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7. Amend Section 1, line 17, by striking out the figures "$50.00-$50.00" and inserting in lieu thereof the figures "$175.00-$175.00."

8. Amend Section 1, line 18, by striking out the figures "$6,975.00-$6,975.00" and inserting in lieu thereof the figures "$7,375.00-$7,375.00."

9. Amend Section 1, line 20, by inserting after the word "stated" the words "subject to the general supervisory control of the State Administrative Board." And the House agree to the said amendments as thus amended.

ORVILLE E. ATWOOD,

HARRY H. WHITELEY,
HENRY T. ROSS,

Conferees on the part of the Senate.

WARREN D. BYRUM,

FRED B. WELLS,
PETER B. LENNON,

Conferees on the part of the House of Representatives.

The question being on the adoption of the Conference Report,
The roll was called and the Senators voted as follows:

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So, a majority of all the Senators-elect having voted therefor,
The Conference Report was adopted.

By unanimous consent the Senate returned to the order of

General Orders.

Mr. Horton moved that the Senate resolve itself into Committee of the Whole for consideration of the general orders.

The motion prevailed and the President pro tempore designated Mr. Horton as chairman.

Accordingly the Senate resolved itself into Committee of the Whole, with Mr. Horton in the chair.

After some time spent therein the committee rose; and, the President pro tempore having resumed the chair, the committee, through its chairman, reported back to the Senate, favorably and without amendment, the following entitled bills: House bill No. 386 (file No. 224), entitled

A bill to amend chapter 2 of part 5 of Act No. 84 of the Public Acts of 1921, entitled "An act to provide for the organization and classification of domestic corporations; to prescribe their rights, powers, privileges and immunities; to prescribe the conditions upon which corporations may exercise their franchises; to provide for the inclusion of certain existing corporations within the provisions of this act; to prescribe the terms and conditions upon which foreign corporations may be admitted to carry on business within this State; to prescribe penalties for violations of the provisions of this act; and to repeal certain acts and parts of acts relating to corporations," approved April 26, 1921, by adding thereto one new section to stand as section 7.

House bill No. 415 (file No. 202), entitled

A bill to amend sections 6, 15, 16, 17 and 22 of Act 238 of the Public Acts of 1897, as amended, entitled "An act for the ascertainment and protection of the interests of the State in escheated estates," the same being compiler's sections 322, 331, 332, 333 and 338 of the Compiled Laws of 1915.

House bill No. 195 (file No. 109), entitled

A bill to amend section 27 of Act No. 279 of the Public Acts of 1909, entitled "An act to provide for the incorporation of cities and for revising and amending their

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charters," same being section 3330 of the Compiled Laws of 1915, as amended by Act No. 84 of the Public Acts of 1919.

House bill No. 193 (file No. 233), entitled

A bill to amend section 2 of Act 217 of the Public Acts of 1897, entitled "An act to provide for the registration of deaths in Michigan and requiring certificates of death," the same being section 5605 of the Compiled Laws of 1915. House bill No. 84 (file No. 19), entitled

A bill to amend section 4 of chapter 2, part 1 of Act No. 256 of the Public Acts of 1917, entitled "An act to revise, consolidate and classify the laws of the State of Michigan relating to the insurance and surety business; to regulate the incorporation of domestic insurance and surety companies and associations, and the admission of foreign companies, and to provide for the departmental supervision and regulation of the insurance and surety business within this State." House bill No. 494 (file No. 243), entitled

A bill to amend section 19 of chapter 4 of Act No. 283 of the Public Acts of the State of Michigan for the year 1909, entitled "An act to revise, consolidate and add to the laws relating to the establishment, opening, improvement, maintenance and use of the public highways and private roads, the condemnation of property and gravel therefor; the building, repairing and preservation of bridges; setting and protecting shade trees, drainage, cutting weeds and brush within this State, and providing for the election and defining the powers, duties and compensation of State, county, township and district highway officials," being compiler's section 4365 of the Compiled Laws of the State of Michigan for the year 1915, as amended.

The bills were placed on the order of Third Reading of Bills.

Mr. Connelly moved that when the Senate adjourns today it stand adjourned until tomorrow, Friday, April 27, 1923, at 1:30 o'clock p. m.

The motion prevailed.

Mr Osborn moved to discharge the Committee of the Whole from the further consideration of

House bill No. 424 (file No. 193), entitled

A bill to repeal Act No. 478 of the Local Acts of 1905, entitled, as amended, "An act to provide for the creation of a board of county auditors for the county of Kent; to prescribe the powers and duties of its members and to provide for their compensation; to provide for the selection by said board of a secretary who shall devote his entire time to the work of said board and act as purchasing agent for said county," as last amended by Act No. 4 of the Local Acts of 1919. The motion prevailed.

Mr. Osborn moved that the bill be referred to the Committee on State Affairs. The motion prevailed.

On motion of Mr. Gansser, the Senators, standing, paid silent tribute to the memory of Michigan's hero dead who, 25 years ago today, marched away to service in the Spanish-American War, in response to President McKinley's call to arms.

By unanimous consent the Senate returned to the order of

Messages From the Governor.

The following messages from the Governor were received and read:

To the President of the Senate:

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 32, (Enrolled No. 32), being

An act to make appropriations for the Board of Osteopathic Registration for

the fiscal years ending June thirty, nineteen hundred twenty-four, and June thirty, nineteen hundred twenty-five, for maintenance, operation and other purposes.

Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

To the President of the Senate: Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 44, (Enrolled No. 33), being

An act to make appropriations for the State Board of Accountancy for the fiscal years ending June thirty, nineteen hundred twenty-four, and June thirty, nineteen hundred twenty-five, for maintenance, operation and other purposes.

Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

To the President of the Senate: Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 48, (Enrolled No. 34), being

An act to make appropriations for the Michigan Historical Commission for the fiscal years ending June thirty, nineteen hundred twenty-four, and June thirty, nineteen hundred twenty-five, for maintenance, operation and other purposes.

To the President of the Senate:

Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 49, (Enrolled No. 35), being

An act to make appropriations for the Commissioner of Pardons and Paroles for the fiscal years ending June thirty, nineteen hundred twenty-four, and June thirty, nineteen hundred twenty-five, for maintenance, operation and other purposes.

Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

To the President of the Senate:

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 140, (Enrolled No. 36), being

An act to supplement existing laws relating to the establishment and maintenance of municipal courts of record and to provide a system or method for the selection of juries for the trial of causes therein.

Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

To the President of the Senate:

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 234, (Enrolled No. 37), being

An act to amend section one of act number two hundred fifty-eight of the Public Acts of eighteen hundred sixty-one, entitled "An act to prevent officers and clerks in the State Land Office and Auditor General's Office from purchasing

lands while in the employ of the State," being section four hundred ninety of the Compiled Laws of nineteen hundred fifteen.

Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

To the President of the Senate: Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 204, (Enrolled No. 38), being

An act to provide for the licensing and regulation of the sale of drugs, nostrums, face powders, face creams, face bleaches, face lotions, cosmetics, tooth powders, tooth pastes, dentifrices and other toilet preparations or ointments or applications for the treatment of diseases, injuries or deformities, by itinerant and traveling vendors or hawkers.

To the President of the Senate:

Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 72, (Enrolled No. 39), being

An act to promote the safety of railroad employes and the traveling public, by requiring railroad companies to equip their engines with automatic fire box doors.

Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

To the President of the Senate:

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 179, (Enrolled No. 40), being

An act to amend section five of act number forty of the Public Acts of eighteen hundred ninety-nine, entitled "An act to revise the laws providing for the incorporation of Protestant Episcopal Churches," being section ten thousand nine hundred thirty-two of the Compiled Laws of nineteen hundred fifteen, as amended by act number sixty-two of the Public Acts of nineteen hundred seventeen.

Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

Executive Office, Lansing, April 26, 1923.

To the President of the Senate: Sir I have this day approved, signed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State

Senate bill No. 235, (Enrolled No. 41), being

An act to amend section four of act number one hundred six of the Public Acts of nineteen hundred nine, entitled, as amended, "An act to regulate the transmission of electricity through the public highways, streets and places of this State, where the source of supply and place of use are in the same or different counties; to regulate the charges to be made for electricity so transmitted; to regulate the rules and conditions of service under which said electricity shall be furnished and to confer upon the Michigan Public Utilities Commission certain powers and duties in regard thereto," being section four thousand eight hundred forty-five of the Compiled Laws of nineteen hundred fifteen, as amended by act number two hundred seventy-four of the Public Acts of nineteen hundred twenty-one. Respectfully,

ALEX. J. GROESBECK,

Governor.

The Senate returned to the order of

Messages From the House.

A message was received from the House of Representatives returning
Senate bill No. 42 (file No. 217), entitled

A bill to make appropriations for the Superintendent of the Capitol for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1924, and June 30, 1925, for maintenance, operation and other purposes.

The message informed the Senate that the House of Representatives has passed the bill and ordered that it take immediate effect.

The bill was referred to the Secretary for enrollment printing and presentation to the Governor.

A message was received from the House of Representatives transmitting
House bill No. 104 (file No. 172), entitled

A bill to provide for the assessment, valuation and taxation of mineral, coal, gas, salt, gypsum, oil, mining or other rights reserved in or to any lands in this State, or to the ores, minerals, coal, gas, salt, gypsum and oil contained therein, against the owner thereof as an interest in real property in any and all cases where any mineral right in or to the ores, oils, mine, valuable deposits, minerals contained therein, shall be or shall heretofore have been reserved to the grantor or any other person in any conveyance thereof.

The message informed the Senate that the House of Representatives has passed the bill.

The bill was read a first and second time by its title and referred to the Committee on Taxation.

A message was received from the House of Representatives transmitting
House bill No. 118 (file No. 292), entitled

A bill to amend sections 41 and 44 of article 2, title 3 of Act No. 167 of the Public Acts of 1917, entitled "An act to promote the health, safety and welfare of the people by regulating the light and ventilation, sanitation, fire protection, maintenance, alteration, and improvement of dwellings; to define the classes of dwellings affected by the act, to establish administrative requirements and to establish remedies and fix penalties for the violation thereof," approved May 2nd, 1917, and sections 39, 42 and 43 thereof, as amended by Act No. 326 of the Public Acts of 1919, approved May 13, 1919.

The message informed the Senate that the House of Representatives has passed the bill.

The bill was read a first and second time by its title and referred to the Committee on Public Health.

A message was received from the House of Representatives transmitting
House bill No. 384 (file No. 314), entitled

A bill to amend section 14 of article 2, title I, of Act No. 167 of the Public Acts of 1917, entitled "An act to promote the health, safety and welfare of the people by regulating the light and ventilation, sanitation, fire protection, maintenance, alteration and improvement of dwellings; to define the classes of dwellings affected by the act, to establish administrative requirements and to establish remedies and fix penalties for the violation thereof."

The message informed the Senate that the House of Representatives has passed the bill.

The bill was read a first and second time by its title and referred to the Committee on Public Health.

A message was received from the House of Representatives transmitting
House bill No. 392 (file No. 283), entitled

A bill to limit the amount of taxes that may be levied upon real and personal property by any county, school district, city, village or township, except in case of emergency.

The message informed the Senate that the House of Representatives has passed the bill.

The bill was read a first and second time by its title and referred to the ComImittee on Taxation.

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