Hale's weekly. (Conyers, Ga.) 1892-1895, July 23, 1892, Image 3
10 : UL CAPITAL Being ^ in Congressional 15 Country’s Welfare. ..31 for mu day to day briefly edo-gs from under Ubh-h 9 ash MEASURES ^deratios- OTHER notes. [ _ ^tCbouse, Thursday, PSe the resolution provid sr- * Lleymade “tarttgiorthcasoof P di( j no t pro I ,hc ^Tr 1 was not Georgia, pending took in the congress. same Tite nf that the r.» T mW Agreed to 7« nrivile^ed one. passed join*' resolution invite was certain king E&to the president to send delegates to the Pan L medical congress to be held in L P S oe ! , September, 1893- the select W! ; LlppSlnta Michigan, from to invo.tiga.te the r ,Xnm office submitted the majority re Ion investigation. It was the calendar. The floor wa. Lrded to the submitted commerce the commit- confer (port 1 . Forney legislative appropna on the .the bill L As agreed upon, ap , $153 160 $31,899,252 being hn L r s it passed the senate, $«15, than as it passed the house, L :ess fiscal than the and appropriations $854,785 e last year % for the khan the estimates 1 fiscal year. The report was [einr to. Mr. Herbert presented the the conference report on it appropriation bill, and was to Mr. Herbert then moved that „, e recede from its disagreement Senate amendments which are still iroversy. These are the appropri naval . ami tor [vision $50,000 for a review for the construction of » ittle ship. Mr. Herbert stated his motion should be agreed to 111 L would appropriate $9,998, g than the appropriations the last lor the naval service for ear Mr. Herbert’s motion was to and the bill is disposed of as he house is concerned. The con ; report on the diplomatic and con ippropriation bill was presented med to. The house then adjourn I committee on commerce not hav cceeded in transacting any busi (owing to these conference re¬ wind] have precedence, occupyi ng Bat.— In the house Friday, Mr. ■ of Tennessee, called up as a matter Bilege the resolution calling on the ■aster general for a report as to all ■mce established on railroads since ■ 4, 1889, together with copies of al pondence ■ion offered on the subject. time This aud was some ago ■ct Bostroads, tc the committee on postoffices I Mr. but was not reported Enloe explained that com Iwos made that in the exercise of Iwer the postmaster general had dis Inted in favor of some railroads and It others. The house should know ler the complaints were well found |he lould Republicans back to desired March 4, that 1885, the and re |Mr. go Enloe declined an amendment I effect they declined to vote on a I for the previous question. The ps question was ordered—yeas, 169; p—and the resolution was adopted, ■inference report on the army ap ption bill was presented and agreed pie house went into committee of pole—M r-for the i. Lester, of of considering Georgia,in the the I amendments purpose priation to the sundry civil pndments bill, 312 in number. Al! pM fair except those relating to s were read and non-con P >a. Mr. Holman then asked con feat general debate on the world’s ptijilments shall proceed for the N Saturday, speeches to be limited [ l a J 10 12 ®: o'clock and that Tuesday, a vote agreed shall to. be jQiately j the chairman was survound [ recorded members desirous of having their P tea minutes upon the list of speakers, 1 tho noise and confu n? ; e great that business had to be . “M. When comparative quiet ® s c 'Uied, the floor was accorded - , Hurborow, , k debate of Illinois, who open dmonts. upon the world’s fair . McCreary, Other speakers were R ^ of Kentucky;Pendle lest Virginia; Little, of New a L° r of Illinois, and Wheeler, , a-aina. The committee then ros fit house took a recess until 8 ( Ration fi, e evening session to be for the of private pension bills. ■-UAY. — j n Dj e house, senate to the fortification appropri - were non-concurred_______ in and a ordered. The house then pro Re consideration of a number I -A - pension bills which came over U, V. ni ffht with the previous ques |i 7 ( eu passed, ' SLxty-four private pension | into pfinmittee and of the then whole, the house Mr. 1 , r t J0 r g j a. ia the chair, on the Um0nt8 , -:PfU t0 the sundry civil tF,;" n kill. A number of speeches b. ' e for and against the dif [•; amendments. anything No vote was reach l connected with the ' >av ' an< ^ ‘'k 6 house adjourned, bj .‘Suspension q a y j Q the house, ao ' Rspred cessorof a fortnight ’e- 1 ' -orward party measures were sowed Mr. Lester, of Geor to suspend the rule3 and pass the bill for the improvement of the outer bar at Brunswick, Ga. Agreed to. Mr. Smith, of Arizona, moved to suspend the rules and pass the senate bill submitting to the court of private land claims the title of William McGarrahan to Rancho Panoche Grande, in the state of Califor¬ nia. (This is one of the oldest claims pending before congress. It has been before the national legislature for more than a quarter of a cen¬ tury and has always found earnest friends as it has found determin¬ ed enemies.”) The motion was agreeed to—yeas, 143; nays, 36. The bill has never before passed both houses. The bill was passed authorizing obtain, the direct secretary of the treasury to by selec¬ tion or competition of architects, plans and specificasions for puLlic buildings to be erected under the supervision of the treasury department and providing local supervision of their construction. The senate joint resolution was passed author¬ izing the committee on labor to make in¬ vestigation of the sliims of cities. The house, at 5 o'clock, took a recess until 7:30 o’clock, the evening session to be for general debate on the world’s fair feature of the sundry civil appropriation bill. the Tuesday. —Filibustering began in house Tuesday over a resolution reported from the committee on rules for the ap poincment or a committee to inquire into the administration of election laws in New York city by the United States offi¬ cials. Agreed to. The house then re¬ sumed iu committee of the whole consid¬ eration of the senate amendments to the sundry civil bill. The senate amend¬ ment increasing from $315,000 to $500, 000 the appropriation for the goveaument exhibit was non-concurred in—129 to 65. All the amendments increasing appropria¬ tions for the world’s Columbian commis¬ sion were non-concurred in in bulk. Mr. Durbovow moved to concur in the senate amendment appropriating $5,000,000 iu souvenir 50-cent coins to aid in de— fraying the costs of completing inaugurating the work the of preparation for world's Columbian exposition. After several other amendments had been called up and defeated, the question recurred ■L Mr. Durborow’s motion to concur iu the senate five-million-dollar amend ruent, and it was lost 91 to 116. lhe amendment was therefore non-concurred in. Au amendment to the senate Sun¬ day closing amendment was lost aud a motion to strike out that amendment was ruled out of order. W. A. Stone, of Pennsylvania, moved that the committee concur in the senate Sunday closing amendment, and upou a division, much to the surprise of both sides, there was a majority in favor of the motion, the voce standing 78 to 74. Tellers were ordered aud again the committee decided to concur, the vote standing 102 to 72. The announcement was received with applause. Mr. O’Neill, of Missouri, made a strenuous effort to add to the bill as a new section, a proviso making it unlawful for any officer of the govern¬ ment authorized to make contracts or auy officer of the District of Columbia to eontract with any person, firm or corpo - ration which employs Pinkerton detect¬ ives or auy other association of men as armed guards, and do employe c' such agencies shall be employed officer Id. any of gov¬ the ernment service or by any could in District of Columbia. It not come as a separate section without unanimous consent, and to this Mr. Oates oojected. Mr. O’Neill then offered it as an amend¬ ment to the clause appropriating mainly lor cap- to itol police. the Ilis employment purpose of was Pinkertons prevent District of Columbia during the in the Grand Army encampment, as well as at Lhe world’s fair. Alter half an hour con¬ sumed in securing a quoium, the amend¬ ment was agreed to—146 to 22. lhe committee rose and reported the bill to the house. The recommendation of the committee in regard to senate amend¬ ments was agreed to with the exception of those amendments ptrtnining to light¬ houses. to the geological survey, and to the world’s fair.' The vote then came upon the proposition amindment to non coicur in the senate ap propriating $5,000,000 for the aid of the world’s Columbian exposition, and it was agreed to—yeas, 122 ; nays, 110 . The Sunday closing amendment was then concurred in—146 to 61. A conference was ordered,and Messrs, ffolman, Bayers and Bingham vfere appointed presented conferees. the Mr Forney, o( Alabama, conference report on the fortification ap¬ propriation bill, and it was agreed amend¬ to without opposition. The senate ments to the general deficiency bill were non-concurred in, and a conference was ordered. On motion of Mr. Wheeler, of A1 ,bama, the bill was passed authorizing the the construction of a bridge across The Tennessee river at Deposit, Ala. house then adjourned. THE SENATE. Thursday. —The senate committee on contingent expenses have voted a compre¬ hensive resolution providing for an in¬ vestigation by a special senate committee of the Homestead troubles, organization the and employment of Pinkertons and nature of the labor troubles. The resolu¬ tion went over till Friday. Mr. Sherman introduced a bill repealing that part of the present silver act which provides take for the monthly purchases of bullion; to effect Januarv 1st next. Friday.— The last stage of legislation was crossed in the senate appropriation Friday as.to bills three of the principal and confer¬ —the legislative, in each navy of these army, having been ence reports and agreed to. Nevertheless it presented found to extend for two was necessary resolution of June weeks longer the joint expenditures of 30th to provide for such the government as are not covered by bills already sent to the president. The sug¬ gestion was made to limit the Jme of the extension to the 25th 0 ! July on the assumption that the session would be closed by or before that time, but Mr. Allison thought it wiser not to take any chances, but pass the joint resolution as it came from the house. Most of the day's session was spent in the discussion of the fort ficatious bill. The bill was finally passed, leaving only the deficiency bill unacted on by the senate, and notice was given that that bill would be taken up Saturday. A number of bills were taken from the calendar aud passed, among them the house bill to amend the act to authorize the construction of a bridge across the Tennessee river at Knoxville. After a short executive ses sion the senate, at 5.50 o’clock, adjourned till Saturday. Saturday.— In the senate, Saturday, after disposing of considerable routine business and bills to which no objection was raised, the general deficiency bill was taken up at 2 o’clock p. m. and the committee amendments were acted upon. The bill contains several items appropria¬ ting ridiculously small amounts. For instanc", there is an item of 22 cents for “ini; roving the harbor at San Francis¬ co,” one of 25 cents for the “marine hos¬ pital service,” one of 28 cents for “improving the Missouri river,” and one of 40 cents for the “repairs and preservation of public buildings.” The “signal service” gets 41 cents for cloth¬ ing, and “registers and receivers of the land office” are to have 60 cents for sala¬ ries and commissions. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company is to have its treasury increased by 67 ceuts in one item and by $447 in another, while the Atlantic and Pacific railroad is to be made the richer by $2.50. The last of the committee amendments was the insertion of a new silver section covering forty printed pages, to pay the findings of the court of claims for indemnity for French spoliation prior to July 31, 1801. These items aggregate $982,000. All items for insurance companies were struck out of the bill, and action on all items on the last twenty-three pages were suspended on the ground that they had been referred to the committee on claims and had not yet been reported upon by that committee.- All of the committee amendments having been acted upon, the bill was open to general amendments. adopted and Several were offered, some ; I others come up again. By general consent the bill went over till Monday and the senate adjourned. Monday, Mr. Monday. —In the senate, Pettigrew moved to insert au item of $50,000 for the collection and publica¬ tion, in connection with the World’s Co¬ lumbian exposition, of statistics of moral, intellectual and industrial progress of the colored people of the United States since January, 1863. Agreed to. The bill was reported from the committee of the whole to the senate, and all the amend¬ ments were agreed to in bulk. Mr. Per¬ kins asked unanimous consent to have struck from the bill an item of $50,000 for the widow of the late Senator Plum 1 ), of Kansas, at the request cf Mrs. Plumb. No objection being made, it was struck out, and then the deficiency bill was passed. On motion of Mr. Washburn, the anti option bill was taken