THIRTIETH CONGRESS—FIRST SESSION.
Report No. 325.
(To accompany bill H. R. No. 301.)
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
NEWSPAPER SUBSCRIPTIONS.
March 9, 1848.
Mr. Lincoln, from the Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads, made the following
REPORT:
Report No. 325.
(To accompany bill H. R. No. 301.)
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
NEWSPAPER SUBSCRIPTIONS.
March 9, 1848.
Mr. Lincoln, from the Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads, made the following
REPORT:
The Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads, to whom was referred the resolution of the House of Representatives, entitled “An act authorizing post masters at county seats of justice to receive subscriptions
for newspapers and periodicals, to be paid through the agency of the Post Office Department, and for other purposes,” beg leave to submit the following report:
The committee have reason to believe that a general wish pervades the community at
large, that some such facility as the proposed measure should be granted by express
law, for subscribing, through the agency of the Post Office Department, to newspapers
and periodicals which diffuse daily, weekly, or monthly, intelligence of passing events.
Compliance with this general wish is deemed to be in accordance with the principles
of our republican institutions, which can be best sustained by the diffusion of knowledge
and the due encouragement of a universal national spirit of inquiry and discussion
of public events through the medium of the public press. The committee, however, has
not been insensible to its duty of guarding the Post Office Department against injurious
sacrifices for the accomplishment of this object, whereby its ordinary efficacy might
be impaired or embarrassed. It has therefore been a subject of much consideration;
but it is now confidently hoped that the bill herewith submitted effectually obviates
all objections which might exist with regard to a less matured proposition.
The committee learned, upon inquiry, that the Post Office Department, in view of meeting
the general wish on this subject,
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made the experiment through one of its own internal regulations, when the new postage
system went into operation on the first of July, 1845, and that it was continued until
the 30th of September, 1847. But this experiment, for reasons hereafter stated, proved
unsatisfactory, and it was discontinued by order of the Postmaster General. As far
as the committee can at present ascertain, the following seem to have been the principal
grounds of dissatisfaction in this experiment:
1st. The legal responsibility of postmasters receiving newspaper subscriptions, or,
of their sureties, was not defined.
2d. The authority was open to all postmasters, instead of being limited to those of
specific offices.
3d. The consequence of this extension of authority was, that in innumerable instances,
the money, without the previous knowledge or control of the officers of the department, who are responsible for the
good management of its finances, was deposited in offices where it was improper such
funds should be placed; and the repayment was ordered, not by the financial officers,
but by the postmasters, at points where it was inconvenient to the department so to
disburse its funds.
4th. The inconvenience of accumulating uncertain and fluctuating sums at small offices,
was felt seriously in consequent overpayments to contractors on their quarterly collecting
orders; and, in cases of private mail routes, in litigation concerning the misapplication
of such funds to the special service of supplying mails.
5th. The accumulation of such funds on draft offices, could not be known to the financial
clerks of the department in time to control it, and too often this rendered uncertain
all their calculations of funds in hand.
6th. The orders of payment were, for the most part, issued upon the principal offices,
such as New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Baltimore, &c., where the large offices of
publishers are located, causing an illimitable and uncontrolable drain of the department’s funds from those points where it was essential to husband
them for its own regular disbursements. In Philadelphia alone, this drain averaged
$5,000 per quarter; and in other cities of the seaboard it was proportionate.
7th. The embarrassment to the department was increased by the illimitable, uncontrolable, and irresponsible scattering of its funds from concentrated points suitable for
its distributions, to remote, unsafe, and inconvenient offices, where they could not
be again made available till collected by special agents, or were transferred at considerable
expense into the principal disbursing offices again.
8th. There was a vast increase of duties thrown upon the limited force before necessary
to conduct the business of the department; and, from the delay of obtaining vouchers,
impediments arose to the speedy settlement of accounts with present or retired postmasters,
causing postponements which endangered the liability of sureties under the act of
limitations, and causing much danger of an increase of suit cases.
9th. The most responsible postmasters (at the large offices) were
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ordered by the least responsible (at small offices) to make payments upon their vouchers,
without having the means of ascertaining whether these vouchers were genuine or forged,
or, if genuine, whether the signers were in or out of office, or solvent or a defaulter.
10th. The transaction of this business for subscribers and publishers, at the public
expense, and the embarrassment, inconvenience, and delay of the department’s own business
occasioned by it, was not justified by any sufficient remuneration of revenue to sustain
the department, as required in every other respect with regard to its agency.
The committee, in view of all these objections, has been solicitous to frame a bill
which would not be obnoxious to them in principle or in practical effect.
It is confidently believed that, by limiting the offices for receiving subscriptions
to less than one-tenth of the number authorized by the experiment already tried, and designating the county
seat in each county for the purpose, the control of the department will be rendered
satisfactory; particularly as it will be in the power of the Auditor, who is the officer
required by law to check the accounts, to approve or disapprove of the deposits, and
to sanction not only the payment, but to point out the place of payment. If these
payment should cause a drain on the principal offices of the seaboard, it will be compensated
by the accumulation of the funds at county seats, where the contractors on those routes
can be paid to that extent by the department’s drafts, with more local convenience
to themselves than by drafts on the seaboard offices.
The legal responsibility for these deposites is defined, and the accumulations of
funds at the points of deposite, and the repayment at points drawn upon, being known
to, and controlled by, the Auditor, will not occasion any such embarrassments as were
before felt; the record kept by the Auditor on the passing of the certificates through
his hands, will enable him to settle accounts without the delay occasioned by vouchers
being withheld; all doubt and uncertainty as to the genuineness of certificates or
the propriety of their issue, will be removed by the Auditor’s examination and approval;
and there can be no risk of loss of funds by transmission, as the certificate will
not be payable till sanctioned by the Auditor; and, after his sanction, the payor need not pay it unless it is presented by the publisher or his known clerk or agent.
The main principle of equivalent for the agency of the department, is secured by the
postage required to be paid upon the transmission of the certificates, augmenting
adequately the post office revenue.
The committee, conceiving that in this report all the difficulties of the subject
have been fully and fairly stated, and that these difficulties are obviated by the
plan proposed in the accompanying bill; and believing that the measure will satisfactorily
meet the wants and wishes of a very large portion of the community, beg leave to recommend
its adoption.
Printed Document, 3 page(s), Volume 76, RG 233, Entry 345:
Records of the United States House of Representatives, Twenty-Ninth
Congress, 1845-1847, Records of the Office of the Clerk, Record Books,
Printed Reports of the Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads