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Commons Chamber

Volume 326: debated on Wednesday 16 May 1888

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House Of Commons

Wednesday, 16th May, 1888.

MINUTES.]—PUBLIC BILLS— Ordered—FirstReading—Municipal Boundaries (Dublin)* [268].

Second Reading—Small Holdings [9], debate adjourned; Habitual Drunkards Act (1879) Amendment (No. 2)* [203].

PROVISIONAL ORDER BILLS— Ordered—First Reading—Local Government (No. 5)* [265]; Local Government (No. 6)* [266]; Local Government (No. 7)* [267].

Second Reading—Local Government (No. 4)* [250].

Considered as amended—Metropolitan Commons(Chislehurst and St. Paul's Cray)* [193].

Mr Speaker's Indisposition

The House being met, the Clerk at the Table informed the House of the unavoidable absence of Mr. Speaker, owing to the continuance of his indisposition:—

Whereupon Mr. Courtney, the Chairman of Ways and Means, proceeded to the Table; and, after Prayers, took the Chair as Deputy Speaker, pursuant to the Standing Order.

Orders Of The Day

Small Holdings Bill—Bill 9

(Mr. Jesse Collings, Mr. Robert Reid, Mr. Burt, Mr. Winterbotham, Mr. Broadhurst, Mr. Cobb, Mr. Newnes, Mr. Flowers, Mr. Pitt Lewis.)

Second Reading

Order for Second Reading read.

in rising to move that the Bill be now read a second time, said: I think that all hon. Members of this House will admit the importance of the subject with which it deals. It will not, therefore, be necessary for me to delay the House for any lengthened period in order to put forward the case for the Bill; and it is further unnecessary because this question, dither in the form of a Bill or of a Resolution, has been before the House every year since I had the honour of a seat in Parliament. For the last three or four years the Bill has been before the House under the head of Allotments and Small Holdings Bill; this year it is brought forward as a Small Holdings Bill with the allotments portion dropped in consequence of the Act which was passed last year by Her Majesty's Government. That Act, I am happy to know, in spite of its defects, is producing a considerable effect in supplying allotments in various parts of England. Now, Sir, small holdings differ from allotments in this respect—that allotments are for labourers and others who have regular occupations, and are intended to supplement the earnings of the labourer and to occupy his spare time; whereas small holdings have for their object, according to their size, either the full occupation of the labourer or whoever holds them, or the partial occupation of any person who has another business to attend to which occupies only a portion of his time. The question I desire to bring before the House is very important, both in its social and economic aspects; and I hope, looking at the aim of the Bill, to hoar no extravagant talk about cutting up the country into small lots, destroying all the large farms, and causing the country to be covered over with small patches. I trust that I may hear no arguments of that kind against this proposal. The fact is that the number of men who would be in the position to avail themselves of the facilities contemplated by this Bill will be limited. Besides the pick of our agricultural labourers who would be in a position to avail themselves of it, there is a certain class in our village population who have business of another character, but whose time is not fully occupied, and to them such facilities as the Bill proposes to afford would be a great boon. Some of these small tradesmen in the villages have little or nothing to do except on market days—I refer to persons in the position of hucksters, dealers, masons, cattle dealers, hay-tyers, blacksmiths, wheelwrights, pig dealers, and others whom I need not enumerate to hon. Members who are acquainted with rural life. All these men would make a very good class of cultivators, and would be able to get possession of a plot of land or a small holding of such a size as he might require for the purpose of cultivating it in connection with the business with which his time would be otherwise occupied. I think I cannot illustrate my argument better than by referring to the estate of Lord Tollemache, who has 40 small farms averaging 32 acres each, 50 averaging nine acres each, and 32 holdings averaging three acres each. There are more than 300 labourers holding about 300 acres of land, and, of course, the occupiers of these small holdings have other occupations such as I have enumerated. They do exceedingly well with their small holdings and are able to pay their rents. Besides this, we have to deal with the labourers in the rural districts who have no prospect before them for the future, except it be to keep a shop, to go into the towns, or to keep a public-house. The consequence is that social condition is much deteriorated. If, however, the agricultural labourer were assured by the Legislature of the facilities which this Bill proposes to give to him, and with examples before him could see that if he were to save a little money he would be able to obtain a plot of land for cultivation, every inducement would be given to him to remain in the district to which he belonged. Moreover, he would be induced to defer his marriage, and, instead of taking a wife at the early age of 20 or 21, which he does now, because he knows that he is as well off at that ago as he is likely to be when he reaches 30 or 31, he would wait until a better prospect was opened out to him in the course of a few years. That is invariably the case on the continent. The labourers there, in the first few years of adult life, spend their time in saving money for an object which is always present to them, and affords them the greatest encouragement to practice thrift. Unfortunately in this country at the present moment the agricultural labourer has as good a prospect at 20 years of age as he has at 40. Then, again, there is a great deal of talk at the present moment upon the question with regard to which the right hon. Gentleman the Vice President of the Council gave a notice just now—namely, technical education. That question is closely connected with the provisions of this Bill. In the towns there is a direct profit attached to the acquisition of technical education, because it enables a workman to earn larger wages and get on in the world. But there is no use in giving this kind of instruction to the labourer, because, however skilled he might be, he has no prospect of getting more than 148s. or 15s. a-week, and even less. Therefore, if this technical education is to be of any use, it is necessary to have some supplementary provision in shape of the means by which the education is to be applied and rendered useful. The consequence of this state of things is that the children and young men in the rural districts are now taught that their great object in life is to get away from the country, and we see that the oldest, largest, and the most honourable industry in the world—an industry for which all have a natural liking—is becoming a mark of degradation in the eyes of our village youths, who are taught that it is a thing to get away from as soon as they can. Only yesterday morning I received a letter from a man which I will quote to the House, because I know him to be a man from the rural districts who is now a workman in a town. He writes—

"I, as a poor boy, from the earliest time I remember, was always led to believe that my only hope was in going away. I feel that everyone who has left the country in the past has felt the same. I, for myself, may say that although I am doing fairly well as a workman, I would gladly return if there was any prospect of living. I have no doubt there are many others in the same position."
It is a fact, as everyone knows, that the education given in the country schools favours the idea that the land is nothing to these children in the future. Therefore, we want two things which, in my opinion, would change gradually but surely the entire condition of the country—namely, to give an industrial training to the rural labourers, and, secondly, to give legislative facilities for obtaining land, so that they may turn their knowledge to account. In advocating this I am advocating no new thing. We see it done on the continent, in almost every country in Europe. In some form or other the same principle is always involved for which I am now contending, and if it could be brought about here there would be an open career for our rural population. What is the social result of our present position? To understand the question thoroughly it is necessary for the man to have spent his life in close connection with the rural districts, and also to have a clear knowledge of the present condition of the large towns. Any man who has had these two experiences will, if he be a sincere politician, regard the social condition, which is the result of our position, as one of the gravest questions which can occupy the mind of our statesmen. If we look at the census returns of 1881, we shall find the total increase of the population, for the decade from 1871 to 1881, was 14⅓ per cent in England and Wales, being larger than any other decade since 1831–1841, when it was 14½ per cent. But if we turn to the rural districts, we find an absolute decrease of 15·9 per cent, instead of an increase of 14½ per cent. If we take the 20 years from 1861 to 1881, there has been a decrease among the agricultural classes of no less than 31·2 per cent, or nearly one third of the entire agricultural population. If we go farther, and take particulars, we shall find that there is not a single county in which there has not been a decrease, except in those parts of the country which happen to possess a large town. Take Wiltshire for instance. Out of 17 registrars' districts, all have decreased considerably with the exception of three. In Dorsetshire, every district has decreased except two, those two being Poole and Weymouth, the decrease having been up to 11 per cent. In Devonshire, out of 20 registrars' districts, everyone has decreased with the exception of eight, those eight being large towns such as Torquay, Exeter, and Plymouth, or the neighbourhood of large towns. The decrease there has been up to 11 per cent. The sub-district of Honiton decreased nine per cent, and one in 11½ per cent were paupers. In Cornwall the decrease was as high as 14 per cent, but it arose from other causes besides agricultural depression. Every district declined with the exception of Falmouth. In Somersetshire, every district declined except in five, including Taunton, Bath and neighbourhood, and Bedminster. In Herefordshire, every district with the exception of Hereford itself. In Buckinghamshire every district decreased with the exception of Eton and Wycombe. In Huntingdonshire every district decreased. In Bedfordshire every district decreased, with the exception of Bedford and Luton. In Brecknockshire and in Radnorshire, in Wales, every district decreased, and in Suffolk every district decreased except five; some as much as 12½ per cent. It is only a question of physique, of keeping up the power of animal endurance, of health; in other words, of the actual fibre of the human being. This is a most important measure that such a state of things should incite such a feeling of alarm, and when these men go away, according to the census returns, they do not emigrate. The emigration is so small that it is not worth taking into account. They go into the larger towns, the centre of manufacturing industry. Years ago, when the manufacturing industry was advancing by leaps and bounds, all these men were absorbed, but the powers of absorption of the large towns have reached their limits, if, indeed, they have not overstepped dangerously the limit to which they can go with safety. What we have to consider is where this is to stop. Every 10 years shows an enormous increase in our large towns. To take London, for instance. Every few years there is an addition to London of a town with a population as large as that of Birmingham, and it is dangerous to put a population the size of Birmingham into London every few years, nearly all of them coming from the country, unless we can find the means of subsistence for them. We all know that there is a social question being raised that will tax the ingenuity of the cleverest statesman. It is said that these men do better in the towns—that each individual goes from 9s. or 10s., into the towns where he earns 15s. or 20s., but in his turn he displaces another, and at the bottom of the list we shall find a broken man or a pauper. As to the condition of our streets, it is distinctly connected with the influx of rural paupers into the towns. I think, therefore, it will be granted that there is a great social question connected with the subject. Coming next to the economical question, I maintain that it is one which affects the working classes of our towns, and factories and mines and quarries more than any other. The workmen may have their rules and regulations, their strikes and Trade Unions, but as long as there is a steady influx of competing labourers, so long will employment be comparatively secured, and wages kept down. The operation is two-fold—the labourer who leaves the land ceases to produce wealth to be spread over the industrial centres, and he transfers himself to those industrial centres, increasing the supply, while, at the same time, he is lessening the demand. Every scheme for finding work for the unemployed—such as the laying out of pleasure gardens, and so forth—although deserving of the highest praise, are a mere scratch on the surface, so long as we have ready to our hands a great field of employment upon the land itself, where three men could be profitably employed, instead of the one man who is employed at the present time. We are, however, met with the argument of prices—that prices have gone down, and that they are such as make employment on the land unprofitable—[Cries of "Hear, hear!"] Hon. Members say "Hear, hear!" It is said that corn cannot be grown at a profit. I have here evidence which I have received from some of the small owners of land, whose testimony I know to be good; and if I weary the House with some of that evidence from that class of men, I do so because I think it will somewhat startle hon. Members. I put aside the evidence in regard to the corn and cereals, and I will confine my observations to articles upon which the price has not gone down. Take the article of butter. In 1886, 77,000,000 lbs. of butter were imported, of the value of £8,000,000; cheese, 87,000,000 lbs., at a cost of £4,000,000; while the produce at home was double that amount. Eggs, 1,000,000,000, at a cost of £2,750,000. Thus every day that we live we import 2,750,000 eggs of the aggregate value annually of nearly £3,000,000. We import poultry at the cost of £250,000; and of potatoes £750,000; onions, £500,000; apples, £1,000,000; bacon and hams, £8,000,000. The articles thus imported, without enumerating anything further, amount to £25,000,000. And no one can say that in regard to those articles, the prices have not gone up enormously during the last 20 years. An hon. Member opposite shakes his head; but in my early days butter was sold for 6½d. a pound, a chicken for ls. 2d., and eggs at 30 and 40 for 1s. Cheese was equally low; and, if my memory serves me rightly, barley was under 20s. a-quarter. Those prices were nut complained of then. However, I leave out grain, and only take the articles I have already enumerated, for the importation of which we paid in 1886 £25,000,000. If it were necessary, I could enumerate other articles, which would increase the cost of importation to £50,000,000, without touching meal or grain. I want to see why we did not produce many of the things which, as a country, we are preeminently fitted to produce. The fact of low prices, which hon. Gentlemen urge as a reason, seems to me to be really a positive advantage in producing these things. The cottager can feed his pig much better during the time of low prices than he can when the price of feeding is higher. In fact, there is no sufficient answer to be given as a reason when we have a good class of cultivators, and a proper method of cultivation, why we did not produce such articles ourselves, instead of importing them. Then, in favour of trade, the cry of the depression is raised. But, in my judgment, the agricultural industry is the only one in the country which has plenty of orders on hand at paying prices. They are all in a position of manufacturers doing a large trade, I grant, but who have orders in excess of what they can execute. There is plenty of material lying idle; there are labourers wanting work, and yet by some foolish arrangement connected with our system of agricultural plant, the orders which ought to be executed by us are allowed to pass by. I want to know what the reason is. We are ourselves paying £50,000,000 for the importation of certain articles of food. We are anxious about foreign markets, and are desirous of opening out now ones; but we seem to be careless about the best and largest market of all—namely, the Home market. Our newspapers and Chambers of Commerce go into fits of alarm if a few thousand pounds worth of steam-engines are brought over from Belgium; but they have nothing to say about the large quantity of food which we annually import. What is the remedy for all this? It is, to my mind, a silly waste of time to talk about Protection, or of putting a tax on articles in order that we may produce them better ourselves. I do not think it is necessary that I should waste the time of the House in discussing that question. What we want is so to arrange our system of agriculture which deals with those small industries so as to allow the small cultivators facilities to compete in price and also in quality with the small cultivators abroad. No doubt, it will take time to do; but if we set about the work now, there is just time to do it. If we go on as we are doing for many years longer, I am afraid our agricultural population will disappear, and that we shall look for our good old agriculturists in vain. [Cries of "Hear, hear!"] Yes; but there is time to stop it, if we set about the work now. We know that the large farmers are in a bad way; but men with a few acres of land, who are growing wheat and cereals, and tilling their holdings in the fashion of large farmers, find they, also, do not succeed. The fact is that the peasant proprietors of England are—as was described not long ago by Lavelaye, one of the Belgian economists—pursuing a lost art in England. In fact, close personal care and labour are rarely bestowed upon the cultivation of the land by anybody unless he has a piece of land which he can call his own. The great Mr. Jenkins, in his valuable Reports, was generally opposed to small holdings; but there was enough in the information contained in the Reports of that Gentleman to show that he was obliged to give unwilling testimony to the character of the small holders abroad. I remember that he startled the large farmers of England by telling them that in Denmark, which is competing so strongly with us in regard to butter, the most successful dairy farms were without a single acre of permanent pasture around them. The later evidence of the Royal Commission goes in strongly for education in the smaller branches of industry. Remarks have been made as to the poverty of the small proprietors abroad. No doubt, they appear to be wretchedly poor when labouring in the fields; but follow them into their own homes, and a very different state of things will be found. They have good furniture, ornaments, and clothes; and altogether there is an indescribable sense of property, position, and comfort about them which must be witnessed in order to be appreciated. Probably there may be among them, as there are among every other class, failures; but it may be taken that, as a rule, the state of things I have described exists. We are told that the remedy is to be found alone in free trade in land. My opinion is hardly in favour of reforms which are likely to aggravate in some cases the existing state of things and prevent the bringing about of a new and better state of things. There is no use in creating more land-holders. What we want is to create new cultivators. If we are to have landlords I would rather that they should be rich than impecunious persons who would wring all the rent out of a man they could. We must raise a new class of cultivators from the class of people I have been describing. We have the finest material any nation could wish for this purpose. We have industrious and law-abiding men, who under fair circumstances would be enterprizing and successful, but they have no money. That is the great drawback, and one that it is of national and certainly of great social interest for us to overcome. We should not be doing anything remarkable in setting about that task. As I said before, there is not a nation in Europe that has not been obliged to help this class of its population on some principle or other, although it may be different in form from that for which I am contending. We have ourselves done it in Ireland, perhaps to an extent beyond that of any other country. We have the material, and the whole question is whether we will turn it to account. It is useless to preach to a farmer about wearing a black coat. He must go into minute cultivation personally. We have heard a great deal of noise on this subject, and many theories have been put forward. Platforms have rung again about the pick of the land, but the pick of the land means men who are ready to undergo hard work and privation to persevere. It also means home interests, something to the good and the pleasure and satisfaction which attends the cultivation of the soil, and which does not belong to any other industry. Now, in order to remedy this state of things I venture to bring forward again the present measure. Its object is, and I have no doubt whatever its effect may be, that it will raise the question I have referred to, and seeing that the Unionist Government have made one right step last year in this direction, and have shown that in this and other matters they are capable of appreciating the importance of the subject, I hope they will support the Bill.

was understood to say that the Government had already dealt with one branch of the subject.

The subject with which this Bill deals is another subject altogether.

I do not accept the classification. What I say is that they are two distinct branches of absolutely the same question. The object of this Bill is to enable the Local Authorities to acquire land for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of the Bill, and the method of acquiring it is to be practically the same as that for which provision was made in the Bill of last year. Having acquired the land, the disposition of it becomes an important matter. The Local Authority may sell to any one person a small holding on certain conditions, and may advance three-fourths of the purchase money. The purchaser is to provide one-fourth of the purchase money on the completion of the purchase, and the remainder is always to remain unpaid, and is to be a first charge upon the small holding. The interest on this unpaid balance, or quit rent, or rent charge, or mortgage, is 1 per cent, or such other percentage as may be agreed upon, over and above that which the Local Authority paid to the Treasury at the date of advance. By that means the bonâ fides of the holder will be tested, and he would have a personal stake in the matter. This interest, if put aside as a sinking fund, after having paid expenses, would, in a limited number of years, cancel the debt to the Treasury, and the Local Authority would henceforth be the perpetual receiver of well secured ground rents to the extent of about one-third of the percentage of the balance remaining unpaid. There is also a margin of further security in the 25 per cent of the purchase money provided by the purchaser, and added to this there is the yearly increase in the value of the holding which cultivating ownership almost invariably produces. The security is sufficiently good to take away any suggestion of ultimate loss. But Local Authorities, after the purchase is concluded, will have no trouble or responsibility as to the details of management, but will simply be collectors, and will secure their rents in precisely the same manner as the rates are collected; and, seeing that the claim of the Local Authority will be a first charge, no fear as to loss need be entertained. By conferring the quasi-ownership only on the small owner, subletting, sub-division, excessive mortgage, and other drawbacks connected with the small cultivators' system on the continent would be avoided. Therefore, I claim for the Bill that by means of its provisions there would be a large increase in the amount of labour employed on the land, and indirectly the manufacturing interests of the country would receive benefit also. Certainly, it would provide and open out a career for the rural population who had now nothing to do but to migrate to the large towns. There is one clause contained in the Bill by which any Local Authority may, subject to certain conditions, make loans to the owners of small holdings for buildings, or for improvements, such loans and all interest upon them to be repaid within a certain period, in no case extending over 35 years from the making of the loan. These advances are to be under different conditions from those made for the acquisition of the holding, seeing that the whole sum would have to be paid back in annual payments. What greater facilities could be given to a young man just starting in life than to see his way to the acquisition of a holding and a dwelling-house of his own? It would supply that which does not exist at the present moment, and that is the element of hope at the commencement of a man's life. I would ask the House not to discard too hastily the suggestion that three-fourths of the purchase could always remain as a permanent charge upon the holding. I want the House to look carefully into the matter, because, in my view, this is a most valuable provision. My object in making the suggestion is to enable the owner to put as much capital as he possibly can upon the land. If he were to buy the holding out altogether the little capital he possessed would be gone, and the same would be the case if he were to pay the whole sum of instalments. He would himself be crippled, and all his capital taken up in repaying the advance, and he would be unable to pay the amount which was necessary upon the land in the way of stock, work, and manure, or, in other words, he would have parted with the capital required for cultivating the farm in addition to a man's labour, which, after all, is the most valuable portion of his capital. It would be paid to the landlord instead of being distributed on the farm. Besides this, where you could find one man who could have any hope of raising sufficient money to buy a holding out and out, and stock it, you would be able to find three or four or half-a-dozen able to pay one-fourth, and still retain sufficient to enable them to stock and work it. Besides this, there is a greater reason than all. The inquiries I made in France and on the Continent generally with respect of peasant proprietors, resulted in this—that there is one great cause of failure, and that is the excessive mortgages on plot divisions of the land. In bad times, when there may be a temporary pinch, it is easy to be tempted to borrow on the security of the land, and these poor peasants having commenced the practice at once place themselves under the tyranny compared with which the practices of the harshest landlord are simply mercy. I therefore take it for granted that means will be taken to prevent the money-lender, who will be lying in wait to take advantage of these peasant proprietors on the first opportunity, in order to advance money to the small holder, from taking advantage of the necessity of these poor men. Unless something of that kind were done, we might as well give up at once all idea of benefiting the agricultural labourer, because he would simply have to go through a slow and painful process of extinction. Under the provisions of the Bill the proprietor would offer no temptation to the money-lender, inasmuch as he would not have the power to part with the land. He is to advance one-fourth of the purchase money. Suppose the value of the holding is £100, he advances £25, and the Local Authority advances the remaining £75, on which, say, he pays 4 per cent. In that case, he is of no use to the money-lender, and offers no temptation to him. He could only lend up to the value of the £25, and in no case could he fall in any way on the man to whom he lent it, and he would have no legal means of recovering the money. I received evidence in support of my proposals from persons with whom I am acquainted which shows clearly that a large number of people would remain on the land, and that others would go back to it if facilities of this kind were offered. I would ask hon. Members to look at the Consular Reports which have been lately issued, and which contain most interesting information on this subject. I quite grant that agricultural depression has been general; but in every one of these Reports there is sufficient evidence to show the comparatively prosperous condition of the cultivators of the kind I am speaking of. If I am not wearying the House, I should like to read a passage or two from these Consular Reports. I will take, first, Consular Re-port No. 220, 1887, for the year 1886, on the trade and agriculture of Wurtemburg—

"As matters now stand, the normal, natural, and equal development of agriculture is at a standstill. Abundant harvests hate been unable to effect any appreciable improvement. Tenants and encumbered proprietors find the situation even more distressing. The condition of the small farmer, on the other hand, is proportionately better. He tills his fields with the aid of his family, and is but little affected by the depreciation of the price of the crops, as he supplies the wants of his household from his own hand, and makes good his need in cash by the sale of a pig or a beast. On estates of larger dimensions, both the sale-value and rental of land has fallen; in the case of the latter, in many instances, as much as 25 per cent. In the matter of small allotments, on the other hand, with the exception of those situated at an inconvenient distance, or otherwise hampered, the fall in value has not been experienced, many such small lots fetching extraordinary prices."
Our Consular Agent in Sweden says—
"The butter import trade has been steadily on the decline for several years. This has been caused by the marked progress made in Swedish dairy farming, which has increased the home supply and opened up a considerable and rising export with foreign countries."
A Report from the Consular General of Havre, in France, for 1886, says—
"The crops, on the whole, throughout the district were not good, and farmers are complaining, like our own, of the hardness of the times; but I would again, as I did last year, draw attention to the fact that Mr. Vice Consul Lethbridge shows in his Report that from the port of Honfleur, eggs, butter, poultry, fruit, and cheese were exported to England last-year to a total value of—1,152,140. This astonishing fact induces two reflections—first, wonder that our own agriculturists do not supply much of this themselves; and, secondly, what would become of the farming interests in a district of which Honfleur is the outlet were this trade, by any circumstances, put a stop to?"
Thus, according to this Report, we are keeping the people of these districts instead of keeping our people at home. I will not detain the House much longer. I have been contending for a principle—that is, that we should give facilities to persons who without facilities cannot get upon the land, and that we should give them facilities for acquiring holdings by means of which they might produce these articles. There would then be more capital, recognizing labour as capital, expended upon the land. It must be remembered that labour is the most valuable part of capital; that the small holder and his family, by their work, put what is probably equivalent to £2 per week upon the land, and that, though there may be failure if the labour has been employed and paid for by the farmer, it makes all the difference if it is supplied without payment by the man and his family, who will be content with small results when those results are brought about by the efforts of himself and his family. I maintain, further, that there would be more people employed on the land, for, although next t Belgium, we are the most thickly-populated country in Europe, yet, if we take the rural districts alone, we shall find that they are very thinly-populated. In the next case, the larger the amount of cultivation and of production, the greater the increase in the demand for our manufactures; and not only so, but the consequential saving in the amount of poor rates, charities, and so forth. The time is very favourable for trying an experiment in the direction I have indicated. The social and political value of land in this country has largely diminished; and, what is more important still, the profits upon it have largely disappeared, and its marketable value greatly deteriorated. There is a large quantity of vacant land in the country. Almost in every district there is a good deal in the hands of the landowner, who is cultivating the land at a loss, as he finds out to his cost at the end of the year. I am, therefore, surprised that the landlords, and everybody else, did not see the advantage of increasing the usefulness of the class in whose interests I have brought forward this Bill. Have hon. Members—knowing that the marketable value of land has much deteriorated in this country—seen the prices at which land is selling in France and Belgium, notwithstanding the depressed times in which we are living? The price in the countries I have mentioned is enormous compared with what landed property goes begging for here. It is absurd to cry out for Fair Trade, and all such nonsense, when we are, by our simple neglect, allowing from £25,000,000 to £30,000,000 of produce to be sent over here by foreigners which we could easily produce for ourselves. If we made greater use of the land, prices would go up legitimately; and if we can do that by legislative action, no one will be more thankful than myself. I thank the House for the patient manner in which it has listened to me. I know that the work of the Session is very heavy, and that the time of the Government is so fully occupied that it would be almost impossible for them to get through Parliament a Bill of this national importance—for I am not going to minimize its importance—during the present Session. But what I ask them to do is that they should take the matter into their own hands. It is too large a question to be undertaken by any private Member, and I have no desire that it should be made merely the subject of platform speeches. I want something done by anybody—I do not care who it may be—in this direction. I hold that it is sound political economy, and will tend to secure the safety of the nation, to make proper provision for the welfare of the country population. We have a duty to discharge to that population, setting aside altogether any question of political economy, or the realization of wealth. Above all, I trust that Her Majesty's Government will not meet this proposal with a mere non possumus, but that they will state that they recognize its importance, and that, as soon as possible, it will receive at their hands a fair and serious consideration. I beg to move the second reading of the Bill.

said, he desired to say a few words on this Bill, having been associated with his hon. Friend the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham (Mr. Jesse Collings) in the consideration of the subject from the very inception of the Bill. He must say he was disappointed with the concluding part of the remarks of the hon. Member, as the hon. Member had seemed to make some apology for his measure, offering an invitation to the Government to say generally that they agreed with the principle of the proposal without pledging themselves to a period of time or course of action to give effect to it. His hon. Friend had declared that that was the most urgent question that existed in connection with agriculture. Surely then, when agri- culture—when labour and industry—was so depressed in our great towns and rural districts, this of all times was the time which should be chosen for pressing the matter home, and for declaring that it was absolutely urgent, and for demanding of the Government that they should, if necessary, suspend proceedings with regard to some of their measures not of such national importance as that now before the House, in order to give place to the consideration of this subject. He (Mr. Broadhurst) rose to second the proposal fur the second reading of the Bill, and to recommend that it should be proceeded with at once and passed this Session, and should not be postponed to some time more convenient to the Government—that it should not be put off to suit any political exigency of the time. He should like to point out to the House that for the first time in its history, the Bill to-day appeared upon the Order Paper without a single Notice of opposition to it. He must congratulate his hon. Friend the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham on having so speedily converted hon. and right hon. Gentlemen on the other side of the House. Time was, and not very long back, when the Notice Paper was almost crowded with Notices from hon. Gentlemen on the other side of the House to the effect that the Bill be read a second time that day six months. The right hon. Gentleman the Member for the Sleaford Division of Lincolnshire (Mr. Chaplin) used to know something about the position of the Bill. He was a leader in the denunciation of what he used to call the fallacies of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham, who, he (Mr. Chaplin) declared, proposed a measure upon a subject of which he was entirely ignorant. He (Mr. Broadhurst) was glad that a closer association between the right hon. Gentleman the Member for the Sleaford Division and his hon. Friend the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham had taught the right hon. Gentleman that the hon. Member was not so ignorant on these subjects, but that he knew some little about them.

Will the hon. Member permit me to say that I never made any such assertion as that the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham was ignorant upon this question. On the contrary, I should think he knows as more or more about it than anyone in the House.

Yes; but the right hon. Gentleman, as they all knew, was a master in the art of phrases. The scathing the right hon. Gentleman used to employ against the hon. Member was even stronger and much more effective in the direction indicated than the words he (Mr. Broadhurst) had actually made use of, and meant the same thing. He thought the Government might very well shorten the debate on this subject this evening, if some one representing them would rise early and give the House their opinion upon the measure under discussion. He thought he might say, if he was not taking too great a liberty with hon. and right hon. Gentlemen near him, that they on that (the Opposition) side of the House, accepted the Bill unanimously. Of course, they did not pledge themselves to any of the details of the measure. His hon. Friend would never expect that. But they pledged themselves to the main principle of the Bill, and were prepared to vote it an urgent measure, and one which should be proceeded with at once. He apprehended that there was no hon. Member on the opposite side prepared to give strong opposition to the measure.

The hon. and learned Gentleman opposite, one would think, would almost come within the category in which the right hon. Gentleman the Member for the Sleaford Division of Lincolnshire regarded his hon. Friend the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham as having a place—that is, as hardly renowned for his knowledge of this subject. ["Oh, oh!"] Well, he was not aware that the hon. and learned Gentleman opposite (Mr. Ambrose) was renowned for his knowledge of the subject of small holdings and the condition of the agricultural labourers of the country.

I did not profess to have any practical knowledge on the subject. I simply answered the challenge of the hon. Member as to there being no one on this side of the House prepared to offer a strenuous opposition to the Bill. It may be that I have no practical knowledge of the subject, and yet I may be quite capable of giving a strenuous opposition to the measure.

said, that the hon. and learned Gentleman had always suffered more from ignorance than want of knowledge. Now, he apprehended that the Government was prepared, like the Opposition, to accept the principles of the Bill without pledging themselves to all the details of it. If that were so, he saw no reason why the debate should not be very short, and that they might proceed with one or two measures of great importance that immediately followed this on the Order Paper. Might he, for one moment, say that one of the details—or rather, as it was not in the Bill now, he would put it in this way—one of the omissions from the Bill this year was a very striking one. The hon. Member had omitted the allotments part of the original scheme, and he (Mr. Broadhurst) thought his hon. Friend was scarcely well advised in making that omission. The allotment question was one which was as important and necessary to deal with to-day as it was almost before the Act of last Session. The Act of last Session did not meet the requirements of the rural population with regard to allotments, and he had been rather surprised to hear the hon. Member, in moving the second reading of the present Bill, say that he had evidence that the Act of last year was a great success.

Yes, the hon. Member said "abundant evidence"; but he (Mr. Broadhurst) thought they could, on the other side, produce abundant evidence to show that the Act had very essentially failed in attaining the object which the allotments scheme originally had in view. The hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham, he knew, had passed through a time of great excitement this last year or two, and had been pressed most severely in political matters with political difficulties and problems. ["No, no!"] Yes; that was so, unquestionably. The hon. Member who interrupted him was very energetic in his spirit of criticism; but might he (Mr. Broadhurst) remind him of the fact that the Royal Commission on the Housing of the Poor had spent a great deal of time on the consideration of this very subject. That Commission, at the instance of his hon. Friend the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham, had stated that what was necessary in regard to allotments was that allotments up to half an acre should be attached to each cottage. It was perfectly well known that an allotment of a quarter of an acre in area so situated was of more value to a labourer than half an acre a mile away from his cottage.

I must point out to the hon. Member that he is very much enlarging on the subject of the Small Holdings Bill by entering upon the subject he is now discussing.

said, he was obliged to Mr. Deputy Speaker for reminding him of the fact; but he had been led into this, very unwisely no doubt, by the omission of the hon. Gentleman the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham to include allotments in his proposal. That was one of the misfortunes of the present Bill; but under the kind reminder of Mr. Deputy Speaker, he would not further pursue that part of the subject. On the subject of small holdings, however, he was not quite in accord with his hon. Friend. If he had understood the hon. Member correctly, he had declared that he was not looking forward to the complete ownership of these small holdings by the occupiers as much as to the cultivator having a constant and perpetual tendency——

Yes, to absolute ownership. He was bound to say that he thought if they went to the root of the evil of the present system, they would find the best remedy in making the cultivator the absolute owner of the allotment which he cultivated.

said, the best means of obtaining satisfactory results from the cultivation of the soil was by the soil being in the absolute possession of the cultivator. The cultivator should have the whole interest in the property, and there was no reason why the occupiers of small holdings should not become owners of the fee simple. He thought they must direct their attention when they got into Committee upon this Bill—if they got into Committee on it this Session—to that part of the subject. Many hon. Members thought that means might be found to help small cultivators to secure the ownership of their land on the same principle that labourers and artizans were enabled to obtain the ownership of their cottages—that was to say, through the assistance of Building Societies. That was the system proposed by the late Mr. Fergus O'Connor, and though there were great faults and errors of judgment in the scheme of Mr. Fergus O'Connor 50 years back, yet it had in it the elements of a successful and desirable scheme. There were not wanting to-day evidences—and the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham knew that very well—that good fruit had resulted from the effort of Mr. Fergus O'Connor 50 years ago. They had it in evidence, and his hon. Friend would remember that evidence perfectly well, that in one or two cases the small owners of to-day had been helped to their property under the system proposed and partly carried through by Mr. Fergus O'Connor; and where they saw the ownership going with the cultivation there they saw the very best results in agriculture. ["No, no!"] Yes; where the small holders owned their land, there they saw the most it was possible to obtain got from the land. Well, he had a letter which he had received from one of the great agricultural branches, a letter sent to him to refresh his memory as to a case of a very small holder indeed. The case was that of a man in possession as owner of one acre of land; out of that one acre of land this man and his family extracted a profit of £30 a-year.

said, it was within 18 miles of the nearest market town, and within five miles of the nearest railway station.

In Norfolk. He knew the labourer perfectly well. He was a Norfolk man who had migrated North, and worked in the mines with the hon. Member for Morpeth (Mr. Burt) and another hon. Member.

said, the man cultivated fruit and vegetables. He also grew pigs and a few poultry. It was perfectly well known, and hon. Members would admit it in the House as they did out of it, that the growth of pigs was one of the most fruitful sources of profit to agriculturists. There was an evidence of some little want of information on these subjects on the part of the hon. Member opposite. Here was a man the absolute owner of a piece of land an acre in extent, 18 miles from a town, and four or five miles away from any railway station, earning £30 a-year out of his land, and performing skilful work for the farmers in the neighbourhood which added, perhaps, another £30 a-year to his earnings. There was this man, a most desirable citizen, maintaining himself in independence and respectability, bringing up his family independent of all parish relief, he and his being considerable customers, indeed, the best class of customers which manufacturers could have at their doors. This man had told him (Mr. Broadhurst) that if he could obtain an additional acre—that was to say, to make his holding two acres in extent, he could make the land bring him in from £65 to £70 a-year, but that he could not obtain that additional acre except at such a ruinous rent that it was impossible for him to enter into the contract, and here came in the secret of the want of success in some quarters of the whole system of small holdings. The holders were considerably handicapped, because the rent, rates, and other charges imposed upon them were in such enormous disproportion to the charges imposed upon owners of 300, 400, or 500 acres of land. If the friends of the right hon. Gentleman the Member for the Sleaford Division of Lincolnshire were as wise as it was sometimes thought they were, they would long since have made such arrangements as would have rendered a Bill of the kind unnecessary. If the landowners of this country were only wise enough to foresee what must be the inevitable outcome of the present system, it would not be necessary for his hon. Friend to plead as eloquently as he had done that evening that Parliament should do by compulsion that which people ought voluntarily to have done from self interest and for self protection, to say nothing of the patriotic motive of a desire to see the people increase in prosperity all round the large estates of the country. Those sentiments, and these reasons, one would have thought, should have led the large landed proprietors of the country to have endeavoured to cultivate in the minds of the rural population a desire to become the possessors of small holdings, and should have led them to give facilities for the acquisition by the peasantry of such holdings. The system of largo holdings had failed to some extent. At any rate, it had almost brought ruin upon many of the great houses and many of the great positions in the country. If large holdings had failed, instances had been pointed out, and could be pointed out in still greater numbers, where small holdings had succeeded. They had an evidence of it at their doors. There was not one of them, in whatever direction he might live, who would let his land in allotments at the same price as he would let it in larger quantities to large farmers.

said, the evidence that Mr. Deputy Speaker had very properly intimated to him (Mr. Broadhurst) he must not refer to again. They would find evidence enough, if they would go to the Report of the Royal Commission, to bear out what he was saying. And he could speak furthermore from his own personal experience of this matter, because he happened to know something of this matter, having, as his hon. Friend the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham had pointed out, been early associated with the land, and he trusted he might live to see the day when he might again have an opportunity of spending much of his time in a pleasurable and intellectual and in one of the most healthy avocations that anyone could undertake [Laughter.] Yes, he knew that many hon. Members laughed at anything intellectual. [Renewed laughter.] These gentlemen treated their labourers as though there were no intellect required in their work.

said, he did not for a moment accuse the hon. Member opposite of being neglectful of his labourers, or of being wanting in thought for them; but his point was that they were treated, in far too many instances, as though no intellect were required in the work they had to do, whereas there was no industry so susceptible of intellectual treatment as that of agriculture. In every advance that was made, in every move that was attempted, in every hour's work that they did in connection with agriculture, the work was always the better for the application of the man's whole intellect to it. He was glad that, seemingly, the hon. Member opposite (Mr. Long), who knew something about these matters, approved of what he was saying, whilst some hon. Members took delight in laughing. He hoped that the Bill would not only be read a second time that day, but that the Committee stage would be fixed for an early period. He also trusted that the Government would not listen to his hon. Friend who moved the second reading, and believe that the subject was not so pressing as to require to be taken up during the present Session. He trusted that even at a moment's notice the House would be ready to read the Bill a second time, and that they would apply themselves with all their energy to carrying it successfully through Parliament during the present Session, subject, of course, to some Amendments in matters of detail in Committee. He had very great pleasure in seconding the Motion for the second reading of this most important Bill.

Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Bill be now read a second time."( Mr. Jesse Collings.)

said, he thought there had been a marked difference noticeable between the two speeches which had so interested the House. The one speech had been without a shadow of Party spirit, whereas the other had evidenced a great deal of that spirit. He greatly preferred the speech of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham. [Ironical Cheers from the Opposition Benches.] Yes, and he not only preferred that speech, but he could give his reasons for doing so. He believed that there was thorough earnestness and conviction from the beginning to the end of that speech, and he hoped that whenever they talked about subjects of such interest to the rural population as the question before the House, they would as much as possible always drop Party feeling, and try to thrash the question out in a business-like way. But although he (Mr. Gray) was as much interested in this question as the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham, he did not altogether agree with some of the views which the hon. Member had given expression to this afternoon. He was afraid the hon. Member would find if his Bill were passed into law, that there would not be the supply of labourers willing to take 10 or 20 acres of land which he seemed to imagine. It must be remembered that in order to enable a labourer to cultivate successfully 10 or 20 acres of land—in the Bill the limit was fixed at 40 acres; he would therefore take the mean and apply his argument to the case of a man desiring to cultivate 20 acres—he must have something like £200 of capital in hând for the purpose. Now, had they in this country labourers walking about in their thousands, each with £200 in his pocket to invest in that way? He was sorry to say that labourers of that kind were not to be found in Essex; but, supposing in other counties labourers were more fortunate than in Essex, his experience was that they would much rather, under existing circumstances, and in view of the present condition of agriculture, spend their money in taking small businesses, a small shop, and so on, than they would risk their capital on small holdings. The hon. Member for West Nottingham (Mr. Broadhurst) had said something which he evidently seemed to think would be quite crushing to them on that (the Ministerial) side of the House as to what a certain Mr. Fergus O'Connor had done in connection with small holdings. Now, 20 years ago, he (Mr. Gray) happened to know the small holdings in the neighbourhood of Red Marley and Staunton, in Worcestershire, which Mr. Fergus O'Connor started, and though, 20 years ago, the present great agricultural depression had not set in, these small holdings to which he referred were failures, and the hon. Member for the Evesham Division of Worcestershire (Sir Richard Temple) informed him that they were very much the same now as they were 20 years ago. He was afraid that when prices were as bad as they were to-day, they would always find these small holdings getting into as bad a condition as these small farms at Red Marley and Staunton. Nearly everybody seemed to think that they knew something about agriculture—with the exception, perhaps, of his hon. and learned Friend on his right (Mr. Ambrose). Travelling in a railway train, for instance, they invariably saw people looking out of the window, regarding the condition of the country, and heard them advise the agriculturists as to what should be done with the land. They heard people say—"Oh, the wheat should be carted," or "The wheat should not be carted;" and not infrequently did it happen that the wheat referred to was barley. They, the agriculturists, were told that the reason they did not get on in agricultural business was that they had no enterprize—that they had not the same amount of enterprize as manufacturers. They were told that they should get rid of their old Conservative ideas of doing as their forefathers had done before them, and that if they adopted that spirit, they would get on, as the great woollen spinners and iron-masters had got on. Then, again, they were told that the possibility of succeeding in agriculture, whatever enterprize might actuate their movements, had gone. They were told that they must break up their machinery, stop their engines, and sell off, and let small capitalists and agricultural labourers cultivate the land. Well, before he could believe in the expediency of following that course, he thought they ought to have some practical experience as to the likelihood of the new system proving successful. The allotments question was a very different one to that of the small holdings. An allotment might be worked most successfully by a man who had a few spare hours in the evening; and no better employment could be found for the British villager than an hour or two per day spent in that way, or in the contemplation of his pigs, if the hon. Member opposite liked, but to ask a man to spend a few hours on an allotment in the evening was one thing, and to ask him to invest a capital of £200 upon a holding, and to endeavour to cultivate it with profit, at the present prices of agricultural produce, was another and a totally different thing. He had but little experience in the drawing of Bills; but, in his humble opinion, there were several weak points in the drafting of the present measure, and the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham, he believed, himself admitted that perhaps some points in his Bill could be improved by alterations. Well, it appeared to him (Mr. Gray) that one of the weak points was this. He thought there was something unfair in it—and he was very much inclined to think that the hon. Member opposite would agree with him that unfairness, wherever they found it, was weakness. The Bill said that the Local Authorities should purchase land, if they thought proper, at such a price as would be taken if the owners were willing sellers. Now, he did not think that was fair. He wished everything to be tried which was reasonable and just on behalf of the agricultural labourer; but he certainly did not think it would be fair to pounce down upon the landlord and to say to him, "You shall part with a portion of your property, whether you like it or not, at such price as you would take if you were a willing seller." Supposing one of our manufacturers were told that he must dispose of his great business, however he liked it and wished to go on with it—that he must sell up in the interest of those whom he had been in the habit of employing, at such a price as he would have asked if he had been anxious to part with his business. What an outcry would there be if such a proposal as that were made, and yet there was not much difference between the two cases. He was sure the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham did not wish to be unfair. At the present time, if the Bill had become an Act of Parliament and it had been possible to find any authority willing to take upon itself the powers and responsibilities of the provisions of this measure—and he did not think such Local Authorities would be plentiful, at any rate during the next few years to come—and supposing that authority went to the landlord and said that he should sell his land at the price he would receive for it if he were a willing seller, he would get about £12 an acre for that which some few years ago was probably worth £40 an acre; and in saying that he had in his mind land in the locality with which he was best acquainted. Was this common justice to the landlord? The door would be open to a great deal of jobbery. In the Bill it was provided that nothing should be set up in small holdings which should depreciate the value of property adjoining, but he was not quite sure whether in some cases it would not be the other way round. [An hon. MEMBER: How?] He was not sure that in case where there was only a very limited quantity of land of a certain description, the fact of its being taken up in small holdings would not increase the price of that which was left. The Bill in these respects would not work well, and it might lead to jobbery. The hon. Member who moved the second reading of the Bill said he would not take up the time of the House about the prices of agricultural produce. Well, he (Mr. Gray) was rather inclined to think that the prices of produce was the gist of the whole question.

I am sure the hon. Member does not wish to misrepresent me. What I said was, that I would not take up the time of the House by quoting the prices of grain and cereals, but I went fully into the prices of other produce.

said, that undoubtedly was the case. He, however, was not afraid to go into the prices of cereals, because, after all, it was the price of corn which had been, and still would be a check upon agricultural operations over a great part of the country. When England ceased to grow her own corn, England would be in a state of great danger. They might talk about their——

Message to attend the Lords Commissioners;—

The House went;—and being returned;—

Small Holdings Bill

question again proposed, "That the Bill be now read a second time."

said, he had been speaking of a question relating to corn growing, which seemed to him to be one of the most important questions of the day. He did not think it would be well for this country to change its system of agriculture in such a way as to make us more dependent on the foreigner for the necessities of life than we were at the present time. The hon. Member for West Nottingham seemed to think that it was entirely the fault of the British farmer that he was not able to compete with the foreigner in the production of cheese, eggs, and butter. Perhaps, if they followed up that question very closely, they might find sufficient reasons for that being the case; but it would necessitate his trespassing for too long a time upon the patience of the House that afternoon to go closely into that part of the subject. He would merely say that it was quite possible that foreigners who send that class of agricultural production were able to get a certain amount of profit out of their other agricultural productions. If he could make a profit out of wheat growing or out of barley, he could afford to sell cheese, butter, and eggs at a cheaper price than he could if he were not getting a profit out of these articles. A great deal of wheat growing land in England was entirely unsuitable to the production of either cheese or butter. Here was an error in which people who knew very little about the practical work of agriculture very often fell into. Many hon. Members thought that all agriculturists had to do—if wheat growing did not pay—was to just lay down the barren land in grass. Now, it would not always be possible to do anything of that kind. There were tracts of land under the plough which would do very well under grass no doubt; but, speaking generally, much of the wheat growing land of England would only produce—farm it how they might—a poor description of grass. Therefore, in a large portion of the grain-growing parts of England it was not practicable for labourers to undertake the cultivation of the soil in the expectation of making a profit out of cheese and butter. Again, everyone who knew anything about the matter knew very well that grass land hardly employed one labourer per acre, where arable land used to employ three. He would put it roughly in that proportion that arable land well farmed would employ at least three times as many labourers as grass land. Some hon. Members complained—and he thought, com- plained with very good grounds indeed—of the immense number of the inhabitants of our rural districts who were invading our large towns, and competing with our artizans and operatives there. Well, but if we laid down the land in grass, and followed out the recommendations of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham—whom he was sorry to see was not in his place just now, for he did not wish to refer to anything he had said unfairly—he was certain that a far less number of labourers would be employed n agricultural work than was at present the case. A large number of labourers would be displaced, and they would come up to London and to other large towns, and the grievance which had been complained of, of having too many labourers competing with the operatives of the towns, would be exaggerated in the Future until it became much more serious than it was that day. To go back for a moment to the Bill, he had said that the provisions which forced a landlord to part with his land at a price which he would take, providing he were a willing seller, was unfair, and he would contrast that provision with the provision which pointed out the way in which the small holder was to be treated if he wished to get rid of his land, or if the Local Authority wished to dispossess him of it. The small holder was to be treated in this way. The price he would get would be the value of the land held as a small holding, together with all unexhausted improvements made thereon, 10 per cent for compulsory repurchase and a proper allowance for disturbance, cost of removal, loss of fixtures, and so on. That appeared to him to be a very different way of treating one man to the way in which it was proposed to treat the other, and he could not but fancy that the proverb that what was sauce for the goose was sauce for the gander was applicable in connection with this clause. Then, as to the idea of not allowing a man aver to become the actual possessor of the property. He could not see that it was advisable to leave such a millstone always around the neck of a holder, as that three-fourths of the value of his holding should remain for ever on mortgage. His own experience taught him that there was no class of agriculturists who had suffered more during the last 8 or 10 years of agricultural depression, than those men who had bought their own land years ago and mortgaged it. He hoped there were no hon. Members of the class to which he was about to allude now present, but some hon. Members opposite seemed to think that a landlord was a man who ought to be jumped on whenever there was an opportunity of performing that process. ["No, no!"] He was glad to hear the hon. Member opposite dissent, but his statement was that not infrequently some of the Benches opposite were occupied by Gentlemen who seemed to hold that view. In answer to those hon. Members, he would say, as he had frequently said before, that there were landlords who were good and landlords who were bad. There were such landlords all the world over, and until the Millenium that would perhaps continue to be the case. But it was hardly just that because a man happened to be a landlord they should take up the position of saying—"Never mind what you do with him—he is only a landlord, shy a stone at him whenever you can." He could assure hon. Members that many landlords during the last 8 or 10 years of agricultural ruin, had tried all they could to keep their tenants on the farms, and not altogether for generosity. Generosity, no doubt, had been one motive, but that motive had also been mixed up with another—namely, that of self-interest. Still, the fact remained, that the tenant farmers of England during the past 8 or 10 years, speaking generally, had been in a better position than the men who had bought their farms 8 or 10 years ago, and had considerably mortgaged them on purchase. Supposing a man had land under the provisions of this Bill. If things went on well, he would be able to pay the interest on his mortgage, but as soon as agricultural prosperity waned, the position of the man who owned his own small holding would be most miserable, and whatever they did to get these small purchasers to occupy land, and no one was more anxious than he was that the land should be occupied and cultivated, they must bear in mind that the point he had been dealing with was a most serious one. By all means let them work together in the solution of this problem, and let them work free from all Party bias. The thing to be done was to endeavour to get the land occupied. He would willingly work with those who wished, where the land was suitable for it, to get it cut into smaller portions, rather than have it continued in farms of 200 or 300 acres; but whatever they did, do let them try to put men on these small plots of land with a reasonable prospect of their being able to hold on. They might take his opinion for what it was worth, and he offered it very humbly and with great diffidence; but he was convinced of this, that the men whom they would put in possession of small holdings, by the machinery of the Bill, the men whom they would induce to invest their £200 and their labour and their time in agriculture, instead of many another business—would have a very small chance indeed of prospering. So long as a man had a chance of investing his £200 outside a farm and outside the offer made to him in this Bill, he (Mr. Gray) was sure he would go in for a shop, for a higgler's cart, or for a public-house, or something of that kind. He was very much obliged to the House for the attention it had given to him while he had been speaking at such length, but he was extremely anxious that the question of the condition of the rural labourer should be thoroughly looked into. He did not feel that he could give any hearty support to the Bill; but he heartily supported the endeavour which the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham was making to remedy the condition of the agricultural labourer throughout the country. Within 50 miles of the spot he (Mr. Gray) was standing upon that day, within 50 miles of that great City and centre of the industry of all the world, he could point to a place where agricultural labourers were only getting nominally 9s. per week. He did not see the hon. Gentleman the Member for Saffron Walden (Mr. Gardner) in his place; but on more than one occasion that hon. Member had told them that he represented the agricultural labourer. The hon. Member certainly represented the agricultural labourers in his own Division, and it was to that Division that he (Mr. Gray) was now alluding. Well it was a very sad state of things that 9s. a week should be all the money earned by an agricultural labourer within such a short distance of a great City like that. Something must be done to meet these cases, and he was delighted that the hon. Gentleman the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham had alluded to the question. He was delighted that the hon. Member was working upon it. He wished the Association of which the hon. Member had been the other day made President—an association called, he thought, The Rural Labourers' League—every success, and he believed that when that Rural Labourers' League had gained experience, and had been in working order for a year or so, the hon. Member would be able to bring before the House some proposition to remedy the condition which so many unfortunate villagers of this country found themselves in—some proposition which would be more likely to work well than the provisions of the present Bill. Looking forward rather to the information and experience which would be gained by that League of which the hon. Member was the worthy President, and similar associations, and looking forward rather to the experience they would have from these associations than to the provisions of this Bill, thanking the House for having heard him at such length, he must decline to vote for the second reading of the Bill.

said, he was sure every Member of the House, on whichever side he sat, would agree with the hon. Gentleman who had just sat down in his estimation of the importance of the question. His hon. Friend the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham (Mr. Jesse Collings) had dealt with great ability on the national importance of the question; and the hon. Member's judgment had been endorsed by the hon. Member for West Nottingham (Mr. Broadhurst), and though there were one or two portions of the speech of the latter hon. Member, as well as of the speech of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham to which he (Viscount Wolmer) thought it his duty to take a little exception, yet he thought that those who had spoken on the subject were so far united that they could bear testimony to the importance of the question and in desiring to see it dealt with as quickly as possible on true lines. He thought the hon. Member who had last spoken (Mr. Gray) could not, in his concluding remarks, have intended to imply that the hon. member for the Saffron Walden Division of Essex (Mr. Gardner) would not join with him in deploring the fact that 9s. per week was the average wages of agricultural labourers in his part of the country. He (Viscount Wolmer) felt certain that the hon. Member for Saffron Walden would deplore that as much as the hon. Member (Mr. Gray) himself; and he thought that the hon. Gentleman would not find fault with him for having cleared up that point. It seemed to him to have rather escaped the attention of some hon. Members who had spoken in this debate, and especially of the hon. Member for West Nottingham and of the hon. Member who had just sat down, that it was not a subject upon which they could lay down general principles as if all land could be dealt with in small holdings, or that no land was suitable for small holdings. The hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham took particular pains to point out, and he (Viscount Wolmer) believed with absolute accuracy, the kinds of cultivation that were suitable for peasant proprietorship in this country, and it had been too much the habit of hon. Gentlemen sitting on the other side of the House in the past to endeavour to ride off on the question of cultivation, and to ignore those points upon which the small farmer could undoubtedly make the cultivation of land pay. The other night the hon. Member for West Nottingham spoke in a strain which would lead one to suppose that small holdings might be suitably introduced in almost every part of this country. Now, from that view he—with, he might venture to say, really some personal experience on the matter—certainly dissented. As things stood at this moment bad land, or land in out-of-the-way places, was, and must remain, the luxury of the rich; but good land, or land near a convenient situation, near a railway and good markets, could be brought into cultivation for the purposes contemplated by the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham. Now, he should like to give an instance which had come to his knowledge from his own experience. About 20 years ago, there was some land lying about eight miles from Gosport of a blue clay, mixed here and there with a light sandy peat. The land was let at a very low rent, and grew very bad crops of cereals. One enterprizing man, however, near the neighbourhood, exactly of the class which the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham had in view, tried the growing of strawberries. The land proved peculiarly suitable for the cultivation of strawberries, and the consequence was that there had grown up within the last generation a new industry, strawberries being grown over the whole district, immense quantities being sent to London and other large cities of consumption by small men—none of them farmers in the ordinary acceptation of the term. Now, if he might take a point which the hon. Member for West Nottingham intended to raise—namely, that the holdings could really be introduced under almost all circumstances by willing landlords, he ventured strongly to differ from that hon. Member, and he would take as an example the case of Sweden and Norway, which had already been alluded to by the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham. He (Viscount Wolmer) had had the advantage of living for some time in a very remote valley of Norway, where exactly that method of the cultivation of cereals was carried on, and he had no hesitation in saying that, although that valley was cultivated, and although the result was very creditable to the inhabitants, yet the conditions under which the cultivation was carried on were not such as an English labourer would submit to for a moment. For instance, it involved the expatriation of all the children of every family except one. Every year, from that valley, the surplus population went off to certain States in America. That was the recognized effect without which that cultivation could not be carried on; and, beyond that, the cultivation involved such hard labour and such bad fare that every English labourer in England would find himself much better off with a wage of 10s. or 12s. a-week, which, unfortunately, was what prevailed in some of our Southern counties. But he wished to be understood as drawing a line between the kinds of cultivation that could be profitably introduced and the kinds of cultivation that were unsuitable for small holdings. Now, when they came to the Bill which was under discussion, the point that struck his mind first was the machinery by which this excellent intention was proposed to be carried into effect. The hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham had explained the reasons of his not allowing the full purchase money to be paid, and for insisting that a small holder should always remain indebted to the extent of three-fourths of the purchase money. There was no doubt that the object he had in view was a very important one. No doubt, the money-lender and the moneylender's debt had always been the cúrse of the small farmers and proprietors in every country; therefore, every effort to deal with that must receive most careful consideration from the House. But in flying from one difficulty, at the same time the hon. Member fell into another, which was serious, and with the permission of the House he (Viscount Wolmer) would like to point it out. It amounted to this—that instead of making the Local Bodies really the means of conveyance, the instruments by which the peasant proprietor was created, the Local Body was turned into a general and perpetual land agency, and it was the total unfitness of any such Body, according to his experience, for any such duties which made him quite unable to endorse this part of the Bill. Now, anyone who had any practical experience in the management of property in land, or of farming, knew that practically at that moment no such operations could be made to pay except with the closest personal attention. It was also a notorious fact that all Corporations, whether charitable or elected, were the worst Bodies to manage land which this country ever knew, and when they came to consider the endless details which such management involved at this moment, he did not think that anyone could wonder that the result had not been better. With the permission of the House, he would mention two cases which had come within his own experience where exactly such holdings as were now under consideration had been built by a private owner, who could give the whole of his personal attention to the business, and the House could judge how far the same results would probably be brought about if the management of small holdings was in the hands of District Councils, whoever the men were, and however zealous they might be in the performance of their duties. He would take first the case of a small farm which was purchased some years ago. [An hon. MEMBER: Of how many acres?] A small holding of 152 acres. It was purchased when times were better—and it was obvious that in dealing with measures of this nature the House must contemplate changes taking place in the value of land one way or the other. Supposing this Bill had passed 20 years ago, and the land he was referring to had been purchased at that time, those 152 acres would have brought £30 an acre. The land was fair grass land, not of the best, but still of a very useful quality. No doubt, it ought to fetch more, but it was not easily accessible to railways. Now, £30 per acre for 152 acres would, roughly, make the purchase money £4,560. Well, on the holding, the cottages and other necessary buildings had cost not less than £1,000, and besides that there had been considerable drainage, and considerable fencing, and matters of that kind—of which he had not got the particulars—carried out. He wished the House to remember, although he had not got the particulars of all these expenses, that they were things that would have to be taken into account in making a proper balance-sheet—and this only went to make his point stronger. Now, this farm was part of a larger farm, and two years ago was turned into small holdings, and if any hon. Member should imagine that the original expenditure of £1,000 was larger than was necessary for such a holding, he would explain that that was not the case; because before the tenant could be found for the holding, extra expenditure on the building—whether in the shape of repairs, or of re-adaptation and enlargement—was £104. Therefore, with the drainage, with the fencing, and with the clearing in certain places, the total value, with expenditure, was £5,664. The rent paid for the farm at that moment was £114, which, upon the total of £5,664, was almost exactly 2 per cent. Now, when they considered the rate at which District Councils would be able to borrow money, they would agree, he thought, that they would not be able to get it at 2 or 2½ per cent. At the outside, the best price they would be able to obtain would be 3 per cent, and to that it would be necessary to add the expenses of manage- ment, and the loss which might be occasioned by the farm being vacant for a short time now and then. Then, again, the tenant would require some repairs occasionally and some additional accommodation. Taking all those things into account, it was obvious that such a farm could not be otherwise than a burden on the rates. And now he would take the case of another farm bought at the present moment. This was a farm of 50 acres, having extremely convenient buildings upon it, and which, considering the state of the markets, with buildings, could be bought for £20 per acre. That would make £1,000. The repairs required when the small holder first took possession amounted to £45, making a total of £1,045. The rent of that 50 acres was £40 a-year, coming almost exactly to 4 per cent on the purchase money. Now, that was buying land under the most favourable conditions, and yet that left for the District Council, or whatever the Body might be called which would have the management of the land, absolutely no margin with which to protect the rates from loss.

That would not be paid by the person for whom the money was borrowed. The District Council would have to find the interest, as well as to provide the sinking fund. Taking all the circumstances into consideration, he did not see how District Councils could possibly have done what landowners had been obliged to do. Now, he did not wish the House to understand this as an argument attempting to deal with this question. The argument was only against making a Body like a District Council, which, at the best, would not be more than as improved Board of Guardians, a perpetual land agency for carrying on one of the most difficult businesses it was possible to conceive—that was the management of farm and landed property. Therefore, without desiring to ride that horse too far, or to be understood as endeavouring to prove that this question could not be dealt with in any shape by Public Bodies, yet he wished to provide against a Body like a District Council being converted into a land agency. In the general treatment of the subject, he sincerely hoped that they would hear no more of what was contained in one por- tion of the speech of the hon. Member for West Nottingham (Mr. Broadhurst), to which he, with a great many Members of the House, must take exception; because, while making a very useful contribution to the discussion, the hon. Member could not resist, when he was acting like a revolving signboard, from stopping from time to time, at the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham, giving him a dig in the ribs which he utterly and entirely undeserved; because, whatever might be that hon. Gentleman's political opinions on other subjects, he was perfectly certain that he, more than any other man, had brought this matter to the front, and that he, more than any other man, was responsible for the fact that it had now been taken up by almost every man on the Opposition side of the House, and by a large number of Members on the other side of the House, and that public attention had been directed towards it, having previously regarded the question of the provision of allotments and small holdings as an impossible proposal. It used to be the custom of hon. Gentlemen opposite to snap up those who moved in this matter with the question—When large farmers could not make the land pay, how was it to be expected the small farmers could make it pay? The hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham had proved beyond all denial that there were in this country those farms which not only the small farmer could make pay where the big farmer could not, but for which the small farmer was fitted, as was illustrated by the industries which were carried on in foreign nations. When small farmers would be able profitably to exercise those facilities for dealing with land, he thought it was the duty of Parliament to give them such facilities.

said, that the hon. Gentleman the Member for West Nottingham (Mr. Broadhurst) appealed to Members upon the Ministerial side of the House, and especially to those sitting upon the Front Bench, to state what their views were with regard to this Bill. He (Mr. Llewellyn) did not know at all what course the Government were going to take; but he knew that there were a very large number of Gentlemen sitting on those Benches who were in thorough sympathy with the hon. Gentleman (Mr. Jesse Collings) in moving the second reading of the measure. But, while they all, he thought, heartily sympathized with the object the hon. Gentleman had in view as shown by this Bill, and also with the object he had had in view in doing the great and useful work he had for some time done in the country, it was a matter of serious regret to many of them that the Bill, as it stood, was one which could not be supported. There was no doubt about it that the object of the Bill was to assist labourers—and not only labourers, but those a little above the position of labourers—to become the possessors of small holdings or farms. With the principle of that they heartily agreed; but the question was, whether the Bill before the House would effect such an object, whether it would be a boon to small agriculturists or small people in the country, or be the reverse. Personally, he was inclined to think there were two provisions in the Bill which would turn out to be anything but a boon to the people. In the first place, the chief objection to the Bill was the great responsibility which it entailed upon the ratepayers by the purchase powers. If any Bill could be introduced, or any scheme put forward, or any present Act enlarged or amended by which the small holders could become possessors of small plots of land, he, for one, would heartily support it, and he need hardly say that he would not consider for a moment who it was that introduced it or supported it in the House. He was afraid that in that matter they must not lose sight not only of those who would be benefited by the Bill, but of those who would be injured by the Bill. His first objection to the Bill was founded on the ground of the expense which would be entailed to the ratepayers. His next objection was, that the Bill would offer a direct encouragement to a great number of these people to get into debt. He was afraid they could not do any more unkind act than to encourage small holders to embark upon undertakings which they would be unable to fulfil. There was not only the difficulty as to finding the money to start with, but he was inclined to doubt the ability of the people in view to make the holdings pay in many cases. Now, what were the expenses which the Local Authority must look forward to before it undertook to provide small holdings in any place. The expenses were enumerated in the Bill by one of the clauses. Roughly speaking, they were chiefly these, and he thought it must occur to anyone who had noticed the difficulties with which Local Authorities had to deal in carrying out the Allotments Act, that they would be considerable—the expenses of the valuation of land, and of the examination of titles—he said titles, and not title, because he saw the Bill provided that where possible land should be taken in small amounts from a number of owners of property in preference to being taken from one large owner—expenses with regard to conveyance and the preparation of deeds, and those they knew were great expenses, though he did not lose sight of the fact that in the Bill means were provided by which land could be registered, and so a great deal of the unnecessary expense connected with the transfer of land obviated; and then with regard to the purchase of property, there was the difficulty which had been pointed out by his hon. Friend (Mr. Gray.) His hon. Friend pointed out what was likely to be a willing seller and what was likely to be an unwilling seller. Take the case of the unwilling seller, and there would be a great number of men who would only part with their land on compulsion. A question of arbitration would arise, and anyone who had had anything to do with dealings with public Bodies when they came to arbitration knew what a very expensive method arbitration was. Arbitration proceedings had been sometimes rendered of no avail, because notice had not been served, and dates had been allowed to pass owing to a want of sufficient knowledge, and the arbitration had had to be commenced over again. He had in his mind a case of laying down pipes through a field. In that case, owing to unnecessary delay, the expenses of the arbitration were something very great indeed, something represented by about £70 or £100, when the cost ought not to have been more than about £10. Then there were the expenses attending the borrowing of money from the Public Works Loan Commissioners. He did not mean to say that was considerable, but it must be considered. Then there was the expense of getting much of this land into a fit state for the small holders; they had to provide for water courses and drainage; the matter of rates would not be inconsiderable either, and regard would also have to be had for the expenses of fencing, and so forth. He noticed that in the Bill there were powers granted to Local Authorities to erect buildings. Thus they were at once brought face to face with architects and clerks of works, and so on. All these expenses were possibilities under the Bill, and must be provided for. In the rent the Local Authorities would have to charge the small holders for these expenses, in order to free themselves from the responsibility of incurring debt in the matter. Then there was the question of the expense of the insurance and of the repair of the buildings. All these were questions which must be considered. There was also the question of the collection of rents. The hon. Gentleman the Member for West Nottingham (Mr. Broadhurst) spoke of the collection of rents as being nothing more than the assistant overseer could do. The assistant overseer had power in the case of rates unpaid to summon the ratepayer; but it was a very different matter to collect rent, say, from a man who had left the place, or who was ill, or incapacitated from paying the rent, or had nothing on the place to distrain upon. The difficulties were very different in the case of the collection of rent and in that of the collection of rates in arrear. Then, again, in addition to all this, there was the power pointed out by his hon. Friend (Mr. Gray) with regard to the money to be refunded to a small holder when he was deprived of his holding. A small holder might be deprived of his holding after he had improved it, after he had got his buildings up, and got the land in good condition. The Local Authorities under such circumstances were to pay him 10 per cent for the compulsory repurchase of the land. That, in addition to the amount which would have to be paid for the land, would represent a considerable sum in addition to what he had already mentioned. Again, if the Bill was to be carried out to any extent, and it might be in the neighbourhood of towns, the Local Authorities would have to increase their clerical staff, and have to employ professional assistants—solicitors, and others. All those were expenses which would mount up to a very large sum indeed. Having got together all these possible or probable charges, it would be the duty of the District Council to see at what rent they could afford to let the land. They would have to borrow the money in the first place, and they would not borrow it much below 3 per cent; and in the Bill they had to let the land at 1 per cent more than 3 per cent, that was 4 per cent. In addition to that, they had to put down all the expenses he had spoken of; and he doubted whether they would not add considerably more than 1 per cent, and that would bring the charge up to 5 per cent—5 per cent before they could let the land. The rates and taxes must fall on someone. Take the case of a piece of ground outside a town or village valued, say, at £100 an acre. He had heard it said that land could be purchased at from £15 to £30 an acre; but, still, there was land outside many towns the selling price of which would be as high as £100 an acre. The Local Authorities must let that land at £5 an acre to the small holder, and that would represent a sum which he thought very few of the agricultural labourers would agree to pay for their holdings. He would like to point out, too, the position in which a holder would be under this Bill as compared with the position he would be in if he rented under a landlord. They had heard a great deal of late about bad landlords; but he thought that the worst landlord to be found was the landlord who did not know his own business. The landlord who did not know the value of his land, but who was entirely in the hands of his agent, was the worst of all landlords. In his (Mr. Llewellyn's) opinion, it would be an inestimable boon if men who were born to inherit large incomes would in their early days attend a little more to the business of farming and to the management of their own estates instead of leaving it to agents. They would be on better terms with their tenants, and their tenants would be able, instead of having to approach their landlord through an agent, to go direct to a man who knew something about what they asked, and whether their demands were reasonable or not. He maintained that Local Authorities must of necessity be hard landlords. The rent must be paid to the day; the money was borrowed, the interest had to be paid, and there was no question in such a case of a man being able to ask the landlord to wait until the coming fair next month, when he would be able to sell his beasts. A man would not be able to plead to his landlord that he had had bad luck in one way or another, and he would have no opportunity of working out his rent. If a man rented under a landlord, the produce of his farm, his hay, or grass, or whatever it might be, was often sold to the landlord; his poultry and fruit might be bought by the landlord, or he could give labour to the landlord. In many cases small holders worked out the whole of their rent by their labour. Men acquiring holdings under this Bill would have no opportunities of this kind; their rents must be paid in full to the day, and the consequences would be that at times they would be sorely pressed. It would be very often found that these men had no one to help them. At present, in the part of the country in which he lived there were a great number of small holders of land, holders of from 20 to 30 and 40 acres of land. He did not know how long they held them for; but some of them had held their land for a great many years; but he knew that during times of depression, during the last seven years, for instance, no one had been worse off than these small farmers. They had no landlord to go to to ask for a remission of rent, no landlord to go to to make their position easier in any possible way. They were their own landlords, and their own tenants, and they were the men who suffered most cruelly, because when the money was to be forthcoming the men who had lent them money proved to be harder than landlords, and required their money to the very day. He believed that the tenants under this Bill would be very much in the position of the small holders he had referred to, and he should very much regret that anybody whom he knew at all should embark in this line of farming. With regard to failure again. Suppose a man had a holding of 10 acres, he was very little more than a labourer; he had been a labourer; he had got some money by some means or other, and he was led on by the prospect of getting a little more. Well, he failed from no cause of his own; possibly his failure was to be attributed to sickness, or to having had to pay debts on behalf of someone else, or to a variety of causes. He failed, and perhaps he ran away. It was the commonest thing when a man in such a position got into trouble to go to America for good, or to disappear for a time. What would be the position of the family of such a man? That family would be called upon to meet the payments upon the farm. How was the assistant overseer to get the money? It would be absolutely impossible for him to do so; and as a result of the impossibility of getting the rent, the Local Authorities would have to suffer, and more money would have to be taken up, or else the position of the Local Authority would be a very unfortunate one indeed. The consequence of it all would be that the great number of those who had been successful, and who had managed their farms well, and who had, perhaps, been paying for others, would have to pay over again through the rates, because of the failure of this one man, which might have been brought about by his own mistakes or not. There was another point to be taken into account; how was the Local Authority to interfere in the case of a man who was clearly damaging his property? There was nothing commoner than for an allotment holder to injure his allotment. The allotment might be an acre, or half an acre, or a quarter of an acre in extent, but if it was let to go on badly looked after, and robbed of its goodness, not manured and so on, it would be no longer of the value it was originally; then came a year when such an allotment would have to be taken by some one simply for the sake of getting it into condition again. This was another expense against the Local Authority which must be provided for—they had no power whatever to interfere with bad farming. He did not intend to allude to another Bill now before the House; but, in his opinion, the greatest objection to that Bill was the facilities it afforded to Local Authorities for the borrowing of money. If, in addition to that, there was direct encouragement to Local Authorities to borrow money, they would be placed in a much more serious position than ever. There was another point worthy of consideration in regard to the Bill now under discussion, and that was that direct encouragement was given to people to get into debt. He believed that of all classes in the community there was no class which felt the curse of being in debt more than the agricultural labourer or the cottager. He knew very well that if a doctor's bill or some other bill was owing, it made many of these men thoroughly miserable. There was nothing a cottager disliked so much as being in debt. Now, the Bill spoke of these small holders as owners; but they could in no instance be owners. These men were encouraged to become possessors of the land and were called owners; but this weight of debt was not only put round their necks, but it was made impossible for them to clear themselves of it. However willing a man was to obtain the freehold, he would not be able to do it, but to the end of his days he would be burdened with debt. That in itself to his (Mr. Llewellyn's) mind was a great objection to the Bill, because many a young man, say, of the age of 20 or 25, would work hard and exert himself in every way to clear himself of debt, and to acquire a little property, but no matter how hard he worked, he would not be able to rid himself of debt. He (Mr. Llewellyn) saw also that in the Bill borrowing powers were provided in regard to building. It was provided that the repayment might be spread over a period of 31 years; but that in itself was most objectionable; because if a man who might have put up good buildings met with misfortune, there was the additional charge for buildings laid upon his family for 31 years—his family would be answerable, on account of the payment year after year of the interest upon the money spent upon buildings. If a man lived and made the repayments regularly, he would be upwards of 50 years of age before he found himself clear of debt upon the head of buildings alone. Therefore, he thought he was right in pointing out that in this Bill there was direct encouragement to small holders to get into debt, and the result of that was that the position of those holders would be by no means a rosy one, and in many cases the men would be made unfit for work owing to the weight of debt. The hon. Gentleman the Member for West Nottingham (Mr. Broadhurst) said that under this Bill there would be no possibility of the occupier incurring any responsibility as to the borrowing of money. He (Mr. Llewellyn) did not think that was at all impossible, but that it was very probable. As sure as fate, as long as there were in all country districts men ready and willing to lend money to these poor people, so long would there be people foolish enough to borrow. If a small farmer once got into the hands of the village attorney or money lender, he was worse off than any of the Irish farmers of whom they had heard so much.

said, he never referred to the borrowing powers of the holders themselves.

begged the hon. Gentleman's pardon. He thought that many of these small holders would be ready to get into debt in respect to the stocking of their farms. Many of them would ask money lenders to advance them, say, £100 for the purpose of purchasing cows and ploughs and farming implements generally, and the money lenders were the men of all others who would be the first to get everything they could out of the tenants; they would be at the farm doors almost before the collector of taxes. If a man farmed land with his own money, he might make farming pay; but, if he had money to pay to the money lender, and rent to pay to the landlord, and had in addition to pay rates and taxes, he (Mr. Llewellyn) said, God help the tenant under such circumstances. Now, he had stated his objection to the Bill, and had said with great regret that he could not vote for the second reading of it as it stood. He heartily wished the hon. Gentleman the Member for the Bordesley Divison of Birmingham (Mr. Jesse Collings), or some other Member would introduce a Bill by which it would be possible to increase the number of small holdings safely; because he believed that an increase of these holdings would be beneficial to the agricultural population of the country itself; he believed it would be for the good of the land, and for the benefit of a great number of landlords. If it could be done safely, let them do it with all speed; but if they did it, as the Bill proposed, at the expense of the ratepayers, and, in addition to that, at the risk of incurring the responsibility of encouraging these people to take up land that they could not pay for, they would do no good by passing the Bill. There were others he knew who desired to speak, and he would only say that he was reminded of an authority who spoke some time ago upon this subject. Shakespeare said—

"Neither a borrower nor a lender be; For loan oft, loses both itself and friend; And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry."
He thought Shakespeare must have had this very Bill in view when he wrote those lines. He (Llewellyn) would also remind the House of one other authority, although perhaps not quite so great as the last quoted authority, an authority with whom he did not at all agree. Artemus Ward said—"Never get into debt, borrow sooner than do that."

said, that the hon. Gentleman (Mr. Llewellyn) had taken up a very strange position. He had told them that he sympathized with the Bill, that he sympathized with the agricultural population, and then he proceeded to show his sympathy with the Bill and with the agricultural labourers by stating that he would vote against the measure. He (Mr. Gardner) would not have ventured to trouble the House at all had it not been for the, he might almost call it, ungenerous attack which was made upon him in his absence by his hon. Friend the Member for the Maldon Division of Essex (Mr. Gray). The hon. Gentleman, who was a Colleague of his own, and his neighbour in Essex, took a somewhat unworthy advantage of his (Mr. Gardner's) temporary absence on Committee business to attack him on account of his absence from the House. [Cries of "No, no!"] The hon. Gentleman opposite said that he (Mr. Gardner) posed as a friend of the agricultural labourer, and yet he was not present on that very important occasion. He supposed that the hon. Gentleman wished people to draw the inference that he (Mr. Gray) was a better friend of the agricultural labourer than himself (Mr. Gardner).

said, he was sorry to interrupt the hon. Member, who had taken an entirely erroneous view at second hand of his remarks. He merely referred to the hon. Member for the Saffron Walden Division (Mr. Gardner) as being able to, had he been in his place, corroborate the statement he (Mr. Gray) had made, that within 50 miles of that spot there were agricultural labourers who were unfortunately in receipt of only 9s. a-week, and he gave the hon. Member credit for regretting that such a state of things should be in existence, as he (Mr. Gray) regretted it.

said, the hon. Gentleman certainly accused him of posing as a friend of the agricultural labourer, meaning by implication that he (Mr. Gray) was more a friend of the agricultural labourer by being present on this occasion than himself (Mr. Gardner). However, he did not wish to detain the House, but had only to say that he came down from the Committee Room as soon as he could in order to vote for the Bill of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham (Mr. Jesse Collings), and he did not think he could show himself a better friend of the agricultural labourer than by doing that. He certainly thought that his hon. Friend (Mr. Gray) would have shown his friendship to the agricultural population far better by staying away than by his presence, because he had announced his intention of voting against the Bill.

said, that everyone would acknowledge that they had had an interesting debate, and had listened to some interesting and important speeches. The second reading of the Bill was moved by the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham (Mr. Jesse Collings) in a speech of much ability, and was seconded in a remarkable oration by the hon. Member for West Nottingham (Mr. Broadhurst). The hon. Member for West Nottingham, after taunting him, turned on the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division, and, with that lofty and imposing air which was such a distinguishing feature of his rhetoric, said that the hon. Member always suffered from ignorance rather than from want of knowledge. What was the difference between the two? He did not altogether follow the hon. Gentleman, but in the course of his remarks he came to the conclusion that in his own person, in connection with this subject, he had been successful in proving that sometimes ignorance and want of knowledge were identical. The hon. Member for West Nottingham proceeded further; he taunted the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division with apologizing for the introduction of his own Bill. How the hon. Member could found such an observation on the speech of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division he was at a loss to imagine. Then the hon. Member for West Nottingham went on to lecture the Government as to the enormous—the overwhelming importance of this subject. He told the Government they ought to postpone their other measures for the purpose of legislating at once on this subject, so great was its urgency. Why did not the hon. Member practice a little more what he preached? Why did he not impress those views on his former Colleagues on the Front Opposition Bench? When the former Conservative Government was turned out of Office by the Motion of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division, if ever there was a Party or a Government which was called upon by Parliamentary practice and precedent to deal without delay with this question, it was the Party and the Government of which the hon. Gentleman was himself a Member. So far from following the usual precedents and practice, neither from the hon. Member nor from his Colleagues had one word been ever heard about that subject till that day, when the hon. Member found it convenient to make it a party weapon. As regarded the Bill, it was by no means a new one. It was an old friend, as it was formerly introduced by the hon. Member for Cheshire, and he had an opportunity of making some observations upon that occasion. He did not know, as regarded the machinery of the Bill, which always appeared to be of a remarkable and peculiar character, he could express his sentiments more accurately than he did on that occasion. But there was this difference between the Bill introduced then and now. The former Bill dealt with the question of allotments as well as the question of small holdings. The Bill now before the House dealt with the question of small holdings alone, the question of allotments having been, as he hoped, successfully dealt with in the past Session. [Cries of "No!"] He did not say that the question of allotments had been finally disposed of. On the contrary, from large and varied sources of information, he believed it to be a fact that although that Bill had given a great stimulus to the provision of allotments by voluntary means, yet where it had been attempted to provide allotments under the operation of the Bill, there it had frequently, he believed, failed altogether. It had failed because the Local Authority constituted under the Bill, the Guardians, had been slack and backward in fulfilling their duty. He was not surprised at that, and he pointed out in the debates on the Bill that the Guardians were not the best Local Authority to whom to hand the responsibility, and he was exceedingly anxious to place the power in the hands of the magistrates instead. The course of experience had proved that he was right in one case, and at least he might be pardoned for supposing, until the contrary was proved, that he might have been right in the other. The time was approaching when that question would be solved by the passing of the Bill now introduced by the President of the Local Government Board. When that Act was passed the new District Councils, which were to be absolutely elective, were to take the place of the rural authority so far as allotments were concerned, and if they failed in the performance of their duty, the voters would have the means of finding a remedy. Assuming the passing of that Bill, the question of allotments would be disposed of, and, therefore, they had nothing but small holdings now to consider. What was the object of the promoters of the Bill? The hon. Member for Bordesley, in his able speech, drew attention to the deplorable diminution in the number of labourers in rural districts; he spoke of the great excellence of the labouring population, and he dwelt upon the necessity of keeping up what he described as the rural stock of the country. He proposed to accomplish his object by bringing about in some way a much wider diffusion of land among the people of this country. In that object he need hardly say that he sympathized. [Cries of "Oh, oh!"] He was not the least afraid of expressing his sympathy in spite of the sneers indulged in by hon. Gentlemen on the other side of the House. He should be disposed to support any reasonable means of obtaining that end, and he could safely say that no measure could be more Conservative in its effects than one leading to a larger distribution of land. More than that, speaking as a landowner—and an owner of a great deal morn land than he cared to possess, he was most sorely tempted by the proposition of the hon. Member. The references of the hon. Member to the high price that land fetched in France quite made his mouth water. His virtue was tried in the severest manner, as, for the sake of his personal interest and advantage, Le could not but wish the hon. Member's proposals accepted without unnecessary delay. There was no denying the fact that land at the present moment was exceedingly difficult to let, and almost impossible to sell. For the moment, though he hoped it would only be for the moment, in thousands of cases land was an unmarketable commodity. A greater boon could not possibly be offered landowners than legislation of this kind, whatever might be said on its merits, for it provided them with a first-rate market for an article which many were most anxious to dispose of. Although that was the case, and although he was most desirous of accepting the views of hon. Members on the other side of the House, he was bound to remember that he had a duty to perform to those he represented, and he represented in a special degree the rural ratepayers of this country. He should be able to show the House that, however tempting these proposals might be, it was their bounden duty to those they represented to resist them. He did not intend to say much on the question of compulsion. It was a strong thing for any Government to propose to give power to Public Bodies to take land by compulsion; but, at the same time, the principle of taking land by compulsion had been embodied in our legislation, though subject to a condition which he maintained had not been fulfilled in this case—namely, the condition that it should be shown that the compulsory acquisition of the land would confer a great public advantage. He contended that in the propositions which had been submitted to the House an enormous change was involved. They were embarking on an entirely new and, as far as the extent of land was concerned, an unprecedented course. The clearest proof ought to be given that it was for the benefit of the community at large. He contended, moreover, that almost everything we know of this subject pointed in a directly opposite direction. It was no matter whether we looked at home or abroad. There were masses of evidence on the subject. His hon. Friend spoke of the French peasantry, pointed out their condition, and made what for him was a remarkable admission. The hon. Member admitted that if a judgment were formed from their appearance in the fields the French peasants would be regarded as poor and miserable, but he added that he had followed them to their homes, where ample evidence as to their comfort was to be found. He had not had the advantage of following them into their homes, but he was a Member of a Commission which sat for three years, and which inquired most exhaustively into this subject. That Commission sent out two gentlemen, who also followed the French peasants into their homes, and who gave a very different description of their condition from that given by the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham that afternoon. One of the Sub-Commissioners of the Agricultural Commission, in his report on the condition of the peasants, especially in Western and Central France, said—