up, but was temporarily and informally laid aside for other business. Several bills on the calendar were passed, and then Mr. Peffei desired to have the resolution for a select com mittee on the Homestead conflict taken up for action, but Mr. Washburn objected on the ground that it would probably give rise to debate, and Mr. Cameron confirmed that objection by saying that bis colleague, Mr. Quay, who was not present, desired to address the senate upon it. Opponents of the anti-option bill then interposed a series of motions, which had the character of dilatory mo tions, and which were also destined to oust the anti-option bill from its position of procedure. The friends of the measure were strong enough, however, to resist all these efforts, aud when the senate ad journed the anti-option bill was “unfin ished business.” Tuesday—I n the senate, Tuesday, at ter routine morning business, Mr. Gor man presented the conference report on the fortifications bill, and it was agreed to. Mr. Morgan called up the resolu tion offered by him on the 14th instant, directing the committee on finance to re port the bill to give all paper money issued by the United States as legal tender for debts, and to all standard silver dollars full legal tender given by law to coins of gold, and addressed the senate in ex planation and advocacy of it. The reso lution went ever without action, and, at 2 o’clock p. m., the anti-option bill was laid before the senate. Mr. Walcott said that h O did not know of any more irn *■0 ortant question to be considered by the senate than the resolution which had just been under discussion, and he moved that the senate again proceed to its consideration. Mr. Washburn asked the presiding offi cers, as a parliamentary question, the effect of Mr. Wolcott’s motion, if it were carried. He was told by the presiding officer, Mr. Manderson, that it wouid displace the anti option bill, and by Mr. Cockrell that it would kill the bill. The motion was rejected—yeas, laid before 7; nays, 50. The presiding officer the sen¬ ate a message from the president return¬ ing, without his approval, the senate bill to amend the act establishing a circuit court of appeals and to de fine an ^ regulate the jurisdic tion of n ed States courts in the matter of Indian depredation claims, The message was referred to the judiciary committee. The anti-option bill was again taken up and was riad in full by the clerk. Sundry amendments to the bill were presented. The senate pro ceeded to vote on amendments heretofore offered by Mr. Washburn, and they were all agreed to without question. A sub stitute was offered for the bill by Mr. George on part of himself, Mr. Coke and M r. Pugh. The substitute was ordered printed. The bill was then laid aside in formally and a reprint was ordered with the amendments agreed to and those proposed. After dispos¬ ing of a number of bills on the cal¬ endar a message announcing the action of the house on the sundry civil appropria¬ tion bill was laid before the senate, in¬ cluding the house provision in relation to the Pinkerton detective force. Mr. AUi sou said in regard to the latter that he had no doubt of its meeting the approval of the senate, but that its phraseology might have to be modified and that it should be in its appropriate place. On his motion, therefore, that amendment was disagreed to and a conference then agreed to on the whole bill. Messrs. Al¬ lison, Hale and Gorman were appointed conferees on the part of the senate. Af¬ ter a short extra session, the senate at 6:05 o’clock adiourned. NOTES. The house took up the civil sundry bill Friday, promptly disagreeing to the sen¬ ate amendments in a lump, with the ex¬ ception of the $5,000,000 worfd’s fair appropriation. that, The house wanted to debate and it was agreed that the debate should last until 2 o’clock next Tuesday, when a vote would be taken. The ways and means committee of the house,Monday morning, adopted a resolu¬ tion providing for the final adjournment of congress on the 25th. The resolution will soon bo called up, and, in the pres¬ ent temper of the house, there is little doubt that it will pass. The senate is equally anxious to bring the session to a close, so that nothing short of an emer gencp is likely to cause an extension by the senate of the day fixed in the resolu¬ tion. Under authority conferred by the sen ate resolution directing an investigation of the existence and cause of the