Show MR RAWLINS the telegraph gives but meager reports of the silver debate how going ou in both bouses of congress but as a general thing it gives as much as the newspaper reader has time and taste to peruse naturally every community is in any that may be made by its particular represents representative and hence t e pleasure Di ensure with which fuller reports than juan the wire brought of the excellent speech ot of lion hon joseph li rawlins were sought bought after and read in utah we flod find in the now new york world just to hand another allusion to the utah delegate that wilt will also be interesting the speak er ws was J judge josiah patterson of too ten bessee the date waar wa last lad wednesday and the argument ut was id 10 tavor favor of the repeal of the t act we wilt will lot let the now new york paper tell the incident itself merely premising irig the ao quotation with the remark that the world is strongly anti silver judge patterson Patte raon then took the floor he is more than six feet tall and broad and thick in proportion propof tion he wore a pair of bag baggy y trousers that would make a whole suit of clothes for 66 charley tracey and a loose black sack coat three sizes foo too big biff even for his ample figurer figure his neck was encircled by a high standing collar with big reps flaps turned over like the ears earn of a mastiff he wore a string necktie and big gold bowed spectacles his speech was a knockdown knock down argument on the absurdity of an attempt on the part of any country to make a benoy of its own fron from me materials to ri not inland ld as money in the markets oi of orld rk 10 ha examined mt mf brends diute timm at unith slid and air every one 00 mr rawlins rawling the ambitious young delegate from utah attempted to disconcert judge patterson at several points in his ap speech each but uniformly came out second best when the judge had described the lh effect of the increase in the value of gold and silver in the ebb and flow of these metals from the united states to foreign countries mr rawlins thought he saw a chance have not the laws of france he demanded rather than the laws of the united states induced the ebb and flow of silver and gold I 1 very possibly replied judge patterson with a patronizing wave of his bi big fat hand but my colleague should WUL me how that fact improves the situation does he not know that this congress cannot make laws lor for prance france and that it ls is therefore our oar duty to enack such legislation as will make it Impo impossible isible for Fran france dei or any other country to embarrass us mr Patter pattersons sons rejoinder wa received with hearty applause then the speaker rapped for order to receive a message from the senate which announced thal that body doubtless emulating the example am p le of the house in providing for its ita members had just passed a joint resolution appropriating money to pay its session employee emp loyes |