"The peasant proprietor exists rather than lives. He has no pride in keeping himself or his cottage clean and presentable. His food chiefly consists of bread made from buckwheat or rye, although wheaten bread is gradually coming into more general use. He very rarely tastes meat, except in the form of pork. His drink, if in a wine country, is made from water poured over the already pressed grapes, from which the juice has been extracted and sold.… The peasant owners, examples of industry and thrift carried to excess, slave to get as much out of the land as it can be made to yield, starving themselves and their families to add something to their hoard; their wives becoming prematurely old from field labour, and bent from carrying heavy loads of fodder to the cow at home, content if at the year's end the tale of silver pieces be increased…at a sacrifice of all that makes life worth living for."
That was a description of the state of things existing among the peasantry in France which he had never heard contradicted on at all reliable authority till he heard the statement of the hon. Member that day. He was almost ashamed to refer to the condition of the freeholders in the County of Lincoln. He had himself seen a great deal of their condition. The system of peasant proprietorship had been in existence in that county for years. From his own personal knowledge he could state that it was a fact not to be disputed that during the period of agricultural depression which we had passed through, there was no class of agriculturists in the country which had suffered anything to compare with the misery and poverty of the small freeholders in Lincolnshire. If his views on that subject were doubted, he would refer hon. Members to the Reports of the Agricultural Commission, which contained the most startling evidence on the subject. Then his hon. Friend had referred to Consular Reports in vindication of his views. He had brought down with him the two latest of those Reports which had been presented to the House. One, dated in this present month, was the Report of one of our Consuls in Spain relating to the district of Corunna. That gentleman wrote—
"To give an idea of the great misery that the inhabitants of this province are passing through, it must be understood in the first place that throughout the whole of this province, since the feudal system and Mayorazgo, or entailed estate system, became extinct, the whole of the large properties became subdivided into small farms; this has been going on for years, and, with few exceptions, Galicia now possesses a peasant proprietorship, and the land is subdivided into small tenements more on the style of the market gardens system than anything else I can liken it to. This system is all very well when it is brought to bear on a small tract of land—but when the same embraces a vast province like Galicia, that consists of about 1,032 square miles, with a population of some 1,200,000 inhabitants—it tells its own tale."
He would now call the attention of the House to a Consular Report from France, which bore directly also upon this question. It dealt with the La Rochelle district, and the Consul's name was Mr. Warburton. He said—
"The year 1887 has been a disastrous one to farmers here, who, notwithstanding the higher protective duties on corn and meat, are in a far worse position than they have ever been before. They have made no money on anything, and have lost heavily in almost everything.…. Their losses have been enormous, and, however much we may have suffered in Great Britain, I hear of nothing there to compare with the depth of the depression which exists here at present. It is well that this should be clearly stated, because though it is now generally admitted at home that other countries are suffering as well as ourselves, many persons appear to think that it is in a less degree, and that we ought to be better off here inasmuch as we enjoy a certain amount of the 'Fair Trade' and 'peasant proprietary,' which people were told would bring everything right again. It is not so as far as this district is concerned. No advantage has yet been felt from the moderate protective duties which exist; all are far worse off than before they were put on, and none are suffering so much as those who own their holdings."
He did not think anyone could imagine there was anything in any part of the evidence he had quoted to induce them to believe that a plan such as that which was favoured by hon. Gentlemen opposite had any reasonable prospect of success in this country. If there was any such prospect, he would be glad to recognize it, for he wished to deal with the plan as honestly as he could in the interests of the people. But how was it possible for him to give his support in the face of this kind of evidence? Hon. Gentlemen opposite might laugh at the mention of Protection; yet there was no doubt it must have conferred some kind of advantage on the agricultural classes. It was impossible to believe it could do the agricultural producer harm to put an import duty on the goods which competed with those that he produced in his own country. He had no objection to offer to Protection, and he should view its adoption with great complacency himself, although' he confessed that, in view of the small effect that Protection had had in increasing prices, he had been much less keen about Protection than he had been in former days, Still, he was quite certain that, sooner or later, if the proposls made were adopted, they would inevitably lead to Protection. He was confirmed in this impression by something further in this Report. It gave the reasons for the strong feeling in favour of Protection in these terms—
"The circumstances are very favourable to agricultural protection in this country just now. The principle has been fully admitted. It has been tried with corn and meat, and, while bread is no dearer than before, meat is much cheaper. At La Rochelle the loaf of 2 kilos (4lb. 6oz.) cost, in December, 1886, 6d., and in 1887, 5¾d. Meat was as follows:—In December, 1886, beef, live, 2⅝d. per pound; dead, 5⅝d.; mutton, the same; veal, 3⅛d., live; 6⅛d., dead. In 1887 the prices were1½d. per lb. lower in every case."
And further on the Consul said—
"Those who might be supposed to be most against it (Protection) are the shopkeepers and working classes in the towns, the working men engaged in public works, factory hands, and people depending on coal and iron industries, &c. All of them have reasons for not objecting. The shopkeepers are doing badly because the farmers have no more money to spend with them, and believe that if they became prosperous they would be good customers again. The working people in the towns are suffering from competition, owing to the crowding in of farm labourers out of employment, who, they say, would go back to the country if the farm work was better paid and there was more of it."
And again the Consul said—
"Many of the working people think that even if larger duties on corn made bread dearer, they will be more than compensated by the increase in wages which would take place if they are relieved from all this competition. All these classes consider that agricultural protection would benefit them directly and indirectly, but above and beyond them there is a numerous class, who have no apparent interest in getting it, who would suffer from it by paying dearer for everything, and still who would vote for a tax on foreign food imports for no other reason than to prevent the extinction of the small peasant farmers."
If this was the view of the absolute necessity for Protection among the working classes themselves in France, how was it possible for him to hold any other opinion than that if you establish the same system in this country one of the inevitable results will be to lead to Protection? That, however, was an argument for hon. Members opposite much more than for himself to consider. It was impossible to believe from the evidence that the system which prevailed in France had any advantage over the system which prevailed in this country. Was there any reason for believing that a different system in England would result in greater production? Major Craigie, in his paper on Agricultural Holdings in England and Abroad, read before the Royal Statistical Society, showed from four different sources, one confirming the other, that in every respect the produce per acre in England is greater than it is abroad. He said—
"England holds the first place as a stock-rearing and grain-growing community. Her flocks of sheep represent just ten times those of Belgium on the same area, three times those of France on the same area, and nearer four times than three times those of Germany. As regards cattle, Holland, Belgium, and Germany have more cows than we have, but then our cows hold a different rank from the poor beasts of burden which they often are abroad. We have in England more than Austria for each square mile, more than France, and many more than Hungary or Sweden; while as regards oxen generally we head the list with ease."
Nor was our superiority in crops limited to corn alone. In England the yield of potatoes was 252 bushels to the acre; in Austria 109, in France 113, in Holland 172, and in Sweden 123. Indeed, full examination would show that in respect of the amount of produce per acre the system pursued in England beat all other systems. As to the £25,000,000 worth of butter, eggs, poultry, &c., which we imported, other countries produced them under a double advantage; the people cultivated their lands with the benefit of the duties imposed upon the same kind of articles imported into those countries; and they exported their produce to this country under the influence of what was practically a very heavy bounty upon the articles exported. An average acre of land would produce seven tons of potatoes, and the foreign producer had an advantage as against the English producer of 14s. a-ton in sending potatoes to the Birmingham market. This was equivalent to a bounty of £4 18s. per acre which the English farmer had to pay to a Railway Company before he could compete with foreign produce in the same market in this country. This was only one instance of the unfairness and injustice with which the agricultural interest in this country had been treated, and to which it was determined to submit no longer. As to the machinery of the Bill, he dwelt at length on that two years ago. To illustrate the risks and liabilities it might entail, he had made a calculation with regard to Dorchester, the account of which he happened to find in the Municipal Corporation Directory, which had a population of 6,000, with 1,000 ratepayers and a rate-able value of £20,000. Suppose 20 ratepayers wanted small holdings of say 20 acres each, that would be 400 acres altogether. What would be the price that would have to be paid for the land? It must be remembered that people who wanted small holdings would never be content with the worst land. He did not wish to put an extravagant price on the land; but he did not think he would be exaggerating in putting it at £30 an acre. That would give a total cost of £12,000. Three-fourths of that, or £9,000, was under the Bill to remain unpaid, and the interest on that at 3½ per cent, together with a sinking fund at 2½ per cent, would amount to £540. Then something must be allowed for registration expenses, and he had put them at £100. Then loans were to be made to the in- dividuals who acquired small holdings as capital for working the land, and that could not be put at less than £10 an acre, or £4,000. The interest and sinking fund at 3½ and 2½ per cent respectively upon that sum would amount to £240. Under Clause 38 of the Bill powers were given to the Local Body to borrow money for improvements; and, putting the sum borrowed at £2,000, the interest and sinking fund with respect to that would amount to £120. Then there were the expenses of management, repairs, law charges, and a variety of other things which he estimated to come to about £145 a-year. These items in all made up an annual expenditure of £1,145. Even taking out all the items except interest and sinking fund in respect of the purchase-money and the loans to individuals, the annual outgoings would be £780. Under the Bill those who acquired holdings were to pay 1 per cent more than was paid by the Local Body for the money borrowed for the purchase of the land. Charging them, therefore, 4½ per cent on the three-fourths of the purchase-money remaining unpaid, and 6 per cent on the individual loans, the total receipts would be only £645, against an absolutely necessary expenditure of £780 and a probable expenditure of £1,145, leaving a deficit as regards the latter sum of £500. To produce £500 from a rateable value of £20,000 would require a rate of 6d. in the pound. He had omitted from this any payment for damages on account of guarantee of titles, and he had assumed that the Local Authority sold as dear as it bought, had no land idle, and no arrears of any sort and no reductions. The House might take this calculation for what it was worth. He did not think any hon. Member, if he examined the figures closely, could say that he had exaggerated anything. He was quite sure that, generally speaking, these matters were conducted much more economically by individuals than by Corporations. However much he sympathized with the object of the hon. Gentleman, he was of the strongest possible opinion that the Bill was not at all calculated to give effect to it. If the Bill passed, it would throw enormous possible risks on the ratepayer, and on that ground alone, if on no other, he found it quite impossible to support it. No one could be more anxious than he was to see a wider distribution of the land among the people of the country, and he was strongly tempted by his own personal interest as a landowner to go in the direction the hon. Gentleman asked him to follow. He would be very glad if some means could be devised by which, on a small scale, some tenements of this sort could be founded; but he could not conceal from himself that it would be absolutely impossible, at all events until the Local Government Bill was carried into law. No one could deny that this was a question of the largest and most supreme importance, involving some of the greatest changes ever witnessed in this country, and it was not a question to be hastily settled and decided after a four hours' debate on a Wednesday afternoon. He hoped, therefore, that no attempt to close the mouths of hon. Members upon it would be made. If it were, he should certainly oppose it, as he should oppose the Bill in its present form itself, if it reached a Division to-night.

