, in the necessary' defense and support of the government of this state and the protection and preserva- tion of the subjects thereof, according to such acts as are or shall be in force within the same. Provided, that the general court shall not authorize any town to loan or give its money or credit, directly or indirectly, for the benefit of any corporation having for its object a dividend of profits, or in anj^ way aid the same by taking its stock or bonds. Art. 6. And, while the public charges of government or any in the manner part thereof shall be assessed on polls and estates that has hieretofore been practiced, in order that such assess- ments may be made with equality, there shall be a valuation oP the estates within the state taken anew once in every five years, at least, and as much oftener as the general court shall order. Art. 7. Xo member of the general court shall take fees, be of counsel, or act as advocate in any cause before either branch of the legislature; and, upon due proof thereof, such member shall forfeit his seat in the legislatiire. Art. 8. The doors of the galleries of each house of the legisla- ture shall be kept open to all persons who behave decently, except when the welfare of the state, in the opinion of either branch, shall require secrecy'.

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Art. 9. There shall be, in the legislature of this state, a repre- sentation of the people, bienniallj^ elected, and founded upon principles of equality, and, in order that such representation may be as equal as circumstances will admit, every town, or place entitled to town privileges, and wards of cities having six hundred inhabitants by the last general census of the state, taken by authority of the United States or of this state, may elect one rep- resentative; if eighteen hundred such inhabitants, may elect two representatives; and so proceeding in that proportion, making twelve hundred such inhabitants the mean inci'easing number for any additional representative: provided, that no town shall be divided or the boundaries of the wards of any city so altered as to increase the number of representatives to which such town or city maj' be entitled by the next preceding census; and provided, further, that, to those towns and cities which since the last census 394 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. have been divided or had their boundaries or ward lines changed, the general court, in session next before these amendments shall take effect shall equitably apportion representation in such man- ner that the niimber shall not be greater than it would have been had no such division or alteration been made. Art. 10. Whenever any town, place, or city ward shall have less than six hundred such inhabitants, the general court shall author- ize such town, place, or ward to elect and send to the general court a representative such proportionate part of the time as the number of its inhabitants shall bear to six hundred; but the gen- eral court shall not authorize an^y such town, place, or ward to elect and send such representative, except as herein provided. Art. 11. The members of the house of representatives shall be chosen biennially, in the month of November, and shall be the second branch of the legislature. Art. 12. All pei-sons qualified to vote in the election of sen- atoi's shall be entitled to vote, within the district where they

dwell, in the choice of representatives. Art. ir>. Every member of the house of representatives shall be chosen by ballot, and, for two years, at least, next preceding his election, shall have been an inhabitant of this state; shall be, at the time of his election, an inhabitant of the town, parish, or place hemay be chosen to represent and shall cease to represent ;

such town, parish, or place immediately on his ceasing to be qual- ified as aforesaid. Art. 14. The presiding officers of both houses of the legisla- ture shall severally receive out of the state treasury as compen- sation in full for their services, for the term elected, the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, and all other members thereof seasonably attending and not departing without license, the sum of two hundred dollars, exclusive of mileage: provided, Jwtoever, that when a special session shall be called by the governor, such officers and members shall receive for attendance an additional

compensation of three dollars per day for a x^eriod not exceeding fifteen days, and the usual mileage. Art. All intermediate vacancies in the house of representa- 15. tives maj- be filled up from time to time in the same manner as biennial elections are made. Art. 16. The house of representatives shall be the grand in- quest of the state, and all impeachments made by them shall be heard and tried by the senate. CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 395

Art. 17. All money the house of repre- bills shall oi-iginate in

sentatives, but the senate may propose or concur with amend- ments, as on other bills. Art. 18. The house of representatives shall have power to adjourn themselves, but no longer than two days at a time. Art. 19. A majority of the members of the house of representa- tives shall be a quorum for doing business, but, when less than two thirds of the representatives elected shall be present, the assent of two thirds of those membei-s shall be necessary to render their acts and iwoceedings valid. Art. 20. Xo member of the liotTse of representatives or senate shall be arrested or held to bail on mesne process during his going to, returning from, or attendance upon, the court. Art. 21, The house of representatives shall choose their own epealcer, appoint their own officers, and settle the rules of proceed- ings in their own hoiise, and shall be judge of the returns, elec- tions, and qualifications of its membei's, as liointed out in this constitution. They shall have authority to punish by imprison- ment everj^ person who shall be guilty of disrespect to the house, in its presence, by any disorderlj^ and contemptuous behavior, or by threatening- or ill-treating any of its members, or by obstruct- ing its deliberations; every person guiltj- of a breach of its privi-

leges in making arrests for debt, or by assaulting any member during his attendance at any session; in assaulting or disturbing- anj' one of its officers in the execution of any order or x>rocedure of the house; in assaulting any witness or other person ordered to attend by, and during his attendance of, the house, or in rescu- ing any person arrested by order of the house, knowing them to be such. Art. 22. The senate, governor, and council shall have the same powers in like cases, provided, that no imprisonment by either for anj' offense exceed ten days. Art. 23. The journals of the proceedings and all public acts of both houses of the legislature shall be printed and published im- mediately after ever\' adjournment or prorogation, and, upon motion made b^y any one member, the yeas and nays iipon any question shall be entered on the journal, and any member of the senate or house of representatives shall have a right, on motiou made at the time for that ])ur])ose. to liave his protest or dis.sent, wnth the reasons, against any vote, resolve, or bill passed, entered on the journal. 396 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

SENATE. Art. 24. The senate shall consist of twenty-four members, who shall hold their otfice for two years from the first Wednesday of January next ensuing- their election. Akt. 2j. And, that the state may be equally represented in the senate, the legislature shall, from time to time, divide the state into twentj'-four districts, as nearly equal as may be without dividing-towns and unincorporated places; and, in making this they shall govern lliemselves by the proportion of direct <livision, taxes paid by the said districts, and timely make known to the inhabitants of the state the limits of each district. Art. 2G. The freeholders and other inhabitants of each dis- trict, qualified as in this constitution is provided, shall, biennially, g'we in their votes for a senator at some meeting holden in the anonth of November. ,

Art. 27. The senate shall be the first branch of the legislature, Jind the senators shall be chpsen in the following manner, viz.: every male inhabitant of each town, and parish with town privi- leges, and places unincorporated, in this state, of twenty-one years of age and upward, excepting paupers and persons excused from paying- taxes at their own request, shall have a right, at the biennial or otiier meetings of the inhabitants of said towns and •parishes, to be duly warned and holden biennially, forever, in the month of November, to vote, in the town or parish wherein he <lwells, for the senator in the district Avhereof he is a member. Art. 2S. Pniv'uU'd, ucvcrllH-less, that no person shall be capable of being- elected a senator who is not of the age of thirty years, iind who shall not have been an inhalntant of this state for seven years immediately preceding- his election; and, at the time thereof, he shall be an inhabitant of the district for which lie shall be ohosen. Art. 2!). And every jierson qualified as the constitution jiro- vides shall be considered an inhabitant, for the purijose of elect- ing- and l)eing elected into any otfice or jilace Avithin this state, in the town, parish, and plantation where he dwelleth and hath his Jiome. Art. aO. And the inhabitants of i^lantations and places unin- corporated, qualified as this constitution provides, who are or shall be required to assess taxes upon themselves towards the sup- port of government, or shall be taxed therefor, shall have the CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 397

same privilege of voting' for senators, in tlae })Iantations and places wherein they reside, as the inhabitants of the respective towns and parishes aforesaid liave. And the meetings of such plantations and places, for that pnrpose, shall be holden bien- niallj"^ in the month of November, at such places respectively therein as the assessors thereof shall direct; which assessors shall have like authority for notifying the electors, collecting and returning the votes, as the selectmen and town clerks have in their several towns by this constitution. Art. 31. The meetings for the choice of g-overnor, council, and senators shall be warned by warrant from the selectmen, and governed bj' a moderator, who shall, in the presence of the select- men (whose dutj- it shall be to attend), in open meeting, receive the votes of all the inhabitants of such towns and parishes pres- ent and qualified to vote for senators: and shall, in said meetings, in presence of the said selectmen and of the town clerk in said meetings, sort and count the said votes, and make a public decla- ration thereof, with the name of every person voted for and the number of votes for each person; and the town clerk shall make a fair record of the same, at large, in the town book, and shall make out a fair attested copy thereof, to be by him sealed up and directed to the secretary of the state, with a superscription ex- pressing the purport thereof; and the said town clerk shall cause such attested copy to be delivered to the sheriff of the countj" in Avhich said town or parish shall lie thirtj' da\ s, at least, before the first Wednesday of January, or to the secretary of the state at least twenty- days before the said first ^yednesday of January; and the sheriff of each count}- or his deputy shall deliver all such certificates by him received into the secretary's office at least twenty days before the first Wednesday of January. Art. 32. And, that there may be a due meeting of senators on the first Wednesday of January, biennially, the governor and a majority of the council for the time being shall, as soon as may be, examine the returned copies of such records, and, fourteen days before the first Wednesday of January, he shall issue his summons to such j)ersons as appear to be chosen senators bj* a majority of votes to attend and take their seats on that day: provided, nevertheless, that, for the first year, the said retvirned copies shall be examined by the president and a majority of the council then in office; and the said president shall, in like man- 398 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

