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Commons Chamber

Volume 1: debated on Tuesday 1 March 1892

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House Of Commons

Tuesday, 1st March, 1892.

Questions

Supplementary School Grants

I beg to ask the Vice President of the Committee of Council on Education whether, in view of the fact that in many districts the fee grant of 10s. per head on average attendance, conceded by the Assisted Education Act of 1891, does not equal the fees paid before the passing of the Act, and as it is impossible to free all the schools in such districts without inflicting great hardship upon their managers and supporters, the Government will bring in a Bill to enable County Councils to supplement the new fee grant by a sum equal to the difference between the grant and the average fee paid in the district under its jurisdiction during the last school year ended the 1st of January, 1891, provided that in all schools receiving such supplementary grant the fees shall be either abolished or reduced by the amount of the said grant?

It was not the intention of the Elementary Education Act, 1891, to abolish the payment of fees in all classes of schools, and, as at present advised, I fear I cannot undertake the introduction of a Bill for the objects suggested in the question of my hon. Friend.

Torpedo Vessels

I beg to ask the First Lord of the Admiralty whether he has, or whether he intends organising in detail, a plan of campaign for the various types of ships comprising the squadrons of the Navy; if so, has he considered the part likely to be demanded of vessels of the torpedo class; and whether he is aware that Foreign Maritime Powers attach more importance to this description of naval warfare than the British Admiralty; the French Minister of Marine having provided France with 184, and the Italian Minister of Marine Italy with 123 torpedo vessels, as against 85 now in the British Navy?

The subject mentioned in the first sentence of the question has received all the attention which its importance deserves, and the employment of all classes of ships likely to be used in war has, of course, not been omitted from the consideration of the Admiralty. We have no reason to suppose that any Foreign Naval Power attaches more importance than we do to any description of naval warfare; but it is quite likely that Continental Powers are alive to the policy of employing the methods best adapted to their own peculiar circumstances, instead of copying those suited to other countries, of which the maritime conditions are different.

The Autumn Military Manœuvres

I beg to ask the Secretary of State for War if, during the Autumn Manœuvres of the troops quartered at Aldershot and elsewhere, His Royal Highness the Commander in Chief attended and superintended the operations; and whether he intends issuing an official Report of the Manœuvres similar to that of the Admiralty regarding the Naval Manœuvres?

There have not been Autumn Manœuvres for several years; but there have been at Aldershot and in other commands exercises in the field of troops stationed there. These were under the respective Generals commanding, who reported for His Royal Highness's information. Such drills were not analogous to the Naval Manœuvres, and it is not intended to publish a Report upon them.

The Allowances Of Officers Of Militia And Volunteer Artillery

I beg to ask the Secretary of State for War whether he is aware that officers of Militia Artillery attending a class of instruction in coast defence and range finding at Devonport receive pay and allowances amounting for the week to about £9 for majors, £8 for captains, and £7 for lieutenants, while officers of Volunteer Artillery of all ranks receive only about £3 for attending the same course; and, whether, viewing the importance of inducing officers of Volunteers to make the sacrifice of time necessary to obtain this instruction, he will encourage them by placing them upon the same terms as officers of Militia?

The reason for the difference pointed ont by my gallant Friend is that Militia officers when at training are entitled to the same pay and allowances, rank for rank, as officers of the Regular Army; whereas officers of the Volunteers, belonging to a force whose proud distinction is to serve without pay during peace, are only granted an allowance for subsistence and lodging.

The Limerick Board Of Fishery Conservators

I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether the election of conservators to the Limerick Board of Fishery Conservators in the districts of Limerick and Athlone has been declared by the Court of Queen's Bench null and void; and, if so, whether he can state when it is intended to hold a new election?

I understand that the arguments in the Court of Queen's Bench in this case are not yet closed, and therefore I cannot express any opinion in the matter.

Postmen—Stampers And Box-Clearers

I beg to ask the Postmaster General whether it is true that town postmen engaged as stampers have an allowance of 2s. per week in lieu of Christmas boxes; and, if so, why town postmen engaged in box-clearing are not entitled to a similar allowance?

Town postmen employed upon stamping duties receive an extra allowance in addition to their wages, because their work is regarded as superior in some respects to ordinary postmen's work, and the men employed on it have to be selected from the postmen's class for steadiness and good conduct. As such men would sometimes lose pecuniarily by not performing the outdoor delivery duty, it is thought right for this reason, as well as on account of the better nature of the work, to give them some extra weekly payment. This varies from 2s. in the smaller offices to 3s. and 4s. in the larger. Box-clearing is an elementary, duty which is usually performed by the junior postmen before they obtain a regular walk. No selection is required for this duty, and it is certainly not necessary to pay the men anything extra for doing it.

The Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers

I beg to ask the First Lord of the Admiralty whether, in consequence of the disbanding of the Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers, the officers will be permitted to retire with their present rank, and to wear the uniform of the corps to which they belonged?

I am unable to give at present a definite reply to the question of the hon. Gentleman, as the final arrangements for the disbanding of the corps and the future disposition of the Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers have not yet been made, but the matter will receive the careful consideration of the Admiralty.

Trawling In Ireland

I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland if he is aware that the practice relating to trawling in Ireland is totally the opposite to that of Scotland, England, and France; if he would state by whose authority in Ireland a fishing policy opposed to the practice of Scotland, England, and France is maintained; by whom is the Fishery Board in Ireland appointed, and by whom is the Privy Council appointed, and, if there is any elected body which has any voice on sea-fishery matters in Ireland?

I have no official information in regard to the practice relating to trawling pursued in Scotland, England, and France. The fishing policy in Ireland is determined by the common law, and by special Acts of Parliament. The Inspectors of Irish Fisheries are appointed by the Lord Lieutenant. Privy Councillors in Ireland are appointed under the Sign Manual of the Queen. No elected body in Ireland has a voice in sea-fishery matters save as regards salmon and sea trout; but all bye-laws made by the Inspectors of Irish Fisheries are subject to an appeal to the Lord Lieutenant and Privy Council, by any person interested, before such bye-laws can come into operation.

Is it no part of the duty of the Fishery Board in Ireland to make itself acquainted with the fishing law of other countries?

The first duty of the Fishery Board is, I apprehend, to carry out the law.

Is it no part of any person's duty—the Lord Lieutenant, the Chief Secretary, or the Fishery Commissioners—to ascertain the practice of any other countries; and can no official of the Irish Government give us any information?

I have no doubt the Fishery Board have a profound knowledge of what the law is with regard to Scotland, and England, and France; but their first duty is to administer the law.

The object of the Irish Fishery Board is to know, and to be able to say whether the Irish policy is in line with that of other countries or not.

The River Bann

I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury if it is the intention of the Government to introduce a Bill this Session for the purpose of enabling them to remove the artificial obstructions placed upon the River Bann?

My right hon. Friend has asked me to answer this question. I have to say that the Government hope to introduce this Session a Bill dealing with the drainage of the river mentioned.

Is it the intention of the Government to extend to the proposed County Councils in Ireland power to deal with the question of drainage?

If the hon. Member will read the Local Government Bill he will see what the Government propose to do.

Green Street Courthouse, Dublin

I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland if it has been arranged that the Commission of Oyer and Terminer and General Gaol Delivery hitherto held in the Green Street Courthouse, Dublin, will in future be held in the Four Courts; if the criminal and civil business of the Recorder of the City of Dublin is to be discharged as heretofore at Green Street; whether Mr. W. Kaye Perry, C.E., has reported to the Lord Chief Justice that Green Street Courthouse is unfit for human occupation; and whether the Irish Government refuse to do anything to replace the present Courthouse unless there is a local contribution of two-thirds of the total amount of the estimated cost?

No general arrangement of the nature indicated in the first paragraph has been come to; but it has been decided to hold the next Commission sitting at the Four Courts. This decision does not include the business of the Recorder. Mr. Kaye Perry has, I understand, reported to the effect indicated. It is not the fact that the Irish Government refused to do anything to replace the present Courthouse. As I have already stated, they are willing to ask the Treasury to revive the charge sanctioned in 1883, which was accepted at that time as satisfactory by all parties concerned, but from which the Corporation of Dublin subsequently withdrew.

Would the Irish Government facilitate by restoring the Lord Mayor to the Commission of Oyer and Terminer? If not, what reason have they for refusing to do so?

I can hardly suppose that, in a matter of such vital consequence as I understand the health of those who attend these Courts to be, the Corporation of Dublin would allow any mere matter of sentiment to stand in the way.

Does the right hon. Gentleman consider it of vital consequence to maintain a wanton insult?