I think it will be for the convenience of the House if I now state the point of view from which Her Majesty's Government regard this Bill. It is hardly necessary for me to express the sympathy which we in common with everyone who has spoken to-day feel in the establishment, by legitimate and wise means, of peasant proprietorship in this country; but, Sir, while that sympathy is shared by us, I am not prepared to go as far as the hon. Member for West Nottingham (Mr. Broadhurst), who at an earlier period of the evening seemed to infer that if we changed altogether the system of land occupation in the country, and were to terminate large and create small farms, the agricultural distress under which we have so long suffered would be entirely removed. I cannot endorse a sentiment of that nature, nor can I believe that the view of the hon. Gentleman would be endorsed by the opinion of practical agriculturists. I do not think he is right in laying so much blame on the system as he does, when he tells us that it is to the existence of large holdings throughout the country that so much distress is due, and that ruin had overtaken so many of the landed classes. I venture to point out to the House and to the hon. Member himself, that whatever may be the fault of the present system of land owning and land occupation, it is hardly in accordance with facts that his statement is made, because a great many of the holdings which are, at the present moment, large, have become so by the failure of the smaller holdings which preceded them. Not only have the large holdings been created by the absorption of the smaller holdings, but in many parts of the country, and I speak particularly of the district in which I live, there are many small holdings, and I regret to say also a long record of small holders that failed very seriously four years ago, and whose places from necessity, not from choice, have been absorbed into the larger holdings. Therefore, it is incorrect to say that the largo holdings are the cause of the existing agricultural depression. I regret that the hon. Gentleman has referred to the action of the landlords in the terms he thought fit to use. Have we not heard enough abuse of landlords generally? [An hon. MEMBER: No!] I desire to introduce no Party feeling into this discussion; but those who say "No!" I trust constitute a very small minority. If there is one reason more than another why small holdings have not been sot up where they might with advantage be set up, and where the owners of the soil would be as glad to see them established as those who may desire to occupy them, it is the expense of erecting the necessary buildings. That has been the reason, and I cannot help contemplating with serious apprehension an attempt on the part of some hon. Members of the House to suggest that what landlords have been unable to do owing to the great expense attendant upon it, Local Authorities should do. But while I regard a proposal of that sort with some apprehension I do feel that there is no subject to which the attention of the House in debate can be with greater purpose addressed once or twice in a Session, than a subject similar to that which we are now considering—namely, whether it is possible for Parliament, with safety and fair security, to facilitate the establishment of a system of peasant proprietaryship in this country. But I do not think that any measure which embodied the wishes of those who desire to see that system established, would be facilitated in its progress through this House by such a speech as the one delivered by the hon. Member for West Nottingham earlier in the afternoon. It was my misfortune not to hear the speech of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham (Mr. Jesse Collings), who moved the second reading of the Bill, but I have heard many of his speeches, and have no hesitation in joining in the chorus which from all quarters of the House has acknowledged how my hon. Friend has identified himself with the cause of the agricultural labourers throughout the country. I am not making that admission for the first time; last Session, when it was my duty to offer some remarks to the House in connection with another portion of the small holdings question, I made what I considered to be but a fair and proper admission—namely, that the question had been brought to its then acute and prominent form in consequence, to a large extent, of the labours of the hon. Member for Bordesley. Sir, I regret that this Bill is one which it is impossible for the Government, or those who agree with the Government, to accept, because it is a Bill which, as has already been pointed out by the right hon. Gentleman the Member for the Sleaford Division of Lincolnshire (Mr. Chaplin), proposes to throw upon the Local Authorities a very large and heavy responsibility. As I stated, it was my misfortune not to be present when my hon. Friend spoke; but I have not been able to hear from those who were present, that he gave to the House any evidence of there being any large or general demand for these small holdings, which, I think, he suggests should be limited to 40 acres. Now, I think that when we are asked to agree to the second reading of a Bill containing such important proposals, the House ought, first of all, to be satisfied that there is a real demand for 40-acre holdings in the country; and, in the second place, that there are no means of getting such holdings. When we were last year discussing the Allotments Bill hon. Members on both sides of the House produced evidence from all parts of the country where demands were made for land which had never been satisfied. I very much regret that the references to that Act were made in a tone which, of course, we, on this side of the House, cannot appreciate; and it does seem to us a little hard that our Act having been attacked, we are precluded from saying one word in its defence. But I have no doubt an occasion will arise when we shall be able to discuss the working of that Act, and I shall then be able to acquit the Government of the charges which hon. Members opposite have brought against us, and give our reasons for the delay which has occurred in connection with the Act in different parts of the country. If the demand for small holdings has not been proved, how is the second reading of a Bill to be justified, which puts upon Local Authorities the heavy responsibilities which have been described. The Bill would throw upon them a real risk at this time, inasmuch as it would make them practically the owners of considerable portions of land, because it is possible that when these powers are conferred on Local Authorities the first result would be a demand in certain neighbourhoods that the powers of the Bill should be enforced, and that these small holdings should be created. Supposing that a demand should grow up, and supposing that the Local Authorities, in the discharge of the duties laid upon them in the Bill, should acquire the necessary land for distribution as proposed here, is it an exaggeration to say that there would be a very heavy risk entailed on the ratepayers who would have to provide the Local Authorities with funds, that in three or four years the operation might turn out to be a failure, that the occupation of the land by those for whom it was intended might come to an end, and that the consequence would be that the Local Authorities would be charged with the maintenance of the land, which would lay upon the rates a very heavy burden? Under these circumstances, we cannot help feeling that there does exist in the Bill a principle which would involve a very great risk for the ratepayers in future. The hon. Member for West Nottingham, in the appeal which he made at the conclusion of his speech, expressed his desire that the landowners should do their duty. He said that they had not done their duty in the past, and he referred also to the burdens already borne by the rates. I cannot see that, by agreeing to the Motion for the second reading of the Bill, we should have any prospect or the burdens on the rates becoming in future less than they are now. On the contrary, I am of opinion, as I have shown, that those burdens are likely to be increased. I do not want to go into detailed criticism of the Bill of my hon. Friend, the second reading of which I understand he moved in a speech of a very moderato character. I understand also that he would be willing to consider Amendments to the Bill in Committee. But, Sir, there is in the Bill that which we cannot possibly accept—namely, the duty cast upon Local Authorities of providing holdings which cannot be acquired without the expenditure of a very large sum of money; and, further, that there are facilities for spending large sums of money which we believe would, in some cases, result in very heavy and grievous burdens being placed on the ratepayers. These are not times when risks of that kind ought unnecessarily to be undertaken. I do not think the hon. Member for West Nottingham, or the hon. Member for Bordesley himself, would for one moment contend that there would be the demand for the small holdings provided for in the Bill that there has been for small holdings in the form of gardens or allotments. The hon. Gentleman will, I believe, admit that these two questions are absolutely distinct. It may be urged that every man in the country is entitled to have sufficient land to cultivate for his wife and children in form of garden allotments, and that is a proposal I never have and never will oppose. But it is quite different here, where the principle is to invite Local Authorities to become owners of land in order that quasi-ownership should be conferred on people who it is alleged are unable to get any land. The hon. Member for West Nottingham said that building societies were doing a great deal of good in the country, and that he thought it time that agricultural labourers should have the opportunity of obtaining land just as there are now afforded to artizans opportunities of becoming owners of their houses, By all means let societies be started, and let hon. Members who believe there is a demand for these holdings, and that land can be acquired and sublet or partially sold to individuals without loss accruing to themselves, band themselves together, and I can undertake to say that landowners will be very ready to sell them land. I do not think there will be any difficulty in the way of buying land in any part of the country, except where perhaps land may have a special value from particular circumstances, and that is not of the class which my hon. Friend would wish to deal with under this Bill. Of ordinary land productive and fit for cultivation, there is abundance to be had, and if, as I have said, hon. Members believe there is a real demand for these small holdings, and if they have real confidence in the prudence of their proposals, I invite them to form themselves into a society, such as the hon. Member for West Nottingham has indicated, for the purpose of acquiring and distributing land in the manner suggested. I have read with some amazement that there is a curious difference made in the Bill with regard to the treatment of the original owner from whom the land is to be bought, and the small owner to be created by the Bill. The original owner from whom the land may be taken compulsorily is to part with it at the price which a willing buyer would give to a willing seller without any compensation for compulsory sale; but, if for some purpose the Local Authority desire to re-acquire the land they are to be compelled to give the small owner the market value, and have to pay 10 per cent for compulsory purchase. But, Sir, if it be fair that 10 per cent should be paid to the new owner whom it is proposed by the Bill to create, it is surely fair that it should be given to the original owner who has obtained his land without assistance from Parliament. It only remains for me to say that we very much regret that we should appear in any way unsympathetic with a proposal which, divested of its political associations and partizan characteristics, is one in which, in and out of the House, we, as much as hon. Gentlemen opposite, sympathize from the bottom of our hearts. We desire to advance in every way possible, either by individual or collective efforts, or by the efforts of Parliament, the position of the labouring classes of the country. We sympathize as much with a proposal of that kind as anybody on the other side of the House; we do not wish to maintain any monopoly of this sympathy, and we only ask that the same fairness shall be extended to us as we extend to others. We desire that the question of the amelioration of the condition of the working classes of the country should be approached with an open mind, and with the desire to meet and support proposals tending in that direction when they are practical and when they are safe, but we feel that we cannot, for the reasons which have been given, assent to the measure now proposed. As my right hon. Friend the Member for the Sleaford Division has said, there is now before the House a very large measure of Local Government to confer upon Local Authorities increased powers for dealing with local affairs, and, if it were proved to be our duty, we should only be too willing to consider whether any farther facilities should be given under the Local Government Bill to County Authorities to assist in the establishment of this system of peasant proprietorship, but further than that it would be impossible for the Government to go, and it is with regret that we feel ourselves unable to accept the measure of the hon. Member for Bordesley.

said, he did not wish to import any personal feeling into this discussion; but there had been a fair issue raised on the Bill, whether it was desirable to give additional powers for creating small holdings in this country. That was a fair issue, and upon it difference of opinion might exist. He should support the Bill of his hon. Friend the Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham (Mr. Jesse Collings), as he supported a Bill exactly similar when he occupied a seat on the other side of the Table in 1886. At that time the hon. Member for Bordesley, unfortunately, was not present in the House, and the Bill was brought forward by another bon, Member. And the reasons for and against it were identical with those which had been advanced on the present occasion. At that time the right hon. Gentleman the Member for the Sleaford Division of Lincolnshire (Mr. Chaplin) appeared, as he had done to-day, as the opponent of the measure, had been entirely consistent; and there was an hon. and learned Gentleman behind him who succeeded in talking out the measure, but who, in view of the fact that the House of Commons was now considered a reformed institution, he hoped would not follow the same course to-day. He thought they had had an instructive and interesting debate, and that they might now very well take the opinion of the House upon the Bill. He did not quite understand the argument which the right hon. Gentleman the Member for the Sleaford Division had urged against the Bill when he said that if you create too many proprietors you might have Protection brought back into the country, and that argument was received with loud cheers from hon. Gentlemen who sat behind him. Now, if the right hon. Gentleman was convinced by his own argument, he would be one of the most strenuous supporters of the Bill. The hon. Gentleman the Secretary to the Local Government Board (Mr. Long), who spoke for the Government, had dealt with the subject of small and large holdings. He (Sir William Harcourt) was not going to say anything against the landowners of the country. He believed they had made a largo expenditure for improving the land, and he did not believe that there was any class who had expended so much upon the land in which they lived as the English landlords. He believed the system of large holdings was adopted some 30 or 40 years ago under the idea that it was best for the interest of agriculture; but he thought it had been shown that this investment of capital was not wise, and that it had been found that the smaller holdings had been better able to stand the pressure of bad times than the large holdings. He knew of parts of the country where the holdings were small, and where they had stood that pressure better than the larger holdings. [Mr. CHAPLIN: Occupiers or holders?] Both occupiers and holders. He bad lived in the same county as the hon. Member for Devizes (Mr. Long), and he was acquainted with a number of small holdings that were properous in that county. It was the same in Hampshire, where the occupiers had begun in a very small way. The right hon. Gentleman the Member for Sleaford did not know the habits of those very small holders; he had a knowledge of the great holdings of Lincolnshire, but if he would come down into Hampshire he would find men who had, from 30s. a-week, been able to farm and stock with advantage small holdings.

When the right hon. Gentleman says I have no knowledge of small holdings, because there are none in my county, let me remind him that in Lincolnshire there are ten times as many small holdings as there are in any other county in England, and that it is entirely from the wretched condition of those holdings that I have formed my opinion.

said, he accepted the right hon. Gentleman's statement, and would only say that the holders of small holdings in his county had mostly begun with less than £200 in pocket, and that the system which obtained there he should be very glad to see extended. Then he said it was not at all necessary to have those expensive buildings which had been referred to; of course, the small holders required buildings for a pig and a cow; but those calculations of Gentlemen opposite running to thousands of pounds were entirely contrary to the facts of every-day life as regarded small holdings. That, he thought, was a conclusive answer to the speech of the hon. Gentleman the Secretary to the Local Government Board. The Bill did not put any compulsion on the Local Authorities, who would only have to do what was required by the community electing them, and they would be men who would know the value of the holdings; they would be elected by the community who would make the demands upon them, and if no demand were made then the work would not be done. For these reasons he thought that the proposals of the Bill might fairly be left to them to carry out. The language of the hon. Gentleman the Secretary to the Local Government Board almost led the House to believe that the Bill compelled the Local Authority to lay out this money. But they would lay out no money which they did not desire to lay out; and, that being so, he thought the power might very reasonably be given to them which was asked for in the Bill. And here he would like to mention that the Government had some responsibility in refusing the second reading of the Bill, because in dealing with the Glebe Lands Bill they had held it out as a method of supplying additional small holdings, and it was said that the landlords throughout the country had failed altogether to provide the means for acquiring land which were necessary to effect transfers. Having stated the reasons why he should vote for the second reading of the Bill, he hoped that the House would now go to a Division on the Motion of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division.

rose in his place, and claimed to move, "That the Question be now put."

Question put.

The House divided:—Ayes 135; Noes 191: Majority 59.—(Div. List, No. 113.)

Original Question again proposed.

Debate resumed.

said, that, unlike some hon. Members opposite, Gentlemen on that side of the House had been waiting all day with the desire of speaking on this subject; and he thought it was somewhat hard that when a few minutes were left in which he might have expressed his views, the hon. Member for the Ilkeston Division of Derby (Sir Walter Foster) should move "That the Question be now put." He sympathized heartily with the desire and the action of the hon. Member for the Bordesley Division of Birmingham (Mr. Jesse Collings) on behalf of the agricultural labourer; but, while he did so, he did not sympathize with the Bill before the House. He thought that Bill contained innumerable errors, and that it was calculated to do incalculable mischief to the class intended to be benefited. For that reason he should give the Bill his most strenuous opposition. He had addressed large gatherings of agricultural labourers in various parts of the country on the subject, and should, no doubt, do so in the future; and he believed he should have no difficulty in securing their sympathy with the view he entertained on this particular question. His view was that the agricultural labourers could be benefited by allotments, but could not be benefited by small holdings such as the hon. Member for Bordesley proposed. Au allotment was beneficial to the agricultural labourer because he could devote his leisure hours to its cultivation, and do so in conjunction with his ordinary labour for which he was paid wages. But a small holding was a totally different matter. It being half-an-hour after Five of the clock, the Debate stood adjourned.

Debate to be resumed To-morrow.

Motions

Local Government Provisional Orders (No 5) Bill

On Motion of Mr. Long, Bill to confirm certain Provisional Orders of the Local Government Board relating to the Boroughs of Devonport, Okehampton, Ramsgate, and Sandwich, the Local Government Districts of Crumpsall and Royton, and the Richmond Main Sewerage District, ordered to be brought in by Mr. Long and Mr. Ritchie.

Bill presented, and read the first time. [Bill 265.]

Local Government Provisional Orders (No 6) Bill

On Motion of Mr. Long, Bill to confirm certain Provisional Orders of the Local Government Board relating to the Borough of Brighton and Town of Hove, the Darenth Valley Main Sewerage District, and the Local Government Districts of East Barnet Valley, Friern Barnet, and Herne Bay, ordered to be brought in by Mr. Long and Mr. Ritchie.

Bill presented, and read the first time. [Bill 266.]

Local Government Provisional Orders (No 7) Bill

On Motion of Mr. Long, Bill to confirm certain Provisional Orders of the Local Government Board relating to the Boroughs of Black-pool and Wigan, the Rural Sanitary District of the Chesterfield Union, and the Local Government District of Tredegar, ordered to be brought in by Mr. Long and Mr. Ritchie.

Bill presented, and read the first time. [Bill 267.]

Municipal Boundaries (Dublin) Bill

On Motion of Mr. Murphy, Bill to provide for the extension of the Municipal Boundaries of Dublin, ordered to be brought in by Mr. Murphy, Mr. T. D. Sullivan, Mr. Timothy Harrington, and Mr. Chance.

Bill presented, and read the first time. [Bill 268.]

House adjourned at twenty-five minutes before Six o'clock.