ner, notif.y the persons elected to attend and take their seats accordingly. Art. 33. And in case there shall not appear to be a senator elected bj^ a majority of votes for anj^ district, the deficiency shall be snpplied in the following- manner, viz.: the members of the house of representatives and sucli senators as shall be declared elected shall take the names of the two persons having the high- est number of votes in the district, and out of them shall elect, by joint ballot, the senator wanted for such district; and, in this manner, all such vacancies shall be filled up in every district of the state; all vacancies in the senate arising by death, removal out of the state, or otherwise, except from failure to elect, shall be filled by a new election by the people of the district, upon the requisition of the governor, as soon as may be after such vacan- cies shall haiipen. Art. 34. The senate shall be final judges of the elections, re- turns, and qualifications of their own members, as pointed out in this constitution. Art. 35. The senate shall have power to adjourn themselves, provided such adjournment do not exceed two days at a time: protnded, 7i('VcrfJu'less, that, whenever they .shall sit on the trial of any impeachment, they niay adjourn to such time and place as they may think proper, although the legislature be not assembled on such day or at such place. Art. 36. The senate shall appoint tlicir president and other officers, and determine their own rules of proceedings. And not less than thirteen members of the senate shall make a quorum for doing business; and, when less than sixteen senators shall be present, the assent of ten, at least, shall be necessary to render their acts and proceedings valid. Art. 37. The senate shall be a court, with full jjower and authoritj' to hear, try, and determine all impeachments made by the house of representatives against any officer or officers of the state, for bribery, corruption, maljiractice, or maladministration in office, with full power to issue summons or compulsory process for convening Avitnesses before them; but, previous to the trial of anj' such impeachment, the members of the senate shall re- spectively be sworn truly and impartially to try and determine the charge in question according to evidence. And every officer impeached for briberj^ corruption, malpractice, or raaladminis- CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 399

tration in office shall be served with an attested copy of the impeachment and order of senate thereon, with such citation as the senate may direct, setting forth the time and place of their sitting to try the impeachment; which service shall be made by the sheritf or such other sworn officer as the senate may appoint, at least fourteen days previous to the time of trial; and, such cita- tion being duly sem-ed and returned, the senate may proceed in the hearing of the impeachment, giving" the person impeached, if he shall appear, full liberty of producing witnesses and proofs and of making his defense by himself and counsel; and may, also, upon his refusing or neglecting to appear, hear the proofs in sup- port of the impeachment, and render judgment thereon, his non- appearance notwithstanding; and such judgment shall have the same force and effect as if the person impeached had appeared and pleaded in the trial. Akt. 38. Their judgment, however, shall not extend further than removal from office, disqualification to hold or enjoy any place of honor, trust, or ijrofit under this state; but the party so convicted shall, nevertheless, be liable to indictment, trial, judg- ment, and punishment, according to the laws of the land. Art. 39. Whenever the governor shall be impeached, the chief justice of the supreme judicial court shall, during the trial, pre- side in the senate, biit have no vote therein.

