< Al.iroKMA. 



ewv district to tppm a revolt wherever it 

 should ana*, ami |.r*|iaraliaM were made for 

 calling in the AUuu.mn I-IIUIMIM n if il.. 

 were needed. Tb powers made representation* 



..-. , . M ..-..,, fcttitud< Of 



' - ': ' ' '" >i.n...t,. 



that th*.tn M *:i,> ninrr.1 i,y the great , 



... . V ... : ..,:. ,,nu-rant> 

 to Bttltfarui to hop* tool 



reforms similar to thaw proposed in Armenia; 

 the Bavarian Government had i-rimMed th- 

 agitation to go cm, being | that it was 



employing purely moral means. n.i thai severe 



,..:.::.. -i m-Tedan- 



fHOM saret agitation. The note expressed the 

 COM that the gnt i-.werx. which hail already 

 ,\ - - . : . , . iheertli of the 



. , i | \i., ., ! oia, raid 

 find mean* in the interests of peace to calm the 

 public mind, as had been .!. in the case of 

 Armenia, A promise was made to the Porte to 



take vigorous measures apiinst ih, .imitation 

 ami t" | r. -\eiit km.. 

 .in-l\. tli- 



1 a-aiii-l an\ nn-li- 

 iH.rm;; Mat.-. 



A baml of 1,000 Bulgarians m 



niirr near tin- end of .lulv. ami after de- 

 | (In- Turki-h patrol at bjiuna. entered 

 AII <>f Mciilik, ami liunu-il tlu- .Mohaintnr- 



dait ijuartrr. On Aug. 9 f another i>anl <-i I.IHMI 



Him rai<ll tin' .M.-liainiiii-ilaii ili-i ! 

 iali ami lmrnr.1 th- town of .laiiakli. afti-r kill- 

 ing 25 of tlu- iiilml>iiaiit>. !' r thi> th. 

 ili'inaii'l.-il cxplanal ions of tl 

 mi-lit, which n-plictl that n ir\il- 



otief i- pov.il ilc witlmui 



ini; Bolgmrian troopt there, to which the Porte 

 has always ol.j.-.-tnl. Th. Mn^Miliuan village 

 of Knsteiidil. in the i;hoil|M- di-in< I of I'.ul- 

 \\a> luirneil after a fierce li^hl with the 

 villagers in which many fell on both 



C 



< M IIOKMA. a Pacific coast State, ad- 

 mitted to the Union Sept. 9, 1850 ; area. 158,960 

 square miles. The population, according to 

 earn decennial census n. -,- admission, was 92,507 

 in 1880; 879.994 in 1800; 560.247in 1870; 864.694 

 in 1880; and 1,206,130 in 1890. Capital. Sacra- 



Wofernment, The following were the State 

 otteers du year: Governor, Jam. II 



Hud d. Democrat ; Lieutenant Qownqr. Spenoer 

 anl; Secretary [jewil II. Ilrown; 



Comptroller. Kdward P.Colgan; Treasurer, I,.-vi 

 Kadc! l-'it/tferald ; 



Survevor-General. M..I. Wright : Superintendent 



ll!a.-k; Chief .hlMiee 



of the Supreme Court, W. II. Beatty. 



Fiaaaeea. The report of the Comptroller 

 showed balances on hand in the various State 

 f mills on Dec, 1, 1894, as follows: 



*alnutd.$l7&U; nchool, $187,800.69: in- 

 and staking, $*&,08i.l6: State school land, 



. -..-. - .r. 1 ... ; ' > . -.' 



( ..::.. r . -.. '..'. >. . - ' : -..' 



Oaivwstar. $3.471.09 ; Mining Burma. $486.6'.' : 

 Library, $4,1 49> 



ft; war bond. tMMJO; Yosemite vallev, $49.49; 

 adult bUadT$ftjBOS.U; rev. 



railway tax, 

 .; railway tax contingent. $1JM&86*: 



$"MMA1; 



$SM>.44; Sao - 



- 





. > . :-. . 



; Bank 



aaeeial, $M40^6; 



- - . 



i. 



. i . . . 



of boata, $1,100; .pccial 



, . , 



- . -.. m depot 

 - 



Mt*l; Buildin* and Lnao AjMciation iMpcdion, 

 io Stafs TrcflMiry. $l.*&U2.oi. 



Other items in the Comptroller'* report show 

 that the receipt* for 



,.-:', - v; -., : , . : . ,.,.,. 



ditnrr^ $1T 



penditurv*. |LVM.H46. For the forty-fourth fiscal 

 year the tax levy for school purposes was $1.966,- 



174, The actual amount collected from prop- 

 erty tax was $2.1 1". .!!!. l-'or tin- forty-fifth 



fiscal year there was levied for school purposes 

 :.-J7!l. There was c,|h-cte.l ^VJnl.lll. ol 

 which $72,7' s \va- f"i- hack railroad taxes for 

 the years 1880 to 18H.~>, in.du-i\e. 



The receipts from other sources amounted to 

 $569,316. These amounts to-ether with Im- 

 balance from the forty-fourth fiscal year, aggre- 

 gated $3,861,637. 



The funded debt of the State held in trust for 

 the university and school funds amounts to $2,- 

 282,500. 



Appropriations and Taxes. The tax-levy 

 bill {Missed by the last Legislature i- a manda- 

 tory statute, and reads as follows : 



The State Board of K-jiializution in: 

 purposes, for the forty TV, -nth and tV.rty-riirhth ti-.'al 



years, ti\ -u<-h an tuvalonm rate of taxation upon 

 each $IH in value t' ta\al>le property in this State, 

 aa after allowing - r > f>cr cent, fordeunqnen 



ofe,,l|ectioti of taxes, UH provi-led in section 3696 of 



.ti.-al Code, will ntis4- for the t 



fiscal Vear: Fir>t. tor the L "-nTal fund. *4,'.13,106 ; 



seoono, for tin x-h'M.l fund. !k2.1 1 .i.'..J.'.'.' : third, for the 



interest an.l Hinkiin; fund. *iu.i '"' An-1 f-r the 



%.ar: Kir>t. f..r th- L'-neral fund, 



li.H.l fund. #_'.! 

 tliinl, for the- interest nn<l sirikinir fund. *: 



al amount of appropriations passed und jro 

 vided for in this hill wuj. $1 '_.-: thm, $7, 



iSO/HM) wan for tl 



.J fund. The ainounl 



able frr>m thi* fun-1 lurinif the \ ilalf of 



thegeni-ml appropiiationH, $.;. 



and cpecial a[propria f 0; for 01 



$325,000; and all defi<-ieri. : making a 



B 



nut than the 



'ed for in the tax-levy bill, therefore the tax 



,1 thus 



a urpln of $1,881,576 at> >v< . A ), at was ne<-essarv ha-s 

 oeen t- - by the lew of al.out 10 o 



each $100 of valuation fort! ear. 



Legislative SeHslon. The thirty-first bien- 

 nial session of the Lc -j,] ; , tliro began on .Fan. 

 7 and continued until Man-i, K;. in isij 

 Buld was the only Democratic State officer 



