Address of His Excellency John D. Long to the Two Branches of the Legislature of Massachusetts, January 6, 1881 |
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Page 11
... recommend that no such discharge be allowed except upon notice , where prac- ticable , to the complainant , and upon the recommenda- tion of the magistrate , or , in cases from the Superior Court , of the district attorney . The statute ...
... recommend that no such discharge be allowed except upon notice , where prac- ticable , to the complainant , and upon the recommenda- tion of the magistrate , or , in cases from the Superior Court , of the district attorney . The statute ...
Page 18
... , making sixteen in all . Their primary object . - which is to assist persons of moderate means in securing homesteads upon the credit of their monthly savings recommends them to your fostering care , and , 18 [ Jan. GOVERNOR'S ADDRESS .
... , making sixteen in all . Their primary object . - which is to assist persons of moderate means in securing homesteads upon the credit of their monthly savings recommends them to your fostering care , and , 18 [ Jan. GOVERNOR'S ADDRESS .
Page 19
... recommends them to your fostering care , and , at the same time , requires that their stability should be secured by wise and conservative legis- lation . The recent developments regarding the so - called " Ladies ' Deposit " in Boston ...
... recommends them to your fostering care , and , at the same time , requires that their stability should be secured by wise and conservative legis- lation . The recent developments regarding the so - called " Ladies ' Deposit " in Boston ...
Page 42
... Boston , which , if correctly reported , make it per- emptory that you provide new safeguards for casting , keeping , and counting the ballots . LIQUOR LEGISLATION . I renew my recommendation of a year 42 [ Jan. GOVERNOR'S ADDRESS .
... Boston , which , if correctly reported , make it per- emptory that you provide new safeguards for casting , keeping , and counting the ballots . LIQUOR LEGISLATION . I renew my recommendation of a year 42 [ Jan. GOVERNOR'S ADDRESS .
Page 43
... recommendation of a year ago , that the question , whether or not licenses shall be granted in any municipality for ... recommend that the screen law passed at the last session be made compulsory . As the owner of real estate has been ...
... recommendation of a year ago , that the question , whether or not licenses shall be granted in any municipality for ... recommend that the screen law passed at the last session be made compulsory . As the owner of real estate has been ...
Common terms and phrases
Aggregate debt Jan agricultural amendment attendance authorized Back Bay Loan Boston call your attention capital punishment cent Chap CHARLES AND MYSTIC Charlestown commercial commissioners connection constitution convicts cost Court Cowpens criminal deficit depositors in full discharge district attorney district police divorce dollars duty earnings elected enforcement ern Railroad executive expenditures expenses of 1880 farming Fitchburg freight Governor Greenfield Railroad Company Hoosac Tunnel hospitals improved increase industrial interests insane inspection intelligent intoxicating liquors labor land legislation legislature license-law Massachusetts matter ment militia monwealth municipal MYSTIC RIVERS offence officers pauper payments in 1880 penalty persons port of Boston present Prison public institutions receipts recommend resolve of last RHODE ISLAND safeguard sale of intoxicating schools scrip secure seems session SINKING FUNDS sion South Boston suggestion of last supervision taxation tion treasury Troy and Greenfield trust UNITED-STATES SENATOR vote YORKTOWN
Popular passages
Page 48 - XXVIII. No person having served in the army or navy of the United States in time of war, and having been honorably discharged from such service, if otherwise qualified to vote, shall be disqualified therefor on account of receiving or having received aid from any city or town, or because of the non-payment of a poll tax.
Page 20 - While it is time to recognize that there is no spare money to be wasted in extravagant architecture and external appointments, on the other hand, when it comes to essentials, the last dollar to be economized in Massachusetts is that which gives the poorest public scholar free access to the best public education. You will not begrudge it when you see it shining back in his brightened face, or even in the speaking eye of a deaf-mute, to whom it has unlocked a new avenue of human intelligence and the...
Page 44 - Governor Long, of Massachusetts, in his message of January, 1881, says : • . There is a growing demand, shared by men of all shades of theoretical opinion, . . . that just as far and as fast as possible the dram-shop should be rooted out, in the interest alike of good morals and of the material welfare of capital and labor. The bureau of statistics has, during the year, added to its admirable work by conducting an original inquiry into the causes of crime. It has made personal investigation in...
Page 3 - ADDRESS. Members of the Senate and of the House of Representatives. I CALL your attention at once to the financial exhibit, the statistics of which, as well as those relating to other interests of the State, have been, as usual, furnished by the respective departments to which they relate. THE PUBLIC DEBT. The following is a statement of the amount and character of the funded debt : — Aggregate debt Jan. 1, 1880 .... $33,020,464 It has been reduced by payments during the year as follows : — Back...
Page 57 - Commonwealth can be promoted, there is your duty and mine. The public debt, but for the interest on which no general State tax would be necessary, must not be increased by a single dollar. With emphasis, too, let me now add, your influence should go to check all municipal indebtedness, to encourage its swift reduction, and to sustain the law for its limitation. Our total tax, which is mainly municipal, is more than three times what it was in 1861, though neither our total population nor valuation...
Page 45 - ... drawn. Of the 16,897 cases, more than seventy-two per cent were for the various grades of drunkenness ; and. in addition to these, more than twelve per cent were offences committed by persons under the influence of liquor, leaving only some fifteen per cent of crime to represent what would be about the total amount, but for the use of intoxicating liquors.
Page 7 - Exceptional expenses . . 4,523,461 30 4,040,687 66 $6,088,989 57 $5,603,400 64 The exceptional expenses of 1880 are in part due to the very increase of the receipts, — $561,000 of said expenses being the excess of the corporation and national bank tax refunded in 1880 over the amount refunded in 1879 by the Commonwealth to its cities and towns. ESTIMATES FOR 1881. The estimates for the current year are based upon existing laws, and the expectation that the present business prosperity will continue....
Page 13 - ... of accommodation for them. More room for these must soon be made, but not perhaps necessarily at your session. I trust that, both as a matter of treatment and economy, some other plan will be adopted than that of erecting another costly hospital like the last. It is desirable that there should be a more intelligent classification of the insane, instead of herding them all together. I see no reason why, taking some of our State or county buildings, which I understand are available for the purpose,...
Page 5 - Fund," it will bo necessary during the present session of the legislature to make good the deficit occasioned by the failure of the Commonwealth to sell the State prison property at Charlestown. Chap. 391 of the Acts of 1874 provides that this property shall be sold, and the proceeds of the sale paid into the treasury as a contribution to that fund. It also provides, that, if the receipts of the fund do not in any fiscal year • equal three per cent of the total amount of scrip issued, the difference...
Page 31 - ... $276,629 45 Add interest .... 709,627 78 Paid during the year . $986,257 23 RECEIPTS. From earnings . . . . $239,295 69 From rents, &c. ... 28,699 17 $267,994 86 Net payments in 1880 .... $718,262 37 COST OF THE TUNNEL. Net cost, Jan. 1, 1880 $19,523,57994 Add net payments in 1880 .... 718,262 37 Net cost Jan. 1, 1881 . . . . $20,241,84231 The year here referred to is the calendar year : while the manager's report covers, I take it, the railroad year, which ends Sept. 30. HARBORS AND PUBLIC LANDS....