The Garve And Ullapool Railway

I beg to ask the Lord Advocate why the negotiations which took place last year between the Government and the Garve and Ullapool and Great North of Scotland Railway Companies, with regard to a subsidy of £6,000 a year for 25 years in aid of constructing the Garve and Ullapool Railway, have not been completed; whether he is aware that if the offer of these companies had been accepted the railway might now have been in course of construction; and whether he is aware that no other railway line can be sanctioned by Parliament earlier than the end of the Session in 1893?

I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury whether he is now prepared to lay upon the Table the Report of the Committee of Experts on the requirements of certain parts of the Western Highlands and Islands of Scotland, and to intimate the intentions of the Government thereon?

*

I propose to answer at the same time the question put by the hon. Member for Inverness-shire. It was found in the course of the negotiations referred to that the proposed arrangement with the Great North Company was attended with difficulties for which a solution could not be found. A Departmental Committee of Experts was appointed at that time to report specially on the schemes projected for the construction of railways to the West Coast of Scotland. Their Report, which raises many important points, is being carefully considered, and it is proposed to lay it at once on the Table of the House, together with the instructions to that Committee. I am aware that no line other than that referred to can now be sanctioned this Session by way of private legislation.

The Military Forces In Burma

I beg to ask the Secretary of State for War whether his attention has been called to the statements of Lord Roberts at Rangoon, in the Times of the 26th instant, in which he urges strongly that the Military Forces in Burma should be definitely removed from the Madras command, and placed directly under the orders of the Commander-in-Chief in India; whether this opinion is shared by the chief Civil and Military Authorities in India; and whether, in pursuance of his statement in the Debate on 17th February, 1891, on the Indian Presidential Commands, Her Majesty's Government will proceed, at an early date, to carry out this re-organisation of command suggested by the Commander-in-Chief?

*

This is a question which should be answered by the India Office. I am afraid I cannot answer it. I do not see my hon. Friend the Under Secretary for India present, and perhaps the hon. Gentleman will repeat the question at another time.

Labourers Wages At The Woolwich Arsenal

I beg to ask the Secretary of State for War whether, in view of the fact that 697 labourers employed at the Woolwich Arsenal are receiving only from 17s. to 19s. per week, and that according to recently-published statistics, notably by Mr. Charles Booth in his work on "Labour and Life," it is impossible in a manufacturing town for a thrifty man to maintain a moderate family, even under conditions of privation, on less than 20s. per week, he will give instructions that the minimum rate of labourers' wages shall be 20s. per week, whatever may be the nature of the employment; and whether he is aware that where such minimum rate is fixed it has proved to be conducive to the interests of employers? The hon. Member had also on the Paper a question—To ask the First Lord of the Admiralty whether, in view of the fact that 215 labourers employed in the Naval Ordnance Department at the Woolwich Arsenal are receiving only from 17s. to 19s. per week, and that, according to recently-published statistics, notably by Mr. Charles Booth in his work on "Labour and Life," it is impossible in a manufacturing town for a thrifty man to maintain a moderate family, even under conditions of privation, on less than 20s. per week, he will give instructions that the minimum rate of labourers' wages shall be 20s. per week, whatever may be the nature of the employment; and whether he is aware that where such minimum rate is fixed it has proved to be conducive to the interests of employers?

*

The question addressed to me, and the next one addressed in the same terms to my noble Friend the First Lord of the Admiralty, can be conveniently dealt with together. The position of these labourers was carefully considered last year, and the proportion on the lower rate of wages was reduced; but to adopt the suggestion of the hon. Member would be to depart entirely from the decision deliberately arrived at, nor do we think it would be conducive to the interests of employers to do so.

May I ask the right hon. Gentleman whether the evidence before him from a private communication I made to him is not a sufficient ground to warrant further investigation so as to ascertain whether the rate of wages paid to these men in the Arsenal cannot be made equal, at least, to that which prevails in like industries conducted by private firms?

I am much obliged to the hon. Member for the information he gave me; but I am afraid we could not undertake, on the part of the Government, to pay wages to the same extent as are paid by certain private employers.

Bere Island

I beg to ask the Postmaster General whether, in view of the importance of Bere Island as a fishing station, and also of the frequent visits of Her Majesty's Fleet to that part of Bantry Bay, he will increase the collection and delivery of letters from three to six days a week?

The receipts for this service do not at present cover the cost, and cannot, therefore, afford that it should be doubled.