EXECUTIVE POVPER. — GOVERNOR. Art. 40. There shall be a supreme executive magistrate, who shall be styled Governor of the State of New Hampshire, and whose title shall be His Excellency. Art. 41. The governor shall be chosen bienniallj, in the month of November, and the votes for governor shall be received, sorted, counted, certified, and returned in the same manner as the votes for senators; and the secretary shall lay the same before the sen- ate and house of representatives on the first Wednesday of Jan- uary, to be bj- them examined; and, in case of an election by a majority of votes through the state, the choice shall be by them declared and published; and the qualifications of electors of the governor shall be the same as those for senators; and, if no per- son shall have a majority of votes, the senate and house of rep- resentatives shall, by a joint ballot, elect one of the two persons having the highest number of votes, who shall be declared gov- 400 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. ernor. And no person shall be eligible to this office unless, at the time of his election, he shall have been an inhabitant of this state for seven j^ears next preceding-, and unless he shall be of the age of thirty years. Art. 42. In cases of disagreement between the tvro houses with regard to the time or place of adjournment or prorogation, the governor, with advice of council, shall have the right to adjourn or prorogue the general court, not exceeding ninety days at any one time, as he may determine the public good maj' require; and he shall dissolve the same seven days before the said first Wednes- day of January. And, in case of any infectious distemper pre- vailing in the place where the said couit at any time is to convene, or any other cause wherebj- dangers may arise to the health or lives of the members from their attendance, the governor may direct the session to be hoi den at some other, the most convenient, place within the state. Art. 43. Every bill which shall have passed both houses of the general court shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the governor; if he approve, he shall sign it, but if not, he shall return it, with his objections, to that house in which it shall have orig- inated, who shall enter the objections at large on their journal and proceed to reconsider it. If, after such reconsideration, two thirds of that house shall agree to pass the bill, it shall be sent, together with such objections, to the other house, by which it shall likcAvise be reconsidered; and, if approved by two thirds of that house, it shall become a law. But, in all such cases, the votes of both houses shall be determined by yeas and nays, and the names of the persons voting for or against the bill shall be entered on the journal of each house respectively. If any bill shall not be returned by the governor within five days (Sundays excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, the same shall be a law in like manner as if he had signed it, unless the legisla- ture, by their adjournment, prevent its return, in which case it shall not be a law. Art. Every resolve shall be presented to the governor, and, 44. Ivefore thesame shall take effect, shall be approved by him, or, being disapproved by him, shall be repassed by the senate and house of representatives, according- to the rules and limitations prescribed in the case of a bill. Art. 45. All judicial officers, the attorney-general, coroners, CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 401

and all officers of the nav^' and general and field ofiicors of the militia, shallbe nominated and appointed bj- the governor and council; and every such nomination shall be made at least three days prior to such appointment; and no appointment shall take place unless a majority of the council agree thereto. Art. 4G. The governor and council shall have a negative on each other, both in the nominations and appointments. Every nomination and appointment shall be signed by the governor and council, and every negative shall be also signed by the governor or council who made the same. Art. 47. The captains and subalterns in the respective regi- ments shall be nominated and recommended by the field officers to the governor, who is to issue their commissions immediately on receipt of such recommendation. Art. 4S. Whenever the chair of the governor shall become vacant, by reason of his death, absence from the state, or other- wise, the president of the senate shall, during such vacancy, have and exercise all the powers and authorities, which, by this consti- tution, the governor is vested with when personally xiresent; but when the president of the senate shall exercise the office of gov- ernor, he shall not hold his office in the senate. Whenever the chair both of the governor and of the president of the senate shall become vacant, by reason of their death, absence from the state, or otherwise, the speaker of the house shall, during such vacancies, have and exercise all the powers and authorities which, by this constitution, the governor is vested with when personally present; but when the speaker of the house shall exercise the office ofgovernor, he shall not hold his office in the house. Art. The governor, with advice of couhcil, shall have full 49.

power and authority, in recess of the general court, to prorogue the same from time to time, not exceeding ninety days in any one recess of said court; and, during the sessions of said court, to adjourn or prorogue it to any time the two houses may desire; and to call it together sooner than the time to which it may be adjourned or prorogued, if the welfare of the state should require the same. Art. 50. The governor of this state, for the time being, shall be commander-in-chief of the army and navy and all the military forces of the state by sea and land; and shall have full power, by himself or by any chief commander or other officer or officers, 402 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

from time to time to train, instruct, exercise, and govern the militia and navy; and for the special defense and safety of this state, to assemble in martial array and put in warlike posture the inhabitants thereof, and to lead and conduct them, and with them to encounter, repulse, repel, resist, and pursue by force of arms, as well by sea as hj land, within and without the limits of this state; and also to kill, slay, destroy, if necessary, and con- quer, by all fitting ways, enterprise, and means, all and every such person and persons as shall at any time hereafter, in a hostile manner, attennpt or enterprise the destruction, invasion, detri- ment, or annoyance of this state; and to use and exercise over the army and navy and over the militia in actual service the law martial, in time of war, invasion, and also in rebellion declared by the legislature to exist, as occasion shall necessarily reqiiire; and surprise, by all ways and means whatsoever, all and every such person or persons, with their ships, arms, ammunition, and other goods, as shall, in a hostile manner, invade or attempt the invading, conquering, or annoying this state; and, in fine, the gov- ernor hereby is intrusted with all other powers incident to the office of captain-general and commander-in-chief and admiral, to be exercised agreeably to the rules and regulations of the consti- tution and laws of the land: provided, that the governor shall not at any time hereafter, by wirtue of anj'- power by this constitu- tion granted, or hereafter to be. granted to him by the legislature, transport any of the inhabitants of this state or oblige them to march out of the limits of the same without their free and volun- tary consent or the consent of the general court, nor grant com- missions for exercising the law martial in any case without the advice and consent of the council. Art. 51. The power of pardoning offenses,, except such as per- sons may be convicted of before the senate, by impeachment of the house, shall be in the governor, by and with the advice of council; but no charter of pardon, granted by the governor, with advice of council, before conviction, shall avail the party pleading the same, notwithstanding any general or particular expressions contained therein, descriptive of the offense or offenses intended to be pardoned. Art. 52. No officer, duly commissioned to command in the militia, shall be removed from his office but by the address of both houses to the governor or by fair trial in court-martial pur- suant to the laws of the state for the time being. CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 403

Akt. 53. The commanding officers of the I'egiments shall ap- point their adjutants and quartermasters; the brigadiers, their brigade-majors; the major-generals, their aids; the captains and subalterns, their non-commissioned officers. Art. 54. The division of the militia into brigades, regiments, and companies, made in pursuance of the militia laws now in force, shall be considered as the proper division of the militia of this state, until the same shall be altered bj^ some future law. , Art. 55. No moneys shall be issued out of the treasury of this state and disposed of (except such sums as may be appropriated for the redemption of bills of credit or treasurer's notes, or for the payment of interest arising thereon) but by warrant under the hand of the governor for the time being, by and with the advice and consent of the council, for the necessarj- support and defense of this state and for the necessary protection and pres- ervation of the inhabitants thereof, agreeably to the acts and resolves of the general court. Akt. 56. All public boards, the commissarj^-general, all super- intending officers of public magazines and stores belonging to this state, and all commanding" officers of forts and garrisons Avithin the same shall, once in every three months, officially and without requisition, and at other times when required by the g'overnor, deliver to him an account of all g'oods, stores, provi- sions, ammunition, cannon with their appendages, and all small arms with their accoutrements, and all other public propertj- under their care respectively, distinguishing the quantity and kind of each as particularly as maj^ be, together with the condi- tion of such forts and garrisons. And the commanding officer shall exhibit to the governor, when required by him, true and exact plans of such forts, and of the land and sea, or harbor or harbors adjacent. Art. 57. The governor and council shall be compensated for their services, from time to time, by such grants as the general court shall think reasonable. Art. 58. Permanent and honorable salaries shall be established by law for the justices of the superior court. COUNCIL.

Art. 59. There shall be biennially elected by ballot five coun- cilors, for advising the governor in the executive part of govern- 404 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL. ment. The freeholders and other inhabitants in each county, qualified to vote for senators, shall, some time in the month of November, give in their votes for one councilor, which votes shall be received, sorted, counted, certified, and returned to the secre- tary's office, in the same manner as the votes for senators, to be by the secretary laid before the senate and house of representa- tiveson the first Wednesday- of January. Art. 60. And the person having a majority of votes in any county shall be considered as duly elected a councilor; but, if no I>erson shall have a majority of votes in any county, the senate and house of representatives shall take the names of the two persons who have the highest number of votes in each county and not elected, and out of those two shall elect, by joint ballot, the councilor wanted for the county; and the qualifications for councilors shall be the same as for senator. Art. G1. If any person thus chosen a councilor shall be elected governor or member of either branch of the legislature and shall accept the trust, or if any person elected a councilor shall refuse to accept the office, or in case of the death, resignation, or removal of any councilor out of the state, the governor may issue a pre- cept for the election of a new councilor in that county where such vacancy shall happen; and the choice shall be in the same man- ner as before directed; and the governor shall have full power and authority to convene the council, from time to time, at his discretion; and with them or the majoritj' of them, may and shall, from time to time, hold a council for ordering and direct-

ing the affairs of the state, according to the laws of the land. Art. 62. The members of the council may be impeached by the house and tried by the senate for bribery, corruption, mal- practice, or maladministration. Art. 61!. The resolutions and advice of the council shall be recorded by the secretary in a register, and signed by all the memljcrs present agreeing thereto; and this record maj' be called for at any time by either house of the legislature; and any mem- ber of the council may enter his opinion contrary to the resolu- tion of the majority, with the reasons for such opinion. Art. 64. The legislature may, if the public good shall here- after require it, divide the state into five districts, as nearly equal as may be, governing themselves by the number of ratable polls and proportion of public taxes, each district to elect a councilor; CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 405

and, in case of such division, the manner of the choice shall be conformable to the present mode of election in counties. Art. 65. And, whereas the elections appointed to be made by this constitution on the first Wednesday of January biennially, by the two houses of the legislature, may not be completed on that day, the said elections may be adjourned from day to day until the same be completed. And the order of the elections shall be as follows: The vacancies in the senate, if any, shall be first filled up; the governor shall then be elected, provided there shall be no choice of him by the people; and afterwards, the two houses shall proceed to fill up the vacancy, if any, in the council.

SECRETARY, TREASURER, COMMISSART-GENERAIi, ETC. Art. The secretary, treasurer, and commissary-general 66. shall be chosen by joint ballot of the senators and representatives, assembled in one room. Art. 67. The records of the state shall be kept in the office of the secretarj-; and he shall attend the g-overnor and council, the senate and representatives, in person or by deputy, as they may require. Art. 68. The secretary of the state shall at all times have a

deputjs to be by him appointed, for whose conduct in office he

shall be responsible; and, in case of the death, removal, or inabil- shall exercise all the duties of the ity of the secretary, his deputy office of secretary of this state until another shall be appointed. Art. 69. The secretarjs before he enters upon the business of his office, shall give bond, with sufficient sureties, in a reasonable sum, for the use of the state, for the punctual performance of his trust.

COUNTY TREASURERS, ETC. Art. 70. The countj' treasurers, registers of probate, solicitors, sheriffs,and registers of deeds shall be elected by the inhabitants of the several towns in the several counties in the state, accord- ing to the method now practiced and the laws of the state: pro-

vided, necertheless, the legislature shall have authority to alter the manner of certifying the votes and the mode of electing those offi- cers, but not so as to deprive the people of the right they now have of electing them. Art. 71. And the legislature, on the application of the major 406 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

part of the inhabitants of any county, shall have atithority to divide the same into two districts for registering- deeds, if to them it shall appear necessary, each district to elect a register of deeds; and, before they enter upon the business of their offices, shall be respectively sworn faithfully to discharge the duties thereof, and shall severally give bond,with sufficient sureties, in a reasonable sum, for the use of the county, for the punctual performance of their respective trusts.

JUDICIARY POWER.

Art. 72. The tenure that all commissioned officers shall have by law in their offices shall be expressed in their respective com- missions. All judicial officers, duly appointed, commissioned, and sworn, shall hold their offices during good behavior, excepting those concerning whona there is a different provision made in this constitution: provided, nevertheless, the governor, with consent of council, may remove them upon the address of both houses of the legislature. Art. 73. Each branch of the legislature, as well as the gov- ernor and council, shall have authority to require the opinions of the justices of the superior court upon important q^iestions of law and upon solemn occasions. Art. 74. In order that the people may not suffer from the long continuance in place of any justice of the peace who shall fail in discharging the important duties of his office with ability and fidelity, all commissions of justices of the peace shall become void at the expiration of five years from their respective dates; and upon the expiration of any commission, the same may, if neces- sary, be renewed, or another person appointed, as shall most con- duce to the well-being of the state. Art. 75. All causes of marriage, divorce, and alimony, and all appeals from the respective judges of probate, shall be heard and tried bj- the superior court, until the legislature shall bj' law make other provision. Art. 76. The general court are empow^ered to give to justices of the peace jurisdiction in civil causes, Avhen the damages de- manded shall not exceed one hundred dollars and title of real estate is not concerned, but with right of appeal to either party to some other court. Art. 77, No person shall hold the ofBce of judge of any court, CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 407

or judge of pi-obate, or sheriff of any county, after he has attained the age of seventy years. Akt. 78. No judge of- any court or justice of the peace shall act as attorney, or be of counsel to any party, or originate any civil suit, in matters which shall come or be brought before him as judge or justice of the peace. Art. 79. All matters relating to the probate of wills and grant- ing letters of administration shall be exercised by the judges of