depres sion iu agriculture by the senate agricul tural committee, Senator George has been designated by Chairman Paddock to act as a subcommittee to investigate the cotton-growing industry, and Mr. Cas.w has been charged with the inquiry into other branches of agriculture. They the wifi report to the full committee at next session of congress. The Pilotage Hill. Opponents of the bill exempting coast wise sailing vessels from paying state pilotage fees may rest assured that no legislation will be enacted by congress at this session detrimental to their interest, The commerce committee of the house decided Friday to postpone all further consideration of the measure until the next session. The bill has been before congress for many years and has several times passed the senate, but invariably meets with opposition in the house. As the law now stands, vessels are compelled to pay a pilotage fee on. leaving and en tering certain ports, principally those of Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia, even when they do not require the ser¬ vices of a pilot. Opposition to the bill COH1CS mainly from southern pilots, should who would be injuriously affected if it become a law. COLORED POPULATION Of the United States as Given In » Census Bulletin. The ce nsus office on Thursday issued s bulletin on the subject of the colored population of the United States in 1C90. The bulletin shows that the total colored population, as returned under the census Q f jggo, is 7,638,360. Of this number 7,470,040 are persons of African descent, 107,475 are Chinese, 2,039 are Japanese an a 68,808 are civilized Indiana, Con sidering persons of African descent it is 8een that there has been an increase dur i n g the decade from 1880 to 1890 of 889,247, or 13.51 per cent as against an increase during the decade from 1870 to qggo of 1,700.784, or 34.85 per cent. The bulletin says: colored The abnormal increase of the population of the south during the de ca daending in 1880, led to th CS popular belief that the negroes were i 5 creasing a t a muc h greater rate than the white population. The present census has shown, however, that the high rate of increase in the colored population as 8 hown by the census of 1880, was appa rent only and was duo to the imperfect enumeration of 1870 in the southern states, There has been an increase in the num ber of Chinese in the United States g ur i n g the decade from 1880 to 1890 of on jy 2,010, or t.91 per cent, the number re turned in 1880 being 105,465 and the number returned in 1890 being 107,475. The Chinese increased 66.88 per cent. f rom 1870 to 1880, and 80.91 percent, f rom 1860 to 4870 . j n jggq Dm Japanese in the United states numbered only 148, while in 1890 t h e y numbered 2,039. In 1870 there were only 551 Japanese returned under t b a t census. decreased Tlie civilized Indians have , q ur j n g the past ten years 7,601, or 11.45 j p er cen t. the number returned in 1880 j j ^eing 66,407, as against 58,806 returned ; n qggo. MADISON SQUARE GARDEN Selected as the Place to Notify Cleve¬ land and Stevenson. -phe subcommittee of the reception comm ittee appointed to receive the noti g C ation committee of the democratic na rional committee had a conference in y 0 rk Wednesday with the subcom m j ttee of the notification committee, Tbe mem b e rs of the notification commit tee not on j y a pj jr 0 f the proposition public to have tbe notification given in a ; lace b ut heartily endors d it. After ^ subcommitte the 1 J t j, e adjournment of the j oca [ subcommittee held a meeting. It j wag announced that they had secured the j re U9a i 0 f Madison notification. Square garden It Id -which to make the was decided to accept the garden and to hold the meeting at night. NEWS IN GENERAL happenings of the Day Gulled from Our Telegraphic and Cable Dispatches. CHAT IS TRANSPIRING THROUGHOUT OUK OWN COUNTRY, AND NOTES OF INTER¬ EST FROM FOREIGN LANDS. Sunday’s mortuary register of the c ty of Paris shows ten deaths in northern Paris attributed to cholera. The factory of the Western Linoleum company, at Akron, O., was burned Sun¬ day. The loss is $100,000, fully insuied. Cause unknown. As a result of the reapportionment of New York city, the republicans secure three districts, just what they had hither¬ to, and a fightiug chance in two or three others. Cleveland stockyards buildings at Jlevelaud, O., were entirely destioyed y fire Monday afternoon. The only hing saved is tns stockyards hotel. The jss will be from $100,0000 to $150,000. Advices of Sunday from Paris state that Senator Baron de Courcelles, form¬ erly French embassador at Berlin, lias been appointed French arbitrator on the Behring sea arbitration commission. The arbitrators will meet in Paris next week. The ocean record has again been beaten. The Cunarder Aurania beat the Alaska, of the Guion line, from Queens¬ town two hours and fifteen minutes. The Alaska left Queenstown July 10th, forty five minutes ahead of the Aurania, and reached her pier in New York Sunday,one hour and a half behind her opponent. 