Trippage Allowances With Mails

I beg to ask the Postmaster General whether any, and, if so, what, re-arrangement has been made or proposed with reference to the trippage allowances of officers travelling in charge of the mails from England to Ireland and vice versâ; will he explain why these officers, who have taken up this service in the confidence that what was always done would be continued (namely, that they would be left in receipt of their allowances during good behaviour, or until they received more remunerative promotion, and would be pensioned on them), have been now informed that they must rotate with others, and so, comparatively speaking, lose both these privileges without any compensation of any kind; and whether these officers have also similarly suffered from a revision of the Sorting Office in Dublin, which is their head quarters; and, if so, to what extent and how often this latter office has been revised?

No re-arrangement has been made of the allowances in question, nor I believe is any at present contemplated. If any new scheme were proposed long-established interests would be considered. There have been revisions of the Sorting Office in Dublin, and, as a result, the superintending force has been aug- mented and the pay of a large section increased; but, on the other hand, certain appointments and scales of pay have been abolished, and will cease with the present holders. To this extent, the sorters on board the packets and others of like rank have suffered in prospect by the revision. I believe that the augmentations I have mentioned will more than compensate for the abolitions.

The Case Of Matthew Kinsella

I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, with reference to Matthew Kinsella, of Dublin, who was, in the year 1882, sentenced to 20 years' penal servitude for shooting and killing one Peter Andrews, whether his attention has been called to a declaration, dated 25th February, 1892, and made by deceased's father, Edward Andrews, of Meath Street, Dublin, before Mr. Fry, J.P., in which he declares that Kinsella and his deceased son had been friends and companions from their boyhood; that they never had a quarrel; that the shooting was purely an accident; that Kinsella was tried and convicted in a time of panic; and that, if he had been allowed to give evidence, he could have explained satisfactorily how the unfortunate accident occurred; and, whether, considering the circumstances of the case, and that Kinsella has been in gaol for ten years, he will make inquiry to see if he can advise the remission of the remainder of his sentence?

I duly received the declaration referred to, which was forwarded to me by the hon. Member. The case of the convict mentioned has been already under consideration of successive Lords Lieutenant in connection with memorials submitted on the convict's behalf. They satisfied themselves that there was not the slightest doubt as to the man's guilt, that there was no mitigating circumstance, and that the law must take its course. As, regards the concluding paragraph, I may point out that the Chief Secretary does not advise the Lord Lieutenant to exercise the Royal clemency.

The Mails To The Cushendun District

I beg to ask the Postmaster General whether complaints have arisen that Glasgow letters do not reach the Cushendun district, County Antrim, for two days after they are posted through failure to catch the 6.15 a.m. train from Belfast to Larne with which alone the daily mail-car connects, although passengers from Glasgow are almost invariably able to catch this train; and as there is considerable intercommunication between Glasgow and this portion of Antrim, will he take steps to ensure a regular daily delivery of the Scotch post?

*

It is unfortunately the case that the correspondence referred to frequently misses the early train from Belfast to Larne, in connection with which the Postal Service to Cushendun is maintained. There is said to be some difficulty in providing a remedy for this irregularity, but the matter is now under inquiry, and I shall certainly endeavour to have it rectified.

The Survivors Of Balaclava

I beg to ask the Secretary of State for War, in reference to statements in the Sunday Chronicle (Manchester) newspaper, concerning the survivors of the Balaclava Six Hundred, whether all of the surviving commissioned officers, or a large majority of them, are in receipt of a Government pension; and, if so, will the War Office order any inquiry into the present position of the non-commissioned officers and men who are alleged to be in a state of destitution?

*

The hon. Member seems to be under a misapprehension as to the conditions upon which the retired pay to officers and the pensions to non-commissioned officers and men are granted. Neither is given in respect of any particular act or campaign, except in the cases of wounds or broken health, but they are given as a reward for long and faithful service. If, therefore, officers have completed the period of service entitling them to retired pay, they, like soldiers in similar circum- stances, will be in receipt of such pay. Otherwise, again, like the soldiers, they will not.

The Civil Service Bank

I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury if his attention has been called to the prospectus of the "Civil Service Bank (Limited)," from which it appears that several Clerks in Government Offices are Directors of the said Company; and if this is in accordance with the Rules of the Civil Service?