probate in such manner as the legislature have directed or may hereafter direct; and the judges of probate shall hold their courts at such place or places, on such fixed days as the conveniency of the people may require and the legislature from time to time appoint. Art. 80. No judge or register of probate shall be of counsel, act as advocate, or receive any fees as advocate or counsel, in any probate business which is pending or may be brought into any court of probate in the county of which he is judge or register. CLERKS OF COUBTS. Art. 81. The judges of the courts (those of probate excepted) shall appoint their respective clerks, to hold their office during pleasure; and no sneh clerk shall act as an attorney or be of counsel in any cause in the court of which he is a clerk, nor shall he draw any writ originating a civil action.

ENCOURAGEMENT OF LITERATURE, ETC.

Art. 82. Knowledge and learning generally diffused through a community being essential to the preservation of a free govern- ment, and spreading the opportunities and advantages of educa- tion through the various parts of the country being highly con- ducive to promote this end, it shall be the duty of the legislators and magistrates, in all future periods of this government, to cher- ish the interest of literature and the sciences, and all seminaries and public schools; to encourage private and public institutions, rewards, and immunities for the promotion of agriculture, arts, sciences, commerce, trades, manufactures, and natural history of the country; to countenance and inculcate the principles of humanity and general benevolence, public and private charity, in- dustry and economy, honesty and punctuality, sincerity, sobriety, and all social affections and generous sentiments, among the peo- 408 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

no money raised by taxation shall pie: provided, nevertheless, that ever be granted or applied for the use of the schools or institu- tions of any religious sect or denomination.

— OATHS A^^D SUBSCRIPTIONS. EXCLUSION FROM OFFICES. COMMIS- — — — — SIONS. ^VRITS. CONFIRMATION OF LAWS. HABEAS CORPUS. THE — — — ENACTING STYLE. CONTINUANCE OF OFFICERS. PROVISION FOR A FUTURE REVISION OF THE CONSTITUTION. ETC. — Art. 83. Any person chosen governor, councilor, senator, or representative, military or civil oflBcer (town officers excepted), accepting the trust, shall, before he proceeds to execute the duties of his office, make and subscribe the following declarations, viz. : — I, A B, do solemnly swear that I will bear faith and true allegi- ance to the state of New Hampshire and will support the consti- tution thereof. So help vie God. I, A B, do solemnly and sincerely swear and affirm that I will

faithfullyand impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent on me as according to the best of my abilities, ,

agreeably to the rules and regulations of this constitution and the laws of the state of New Hampshire. So help me God. Any person having taken and subscribed the oath of allegiance, and the same being filed in the secretary's office, he shall not be obliged to take said oath again. Provided, altcays, when any person chosen or appointed as afore- said shall be of the denomination called Quakers, or shall be scrupulous of swearing and shall decline taking the said oaths, such person shall take and subscribe them, omitting the word "swear," and likewise the words "So help me God," subjoining, instead thereof, "This I do under the pain^ and penalties of perjury." Art. 84. And the oaths or affirmations shall be taken and sub- scribed by the governor, before the president of the senate, in presence of both houses of the legislature; and by the senators and representatives first elected under this constitution, as al- tered and amended, before the president of the state and a major- itj of the council then in office, and forever afterward before the governor and council for the time being; and by all other officers, before such persons and in such manner as the legislature shall from time to time appoint. CONSTITUTION OF NKW UAMPSHIRE. 409

Art. 85. All commissions shall be in the name of the state of New Hampshire, signed by the governor, and attested by the sec- retary or his deputy, and shall have the great seal of the state affixed thereto. Art. 86. All writs issuing out of the clerk's office, in any of the courts of law, shall be in the name of the state of New Hampshire, shall be under the seal of the court whence they issue, and bear teste of the chief, first, or senior justice of the court; but, when such justice shall be interested, then the writ shall bear teste of some other justice of the court, to which the same shall be return- able; and be signed by the clerk of such court. Art. 87. All indictments, jjresentments, and informations shall conclude, "against the peace and dignity of the state." Art. 88. The estate of such persons as may destroy their own lives shall not for that offense be forfeited, but descend or ascend in the same manner as if such persons had died in a natural way. Nor shall any article which shall accidentally occasion the death of any person be henceforth deemed a deodand, or in any wise forfeited on account of such misfortune. Art. 89. All the laws which have heretofore been adopted, used, and approved in the province, colony, or state of New Hamp- shire, and usually practised on in the courts of law, shall remain and be in full force until altered and repealed by the legislature, such parts thereof only excepted as are repugnant to the rights and liberties contained in this constitution; provided, that noth- ing herein contained, when compared with the twenty-third arti- cle in the bill of rights, shallbe construed to affect the laws already made respecting the persons or estates of absentees. Art. 90. The privilege and benefit of the habeas corpus shall be enjoyed in this state in the most free, easy, cheap, expeditious, and ample manner, and shall not be suspended by the legislature except upon the most urgent and pressing occasions, and for a time not exceeding three months. Art. 91. The enacting style, in making and passing acts, stat- utes, and laws, shall be. Be it enacted by the senate and house of representatives in general court convened. Art. 92. No governor or judge of the supreme judicial court shall hold any or place under the authority of this state, office

