Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1894 — Page 9
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SECOND PART. ESTABLISHED 1822. INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAttCIl 28, 1891-TWELVE TAGES. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.
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IS A RANK FR
The Tariff Bill Reported to the Senate.
In No Sense Is It a Reform Measure,
But a Bill to Benefit the Trusts.
REPRESENTATIVES ARE HOT
And Will Fight It When It Gets to th House.
Every Indiana Member Opposes the Fraud,
And Announces Hi3 Intention to Fight It.
Tlie AVilann III II Kmniicnlnlril und It Klnlr; Free Rnw Mnterinl (io OlimmcriiiK at the nelioat of the Trunin nnil Cuiiililnrn Murphy tietn Hin "nit" In tlie (ollnr and Cuff Sclirtlulen nnl Other Senator Hnve Tlieir l'rlvnte Inlerentn LnnUrd After The Kill In Senoe n Itelenint ictu of FMctljcen Pintle in the Democratic Pin t form Ken t uren of the Fraud Set Forth.
added: "Then an two subject In th Mil which have received much publlo attention and I will state to the senate, a I have already stated, my vlew on them. (1) I disagree with my colleasrues as to that section which provides for nn Income tax. Amrle provisions having: ben made (or sufficient revenue, it 1s unnecessary, it i undemocratic, it is un-Amprlcan, and. a. I believe, it is unwise, and I Fhall move at the proper time to strike it from th bill. (2) I disagree with my colleague as to the jugar schedule as it appears in the Mil. believing- that the method of testing put a dang-erous power into the hands of any government officer. I would confine tho test of all supar. raw and refined, to the polarlscope alone, ar.4 thus make definite the duties each should pav." Mr. Allison sug-jrested the advisability of having th Mil printed in pamphlet form showing- as to each article th present law, the rhang-e made by the house and the chants propose,! by thfe senate finance oommltle. and Mr. Vnorhees said he thoupht that cmiM be done. Mr. Hoar inquired" how the report could bo consldere.l a committee report when the republican member knfW nothlne about it and the senator from
' Xew Jersey was oppojied to two of the I mopt Important feature. 'Tes tht
make a p3rty report," he asked. "I do not see how it can be said that the committee has agreed t-" the report." Mr. Mcrheron replied that he knew of no disagreement In the committee and the report was made by peneral assent. "I supposed." remarked Mr. Hoar. "that the committee reported bills It was In favor of, and not the bills it wflj oppof-ed to." Th subject wps closed by Mi". McPherson. "I do not want." he said, "to jret into a discussion now on collateral subjects. The time will come when I think I can convince the senator from Massachusetts that I hive acted in a strictly consistent way." Senator Murphy is pleased with the chang-es made in the tariff bill on collars and cuffs, as h his succeeded in s.mrIns an increase of 10 p.r cnt. over th rate in the sub-coir.mi:ice bill, as he did in that bill over the Wilson MM. thus bringlnfr the duty from per cent, ad valorem to per cent, in the bill as reported to the .ernte. H Fays tbat he now feel encourac-d that he may eventually succeed in srettius the old duty restored.
BUREAU OF THE SENTINEL. WASHINGTON. D. C, March 20. Feb. 2 the senate finance committee received the Wilson reform tariff till framed by representatives fresh fmrn the people and directly responsible to the people; constructed strictly on the line of tariff reform with free raw materials as a cornerstone; carrying; free cual, free iron ores, free wool and free sugar, with no favors to the whisky trust and with the sugar trust dethroned. Today the same Wilson bill emerged from the finance committee emasculated. McKinleyized and Gormanized, with the very heart of tariff reform carved out; with the sugar trust re-enthroned, and the whisky trust granted every concessison asked. Sugar, which the Wilson bill made frj has been taxed almost IVs cents at the dictation of the bounty sugar growers of Louisiana and the refiners known as the sugar trust. Coal, which the house made free to give cheaper fuel to the manufacturer and the home, is taxed 40 cents per ton at the dictation of Gorman and IJrice, who are largely interested in coal mines in West Virginia and Tennessee. Iron ores, which the house placed on the free list to enable steel works to obtain cheaper raw material, is taxed 40 cents a ton at the request of senators who represent the Standard oil trust, which controls 90 per cent, of the Lake Superior ores, where they mine it with a steam scoop shovel almost without labor. The tax on steel rails is increased, although Representative Johnson of Ohio, one of the largest rail manufacturers in the country, himself moved in the house to put rails on the free list, and in support of his resolution displayed trust certificates proving that the rail manufacturers were in a trust to keep up prices and cut down wages. Le-ad ore Is heavily taxed, and. in fact, every article of raw material save wool is taken out of the house free list. By more than three-fourths vote the house defeated the whisky trust proposition t extend the whisky bonded period to eight years, but the trust lobby has been swarming about the senate corridors ever since the bill reached that end of the capitol, and the bill comes out of the committee with the Identical provision which the house rejected almost unanimously, and the whisky distillers can have eight years to pay taxes. Meanwhile the government will store the whisky In government warehouses at government expense, while the trust will speculate with the government warehouse certificates. That is the way the senate proposes to reform the tariff. Increases have been made all along the line. The committee drew the blue pencil through the free list with a vengeance, and the only article it added to it is uncut diamonds; but in justice to the committee it must be said that a slight reduction is made on woolen goods and clothing, with the exception of collars, cuffs and shirts, which they increased fron 3T to 5 per cent, at the order of Senator Murphy. Bags for grain, oil cloths, steam engines have been increased, but diamonds, dressed paul, bell cord, balls, dice and other gaming materials get a reduction of taxes. The feeling among the members of the house against the senate amendments is one of revolt, and when the bill returns to the house almost as one man the members will stand up and promptly reject the amendments. The Sentinel correspondent has interviewed every Indiana member now in the city, and he can say without fear of contradiction that every one of them will vote against a conference report giving the sugar trust or whisky trust one cent of advantage. Mr. Voorhees reported the tariff bill to the senate, introducing it In a few words. When it had been read by title Mr. Voorhees said: "I ask that the bill lie printed and placed on the calendar and I give notice that on April 2, a wcyk from next Monday, I "will call the bill up for consideration by the senate." Mr. Morrill, one of the republican members of the finance committee, said he had no objection to the bill being reported to the senate but he was opposed not only to the Income tax but also to the change from specific to ad valorem dutlrs. Mr. Manderson inquired whether there was to be any written report accompanying the bill. "There Is not." said Mr. Voorhees. emphatically. "Will there be any statement?" asked Mr. Manderson. "There will be when the bill Is called v.p." replied Mr. Voorhees. Mr. McPherson explained his relation to the balance of the finance committee, stating that he had Ken ted to ths report believing: that th bill was th best obtainable la ccaiiuitted, JI$
THK cu t;i:s m i:
Stiunr Trenled tvllh Mireli ConHiilerH t Ion. The most important hange made by the bill is in the sugar schedule. An additional duty of of 1 pr cent, per pound is given on all sugars testing above IN degrees by the prlari.cope test, or which are alove No. 16 Dutch standard in color. The text of the sugar schedule as now agreed on is as follows: "All sugars, tank bottoms, sirups of rane juice or of beet juice, melada. concentrated melada. concrete and concentrated molasses, testing by the polariseope not above SO decrees, shall pay a duty of 1 cent t iound, and for every additional degree or fraction of a degree above 8' degrees and not above 90 degrees, shown by the pulariscope test, shall pay one-hundredth of 1 cent pel jH.und additional, and alxive !K degneet and not above !'S degrees, for every additional decree it fraction of a degree shown by the polariscoj test, hall pay a duty of t wo-one-hnndredths of 1 cent per pound additional, and upon all fugars testing alxve degrees by the J0lariscope test, rr above N'o. C by th Dutch standard in color, thf-re shall b levied and collected a duty of l of 1 cent per pound in addition to the duty imposed upon sugars testing al-.ve 8 degrees. Molasses testing not above 65 degrees by the polariseope shall pay a duty of 2 cents jer gallon; molasses testing above : degr-es shall pay a duty of 4 cents IT gallon." The provisions abropating the Hawaiian reciprocity are stricken from the revised bill, and a specific declaration Is inserted, rtjiealir.!? the reciprocity treaties negotiated under the McKinley act. Other changes made in the revise,! bill from the bill as agreed upon by the subcommittee, are as follows: Glycerine is change.! ba k to the rates fixed in the lious bill, which are 1 cent per pound for the crud" and S cnts for refined, instead of 20 per cent, ad valorem, as in the senate sub-committee bill; licorice. 4 per cent, a pound, instead of 2 per cent, ad valorem, as In the senate sub-committee bill, and Ö cents a pound in the Wilson bill; blues containing ferocyanide of iron are restored te the Wilson bill rates, which is G cents a pound, instead of 20 per ce"U. ad valorem in the senat sub-committee rates; lime is placed at 13 per cent, ad valorem instead of 20 per cent., as in the senate sub-committee bill, and 10 per cent In the Wilson bill, and the duty is made to include the value of the covering of barrels; plaster of paris, which was not changed in the senate sub-commit tee bill from the Wilson rate of 10 per cent, ad valorem on the ground article, is to pay a duty of Jl per ton; calcined plaster of parts, per tnn. instead of 15 per cent, ad valorem in the Wilsen bill. Cast polished plate-glass, finished or unfinished, and unsilvered not exceeding twenty-four by sixty inches quare, is fixed at 20 cents per square foot, instead of 18 cents, as In the Wilson bill; all aboe the dimensions given 35 centa per square foot, instead of 30 cents, as in the Wilson bill: all sheets of Iron steel, common or black, thinner than No. 25 wire gauge, and black taggers, iron or steel, pickled or cleaned, is changed from nine-tenths of 1 cent a pound to three-fourths of 1 cent a pound, and the provision which the house bill car ried. but which was stricken out of the original senate bill, that this change shall take effect after Oct. 1, 1S94, Is restored. Tin riate. Tin plate, terne plate and taggers tin 1 cent per pound instead of 1 1- a in the Wilson bill, the senate srub-commlt-tee not having before changed from th Wilson rate. In this paragraph the Wilson bill provision that the rates shall take effect Oct. 1, 194. Is restored; cast iron pipe of every description 22Vi per cent, ad valorem instead of 25 per cent, in the Wilson bill, and 20 per cent, in the senate sub-committee bill; crosscut saws. mill, pit and drag saws 15 per cent, ad valorem. Instead of 25 per cent., the Wilson bill rate; aluminum In crude form 15 per cent, ad valorem, instead of 25 per cent., the Wilson bill rate. The lead and lead ore duties are left unchanged from the senate sub-committee rates, as are the iron ore and col duties. Oat-meal. 13 per cent, ad valorem. Instead of 20 ier cent., the Wilson rate; castor beans are restored to the Wilson rate cf 25 cents a bushel. The para graph bill relating to "cans or package made of tin or other metal containing shell-fish," is struck out entirely; collars and cuffs are left unchanged from the senate sub-committee rate, but shirt end all other articles of every description, not especially provided for. composed wholly or in part of linen. 50 per cent, ad valorem. Instead of 35 per cent., the "Wilson bill rate; playing-cards ra nstored to the Wilson rate of 10 cents a pack, instead of I cents a rack, as fixed by the senate sub-committee; pipes, rlpc-bowls and all smokers' articles not specially provided for in this act. including cigarette-books, cigarette bookcovers, pouches for smoking or chewing tobacco and cigarette paper in all forms, the Wilson rate of 50 per cent, ad va. lorem Is restored; the senate sub-com-mittee rate having been 40 per rent. aJ vtloreqa fn4 tte remainder cl the pax