*

My attention has been called to the prospectus in question. The names of the Directors appear to be generally those of Civil servants, with the names of their Departments added. The Rule of the Civil Service is as follows:—

"No officer shall be allowed to accept any part in the management of any society or any trading, commercial or financial company of whatever description which would require the attendance of such officer at any time between the hours of 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.;"
but if, as in the present case, members of the Civil Service use the credit of their official position to carry on such a business as banking, which can hardly be efficiently conducted by attendance after 6 p.m., the necessity for making rules of a more stringent character will have to be seriously considered by Her Majesty's Government.

The Staff Of Portland Prison

I beg to ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department whether he has received a memorial from the staff of the Portland Prison, which was presented to the Governor for transmission to the Home Office; whether the Report of the Committee appointed to consider the Prison Officers' grievances recommended the promotion of assistant warders to the pay and rank of warders after ten years' service, but in the case of all assistant warders of longer standing recommended a delay of one year before the commencement of such increase of pay; and whether it is intended to act on this latter recommendation; and whether a similar method has been recommended in reference to the increase of pay of the officers of the civil guard?

*

The memorial referred to has been received. The Committee did not make the recommendation alleged in the second paragraph of the question. As I informed the hon. Baronet the Member for Barnard Castle Division (Sir Joseph Pease) last week, I have made an addition to the maximum rates of pay of assistant warders, and also to the maximum pay of officers of the civil guard.

British East Africa Company And Mombasa Railway Survey

I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether, in view of the fact that Limited Liability Companies enjoying a Royal charter are freed from the obligation of depositing at the end of each year a list of their shareholders at Somerset House, which is open to the inspection of all, and to the statement contained in the letter written by Sir Philip Currie, and by direction of Lord Salisbury, to the Lords of the Treasury, dated 20th December, 1890, that—

"It is notorious that the majority of, if not all, the subscribers (to the company) are actuated rather by philanthropic motives than by receiving any adequate return on their capital,"
he will lay upon the Table of the House a list of the first subscribers to the capital of the Company; the amount of shares subscribed by each; all subsequent transfers; and a list of the present shareholders, with the amount of shares held by each shareholder; and whether, in view of the fact that it is proposed that the State should eater into a partnership with the Company in respect to a railroad, he will lay upon the Table of the House the annual balance sheets of the Company since its formation, showing the amount expended each year, the gross receipts, and the net profit or loss on the transactions of the year; together with the names of the Directors of the Company, and the amounts received each year by them in fees, salaries, or otherwise?

*

Chartered Companies are exempted from the requirements of the Limited Liability Companies' Act in the respect indicated by the hon. Member; but he invites Her Majesty's Government to place this Chartered Company in the same position as a company under the Limited Liability Companies' Act. Her Majesty's Government cannot take the course indicated, nor have they the information necessary to enable them to lay the Papers desired. The Imperial British East Africa Company are, however, prepared, I am informed, to give all the information asked for, if the hon. Member will call at the office of the Company, No. 2, Pall Mall East. As to the second paragraph of the hon. Member's question, Her Majesty's Government will, when the question arises, undoubtedly undertake to satisfy the House of the financial stability of this Company, or of any other with whom Her Majesty's Government may enter into any future arrangement for the execution and completion of the railway if it is undertaken.

I should like to ask the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs precisely the information I am to receive at No. 2, Pall Mall East, if I call. I should like to know if I shall receive a list of the shareholders, in addition to a list of the original shareholders, together with all transfers that may have taken place since the formation of the Company. I would further ask what information Lord Salisbury was in possession of when he said that it was notorious that the majority, if not all, of the subscribers to the Company were actuated rather by philanthropic motives than the receiving of any adequate return for capital. I would further ask if I am to understand that when we are asked to endorse the action of Lord Salisbury we are not to have it made known to us who these philanthropists are to whom Lord Salisbury referred?

*

As to the first question, I think the answer will be best obtained if the hon. Member will call at the office. I am informed that the British East Africa Company are prepared to give all the information for which he has asked in the question put down on the Paper. With regard to the second question, the same sources of information were open to Lord Salisbury when he made the statement referred to as are, and were, open to the hon. Member. With regard to the third question, the matter seems one rather of argument, and therefore I do not think I should be in order in referring to it.

Will not the hon. Gentleman give to this House the list of shareholders, which I gather from his answer was in the hands of Lord Salisbury when he made this extraordinary statement?

*

No, Sir; I have told the hon. Member that the information is not in the possession of the Foreign Office. As the hon. Member is aware, the names of the promoters of the Chartered Company have already been made public, and are to be found in the Blue Book, Africa, 1888, No. 10, I think.

The Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers Of Hastings

I beg to ask the Secretary of State for War whether he will take into consideration the unfavourable position of Hastings as a station for a corps of Submarine Miners, and allow the Hastings corps of the Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers to be absorbed into a fortress company of the Royal Engineer Volunteers, as a special case, instead of into a submarine mining company?

There are difficulties in the case of Hastings, as we do not want submarine miners there, and there are already three companies of Artillery connected with the town. I will make further inquiries as to the possibility of utilising this corps of Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers there.

The Public Health Acts Amendment Act, 1890

I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland if the Irish Local Government Board have yet made and issued such regulations, as they are empowered to do by Part 5 of "The Public Health Acts Amendment Act, 1890," by which Municipal Corporations, Urban and other Authorities, may borrow money by the creation of stock; is he aware that the Enniskillen Town Commissioners and Urban Sanitary Authority more than twelve months ago, namely, in January 1891, complied with the requirements of the Act in relation to its adoption, and requested the Local Government Board immediately to formulate rules to that effect, being the first authorities in Ireland to make application under the Act; in view of the fact that the Act has been put into operation long since in England, will he explain wherefore the delay by the Irish Local Government Board; and will he say whether or not the Irish Local Government Board will at all, and when, issue those necessary regulations, to enable Irish Authorities to avail themselves of the provisions of the Act?

Some necessary delay has occurred in the preparation of the regulations referred to; but they are now completed, and will be forthwith promulgated.

West Clare And The Scheduled Districts

I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland if the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland has received a Memorial from the fishermen, labourers, small farmers, and others in different districts of West Clare, praying him to include the maritime Baronies of Ibricene, Corcomrae, and Moyasta in the list of scheduled districts, with a view to the improvement of harbours, the planting of trees, the improvement of the breed of cattle, and the development of fisheries and agriculture; and if His Excellency has favourably considered their application?

The Memorial in question has been received and referred to the Congested Districts Board for their consideration.

Yellow Fever At Santos

I beg to ask the President of the Board of Trade whether he is aware that it is reported the yellow fever at Santos has reached such a height that there is no one left to carry on business, the well being obliged to devote attention to the sick; that in consequence merchandise has accumulated so as to block the streets; that the epidemic has been aggravated by the authorities continuing to dredge the port; and whether he has any means of informing the shipping community of the condition of the port other than the brief notice in the Board of Trade Journal, or of otherwise guarding against the risks of British subjects trading in that port?

*

Yes, Sir; I believe the facts as stated by the hon. Member are substantially accurate. On the 8th February I caused a notice to be sent to the daily papers, to the Press Agencies, and to Lloyd's, suggesting that, owing to the insanitary condition of Santos, no ships should be chartered for that port. I do not see what further steps I could usefully take, but probably some good may be done by the public attention which my hon. Friend has called to the matter.

Enniskillen Gaol

I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland if the Prisons Board claim the area in front of the gaol in Enniskillen, extending from the gaol wall to the channel adjoining the country road leading south to Castlecoole; and, if so, is it the duty of the Board to keep it in proper repair and clean it; will they either do so, or hand it over to the Local Authority, the Town Commissioners, to put it into and keep it in proper condition; and is this gaol being now used as a prison, or is it intended that the authorities will discontinue its use as such, and permit it to fall into further dilapidation; if not, will they instruct an engineer to inspect and report on the condition and appearance of the outside front wall, doors, &c., with a view to due repairs?

The subject-matter of this question is one which necessitates some inquiry, and I shall be glad if the hon. Member would be good enough to put a further question on the Paper.

Fleet Street Post Office

I beg to ask the Postmaster General whether he is aware-that it is a matter of constant occurrence for letters addressed to the newspaper offices in the neighbourhood of Fleet Street and posted before 3 a.m. not to be delivered till noon on that day; and whether he will direct inquiry to be made at the Fleet Street office into the cause of this delay?

I would like to know whether the right hon. Gentleman is aware that inconvenience of a similar character exists in the suburbs?

I am informed that no such complaints have been received. My hon. Friend does not say where the letters in question were posted. The 3 a.m. collection is only made in the town districts of London and certain suburbs.

The Case Of Florence Cawood

I beg to ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department whether his attention has been called to the case of a girl Florence Cawood; and whether in order to prevent a repetition of such cases, he will consider the advisability of proposing alterations in the law to prevent girls being sent to gaol and sentenced to long terms of confinement in reformatories for offences not of a criminal character?