4 he race proves the Aurania the lasfer, uot withstanding she is the heavier of tlio two. A Washington dispatch of Sunday says: When the democratic nominees for president aud vice president the are formally notified of the action of Chicago convention by the committee ap pointed for that purpose, each will ro ceivc a substantial remembrance of the event. This remembrance will he a copy of the democratic platform handsomely engrossed on parchment, and bound in pure white buckskin, Dispatches from Pittsburg state that the Beaver Falls employes of Carnegie’s ; kept their threat and did not go to work Monday morning. Consequently the mill no (; resume. The men nre orderly ftll( j s t a nd about the streets talking in j ow au q guarded tones. Many of the strikers think the move made last Friday W as I)0 t w iso, and admit this, but. remain g rni in their determination to adhere to the s t a nd tuken. President Harrison issued a proclama¬ disturbed tion Saturday setting forth the condition of society in Idaho, resulting in a call upon the federal authorities for assistance and commanding “all persons engaged in said insurrection and in re¬ sistance to the laws to immediately dis¬ perse and retire peaceably t their abodes.” The proclamation was tele¬ I graphed to the military authorities in Idaho with instructions to promulgate it. A band of 180 reapers, men and women, employed at Be bar, Hungary, struck Tuesday for an increase in wages. When their demands were refused they became riotous. They offered battle to the gendarmes and stabbed the officer in command. The gendarmes then gave bat¬ tle in earnest and twelve of the rioters were killed and many more wounded. The rioters were well armed, fighting in skirmish fashion, and it required forty two rounds from the gendarmes’ rifles to win the fight. Papers were filed Tuesday in the United States circuit court of New York city for the removal of the suit of the Western National banK, of New Y»rk, Railroad against the Richmond and Danville Company from that state supreme court to the United States circuit court. The suit is begun for the recovery of apromis sory note given on January 18, 1892, by the Danville company, by Walter O. Oakman, for $200,000. The note fell due on June 21st, and the amount, with interest due since that date, is involved. The steamer Enchantress, Capt. Ham¬ mond, from Santos and Perambuco, was ieained at quarantine at New York Sun lay for examination and disinfection, during the voyage from Santos to Peram luco Capt. Hainmond and Purser A. E. foster were stricken with yellow fever. jthey died and were buried at sea. Im¬ mediately following the death of Ham¬ mond and Foster, Steward Wamsley, the second and third engineers, Pottinger and Parks, were stricken with the disease and all but the latter died. A grand reception was given in St. Petersburg, Russia, Monday, to officers of the steamer Leo, from New York, which recently arrived at that port with a large quantity of food for the starving peasants in the famine-stricken sections of the country. A richly bound address of thanks for the noble and timely gift to the stricken people was presented to the officers. Addresses were made by a num¬ ber of those present, including Dr. Tal mage and Count Bobrinsky, who is coun¬ sellor of state and who also hoids other high offices. The Cholera’s Ravages. An official cholera report issued at St. Petersburg, Russia. Thursday, shows that __July on 8 th and 9th there were 945 case* of the disease and 139 deaths throughout The ail the Russian districts affected. heaviest mortality at any single place is at Baku, where there were sixty-two deaths. While there were 191 ..ew cases in Astrakhan, there were only thirty-two deaths there. All private schools in Cau¬ casus will he closed owing to the prev¬ alence of cholera.