Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

THIRD READING OF BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS.

House bill, entitled

A bill to establish and regulate a mining school in the Upper Peninsula,

Was read a third time and passed, a majority of all the mem

bers elect voting therefor, by yeas and nays, as follows:

[blocks in formation]

The House adjourned till to-morrow morning at 9 o'clock.

Lansing, Thursday, February 21, 1861.

The House met pursuant to adjournment, and was called to

order by the Speaker.

Prayer by the Rev. Mr. Gillet.

Roll called: quorum present.

Absent at roll call, without leave, Messrs. Douglas and
Taylor.

Mr. Goodrich asked and obtained leave of absence for Mr.
Taylor for an indefinite time, on account of sickness.

PETITIONS PRESENTED.

By Mr. Tibbits: petition of sundry persons, praying relief
against the taxes and other burthens imposed upon the people
of the ninth ward of the city of Detroit;

Referred to the committee on banks and incorporations.

By Mr. Childs: petition of Thomas F. Burton, John F. Hub-
bard and 29 others, inhabitants of Washtenaw county, for a
tax on dogs;

Referred to the committee on agriculture and manufactures.

By Mr. Alexander: petition of E. B. Sherwood and 44 others,
citizens of Berrien county, asking for an appropriation of
$5,000 to the suffering poor in Kansas;

Laid on the table.

By Mr. Peters: remonstrance of Samuel Bartlett and 39
others, citizens of Monroe county, against the passage of a law
to prohibit fishing with pond nets in the waters of this State;
Referred to the committee on State affairs.

By Mr. Blakeslee: remonstrance of Alonzo Ferguson, James
H. Davis and 56 others, citizens of the township of Springfield,
Oakland county, against any alteration in the road known as
the Pontiac and Grand River road in the said township;

Referred to the committee on roads and bridges.

By Mr. Wetherby: petition of Benj. F. Ferris, J. M. Rowell
and 50 others, asking for the repeal of an act (act No. 162,)
passed February 13, 1855; and also an act passed February 15,
1859, known as the personal liberty laws;

Laid on the table.

By Mr. Fowle: petition of Stephen Fitzsimmons, Daniel La-
fever and 22 others, praying for the enactment of a stringent
usury law;

Also, petition of Parley Brown, Michael Depue and 19 others,
for the same purpose;

Also, petition of Harvey Osborn, Wm. Chester and 42 others,

for the same purpose;

Also, petition of D. G. Mosher, Wm. Moore, and 18 others,
for the same purpose;

Also, petition of Emanuel Bently, Freeman Page and 27 oth-
ers, for the same purpose;

Also, petition of E. T. Chester, A. R. Kellogg and 35 others,
for the same purpose;

Also, petition of Z. H. Gray, Almond Colton and 17 others,
for the same purpose;

Also, petition of Charles Mosher, Peter B. McArthur and 14
others, for the same purpose;

Also, petition of H. N. F. Lewis, Joseph Cleveland and 41
others, for the same purpose;

All of which were laid on the table.

By Mr. Shank: petition of Eber M. L. Cory and 20 others,
asking a law to relieve observers of the seventh day of the
week from the necessity of defending suits on said day;

Laid on the table.

By Mr. Brownell: remonstrance of sundry persons against
the organization of the county of Bleecker;

Laid on the table.

By Mr. A. Stevens: remonstrance of Harvey Williams and
175 others, against the passage of any law which shall prohibit
trap net fishing;

Referred to the committee on State affairs.

By Mr. A. Stevens: petition of Geo. E. Smith, A. Miller, B. B.
Hart and 60 others, for a State road from Bay City to East Sag-
inaw, and an appropriation of swamp land for the same;

Referred to the committee on public lands.

By Mr. Choate: remonstrance of James Mulholland, Andrew
J. Kinney, Samuel Stillwell and 71 others, citizens of Monroe,
against the passage of a law to prohibit fishing with pond nets
in the waters of this State;

Referred to the committee on State affairs.

By the Speaker: petition of the employees in the State print-

ing office, asking that the House authorize the committee on

ways and means to employ a clerk;

Mr. Howell moved that the petition be rejected;

On motion of Mr. Blakeslee,

The whole subject was laid on the table.

PRESENTATION.

The Speaker presented to the House, with the compliments of C. F. Dietrich, a lithographic view of the city of Grand Rapids.

REPORTS OF SELECT COMMITTEES.

By the select committee on apportioning anew the representatives among the several counties and districts of this State: The special committee to whom was referred certain bills "to apportion anew the representatives among the several counties and districts of this State," with instructions to report a bill on the basis of one representative for every ten thousand inhabitants,

Have had the same under consideration, and herewith report back House bill No. 39, with certain amendments, in which they ask the concurrence of the House, and ask to be discharged from the further consideration of the same.

Respectfully submitted.

S. M. CUTCHEON, Chairman.

Report accepted and committee discharged.

Mr. Childs moved that the House concur in the amendments made by the committee;

Mr. Howell moved that the bill be laid on the table, and ordered printed, with the amendments made by the committee Which motion prevailed.

e;

By the joint committee on constitutional amendments: The joint special committee upon constitutional amendments to the Constitution, to whom was referred the matter to enquire and report what amendments to the Constitution were desirable and necessary, and also, several resolutions from each House, have had the same under consideration, and would respectfully report, that as the result of their examination of the

matter committed to them, the many amendments that would be desirable to make the present Constitution subserve the purpose of being a convenient organic law for the government of any well regulated State, would be so numerous as to constitute almost an entire revision of the instrument, which your committee believe, in view of the early time when the question of revision is to be submitted to the people, under the provisions of that instrument, the present Legislature would not be disposed to adopt. Your committee, however, find some points in which they deem it indispensable that amendments should be made, in order to enable the government to proceed with any degree of convenience or success. To that end, therefore, they herewith report a joint resolution embracing such amendments as they deem indispensably necessary, entitled

Joint resolution to provide for amendments of article 6, section 2; article 9, section 1; article 13, section 6; article 15, sections 1, 2 and 4; article 20, sec 2, of the constitution of the State of Michigan,

[ocr errors]

And recommend its adoption.

All of which is respectfully submitted.

Report accepted.

S. L. WITHEY,

Chairman of the Senate Commiitee.

THOS. W. LOCKWOOD,

Chairman of House Committee.

The joint resolution was read a first and second time, by its title, ordered printed, referred to the committee of the whole and placed on the general order.

MOTIONS, RESOLUTIONS AND NOTICES.

Mr Howell offered the following:

Resolved, That the view of the city of Grand Rapids, presented to the House, be put in a substantial frame and hung in the State library.

Mr. Gilbert offered the following as a substitute:

Resolved, That the thanks of this House be returned to C. F. Dietrich, Principal of the Grand Rapids Mercantile Institute, for

« AnteriorContinuar »