*

My attention has been called to this case, and I have directed the release of the girl alluded to. The recent Government Bill relating to reformatories had the effect of limiting the application of the reformatory system to cases of a really criminal character, and even in those cases made preliminary imprisonment a matter for the discretion of the commit- ting Magistrate. I should be very glad to see this provision become law. I wish, however, to guard myself from saying that a young person escaping from an industrial school should in no case be sent to a reformatory.

German Emigrants

I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether the attention of the Government has been called to the proposed alteration in the German Laws, by which the transit of emigrants through English ports will be prohibited; and whether he can give any information on the subject?

*

No information upon the proposals mentioned has yet been received at the Foreign Office, but Sir E. Malet will be asked for a Report upon the subject.

The Claremorris And Collooney Railway

I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland if he has seen the statement of the Chairman, Sir Francis Brady, Bart., at the half-yearly meeting of the Waterford and Limerick Railway Company, on Friday last, in relation to the proposed agreement between the Government and that Company for the completion and working of the Clare-morris and Collooney line—namely,

"There remains to be executed a formal document by the Board of Works. It would appear that some one has discovered that part of the agreement proposed by the Treasury was at variance with the provisions of some Act of Parliament. I am not able to say how far this may be well-grounded, but if it be, no doubt the Government will be able to take steps to remove all technical difficulties, and enable the work to be continued without delay;"
is he aware that the Directors of the Waterford and Limerick Company refuse to carry out their arrangement with the Treasury, except in violation of "The Tramways Act, 1883," and to the detriment of the guaranteeing cesspayers of the Counties of Sligo and Mayo; and if the Waterford and Limerick Company continue such action, will the Government take such other steps as will, at the earliest possible date, make the line from Claremorris and Collooney available for the traffic of the district?

Sir, in answer to this question, I have not seen the statement referred to in the first part of the question. The facts are, I believe, that the Waterford and Limerick Company have refused to sign the agreement or to accept the proposal which has been made to them with reference to this railway without some alteration of the law, the arrangement made being apparently in violation of the Act of 1883. With reference to the last portion of the question, no doubt, if the Waterford and Limerick Company refuse to carry out the agreement, it will then be for the Government to consider in what form they can accomplish the carrying out of the line in some other way. But I would be unwilling at present to believe that the Waterford and Limerick Company had said the last word on that subject; because, if they declined absolutely to carry out the agreement, they will, no doubt, release the Government from the offer the Government have already made. They have had sufficient time to consider the matter, and I am quite sure they will come to a decision before long.

The New Magazine Rifle

I beg to ask the Secretary of State for War whether a decision has yet been arrived at as to the patents in connection with the new Magazine rifle; what persons have established a claim to payment for such patents, and whether any person in Government employment is among the number; and what amounts have been paid to, or are intended to be paid to, them respectively on account of their inventions or patents?

*

It has been admitted that the British Magazine Rifle Company and Messrs. Greenwood and Batley are entitled to payments on account of patents connected with the rifle and ammunition respectively. The amounts to be paid are, I am sorry to say, not yet finally settled. The above statement does not include patents taken out by persons in the Government employment. I have declined to recognise the claim of Mr. Rigby, the Superintendent of the Small Arms Factory; but as regards Mr. Speed, I am considering whether, looking at his position as a Government employé, and to the circumstances under which his inventions were originated, worked out and patented, he is entitled to any reward at all.

Sunday Post At Upperchurch, Tipperary

I beg to ask the Postmaster General, with reference to the memorial received from the inhabitants of Drum-bane and Upperchurch, County Tipperary, praying for the accommodation of a Sunday post at Upperchurch, whether the only cost to be incurred would be the payment of a rural messenger for the one day in the week extra, for a distance of five miles, from Ballycahill to Upperchurch; and whether, in the interests of the Public Service, having regard to the large district to be accommodated with a population of nearly 3,000 inhabitants, he will see his way to have the want provided for?

The cost to be incurred (between £7 and £8 a year) would be the payment of a rural postman for the one day in the week extra, but the distance which would have to be walked would not be five miles but fully twelve miles. As the existing post is carried on at a serious loss it is not considered that any extra expenditure should be incurred in connection with it.