except such as by this constitution they are admitted to hold, saving that the judges of the said court may hold the offices of 410 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANUAL.

justices of the peace throughout the state; nor shall they hold any place or or receive any pension or salarj^ from any office other state, g-overnment, or power whatever. Akt. 93. No person shall be capable of exercising at the same time more than one of the following offices within this state, viz. :

judge of probate, and never more than sheriff, register of deeds; two offices of profit, which may be held by appointment of the governor, or governor and council, or senate and house of repre- sentatives, or superior or inferior coui-ts, military offices and offices of justices ofthe peace excepted. Akt. 94. No person holding the office of judge of any court (except special judges), secretary, treasurer of the state, attorney- general, commissary-general, military officers receiving pay from the continent or this state (excepting officers of the militia occa- sionally called forth on an emergency), register of deeds, sheriff, or officers of the customs, including naval officers, collectors of excise and state and continental taxes hereafter appointed, and not having settled their accounts with the respective officers with whom it is their duty to settle such accounts, members of con- gress, or any person holding any office under the United States, shall at the same time hold the office of governor, or have a seat in the senate or house of representatives or council; but his being chosen and appointed to and accepting the same shall operate as a resignation of their seat in the chair, senate, or house of repre- sentatives, or council, and the place so vacated shall be filled up. No member of the council shall have a seat in the senate or house of reiDresentatives. Art. 95. No person shall ever be admitted to hold a seat in the legislature, or office of trust or importance under this gov- any ernment, who in the due course of law, has been convicted of bribery or corruption in obtaining an election or appointment. Art. 96. In all cases where sums of money are mentioned in this constitution, the value thereof shall be computed in silver at six shillings and eight pence per ounce. Art. 97. To the end that there may be no failure of justice or danger to the state by the alterations and amendments made in the constitution, the general court is hereby fully authorized and directed to fix the time when the alterations ^d amendments shall take effect, and make the necessary arrangements accord- ingly. CONSTITUTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 411

Art. 98. It shall be the duty of the selectmen and assessors of the several towns and places in this state, in warning the first annual meetings for the choice of senators, after the expiration of seven years from tjie adoption of this constitution as amended, to insert expressly in the warrant this purpose among the others for the meeting, to wit: to take the sense of the qualified voters on the subject of a revision of the constitution; and, the meeting being warned accordingly, and not otherAvise, the moderator shall take the sense of the qualified voters present as to the neces- sity of a revision; and a return of the number of votes for and against such necessity shall be made by the clerks, sealed up and directed to the general court at their then next session; and if it shall appear to the general court by such return that the sense of the people of the state has been taken, and that, in the opinion of a majority of the qualified voters in the state present and voting at said meetings, there is a necessity for a revision of the consti- tution, it shall be the duty of the general court to call a conven- tion for that purpose; otherwise the general court shall direct the sense of the people to be taken, and then proceed in the manner before mentioned; the delegates to be chosen in the same manner and proportioned as the representatives to the general court: pro- vided, that no alteration shall be made in this constitution before the same shall be laid before the towns and unincorporated places and approved by two thirds of the qualified voters present and voting on the subject. Art. 99. And the same method of taking the sense of the peo- ple as to a revision of the constitution, and calling a convention for that purpose, shall be observed afterward, at the expiration of every seven years. Art. 100. This form of government shall be enrolled on parch- ment and deposited in the secretary's office, and be a part of the laws of the land, and printed copies thereof shall be prefixed to the books containing the laws of this state in all future editions thereof. VI \l.h

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