Clerks In The Central Telegraph Office

I beg to ask the Postmaster General whether second class clerks in the Central Telegraph Office, who are performing duties exactly similar to those performed by first class clerks, are entitled to promotion or extra pay in respect of the performance of such duties; whether any second class clerks now performing first class duties shall receive compensation for such periods as they have performed duties of a higher class; whether the clerks have any means of distinguishing between first and second class duties during their performance; and whether he will consider the desirability of directing that in future all promotions from the second to the first class are made so far retrospective as to ensure that the clerk promoted "enjoys a similar advantage" to that of his immediate predecessors?

*

Second class telegraphists, who, owing to the exigencies of the Service, may be temporarily employed upon first class duties are undoubtedly qualifying themselves for promotion to the superior class when vacancies occur. Without such opportunity for acquiring the necessary qualification they, of course, could not be promoted, and when promotion is obtained this in itself affords sufficient compensation for any temporary discharge of higher duties. This is the universal rule of the Service, and I should think of all other Services, and there is no ground whatever for altering it. The distinction between first and second class duties is generally well understood, but there may be cases, of course, in which the one very nearly approaches the other. It is not the practice of the Service in any case to make promotion retrospective beyond the date of the vacancy.

Polling Cards

*

If the House will allow me I will take this opportunity of mentioning, with reference to questions as to what may be inserted in polling cards so as to pass by post at the halfpenny rate, that the distinctions maintained appear to be so troublesome, that I have given instructions that the name and number of the voter may be inserted in writing, and a circular to this effect will be issued immediately.

Arboriculture In Ireland

I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether the authorities in Ireland, following the precedent set by the Board of Agriculture in England, have taken any steps to provide for suitable instruction in the higher and lower branches of arboriculture and silviculture, as advised by the Select Committee on Forestry in 1887?

The authorities in Ireland have taken some practical steps with reference to the questions of forestry and of planting, and I have already answered questions on the sub- ject two or three times. I am not aware that they have taken any steps for instruction in the branches referred to in the question, nor do I think that they would. That would very well come within the powers or duties of the Congested Districts Board, to whom the question has been referred.

The Stamp Distributor At Goole

I beg to ask the First Lord of the Treasury if his attention has been called to a memorial sent to the Treasury, numerously signed by shipowners, bankers, merchants, chairmen of the Local Bodies, and others, gentlemen of both political parties, protesting against the position of stamp distributor being taken from the office of Messrs. Gardiner & Co., printers and publishers, Goole, they having held the office for many years to the satisfaction of the public and faithfully to the Crown; if it is true that Mr. Elvin, the printer and publisher of a new Conservative newspaper recently established at Goole, has been appointed stamp distributor; and if he will consider the additional appointment of Mr. Robert Hudson, a member of the firm of Messrs. Gardiner & Co., who has practically discharged the duties of the office for some time?

Sir, no such Memorial as that described by the hon. Member has been brought to my notice. I understand that Mr. Gardiner resigned last autumn. Mr. Elvin, who was strongly recommended from other quarters and is well qualified, was selected. The salary attached is only £8. The Inland Revenue Department cannot, I understand, recommend that this £8 should be further sub-divided by being allocated to two individuals.

Do I understand the First Lord of the Treasury to say that no such Memorial has been received?

The Office Of Woods And Forests And Land Revenues Of The Crown

I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury when he will introduce the Bill promised last Session by his predecessor, to carry out the recommendations of the Committee of this House which reported upon the administration of the Office of Woods and Forests and Land Revenues of the Crown?

I hope very shortly to be able to introduce the Crown Lands Bill—probably in the course of next week.

The Lagos District

I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for the Colonies a question of which I have given him private notice whether, having regard to the statement he made in reply to the hon. Baronet the Member for North-West Manchester (Sir Henry Houldsworth), it is correct, as reported, that the Jebus are still blocking trade; and whether he will give the House any more recent information on the subject?

I am asked to reply on behalf of my right hon. Friend. In reply to the first question, I am informed that an arrangement has been made with the Jebus on the 21st of January, by which they undertook to keep the roads and river free to all persons, and to levy no tolls, in consideration of a yearly present of £500. The Secretary of State for the Colonies has now learnt by telegram that they have broken this agreement, and that an officer sent to remonstrate was not allowed to proceed to Jebu Ode, the capital of their territory. The Secretary of State has also just learnt by telegram that the letter sent to the Egba authorities has been returned unopened, and that they decline to have any communication with the Governor of Lagos. Mr. Carter, the Governor of Lagos, is up the country, but is expected back on 9th March. He has been instructed by telegraph to report at once fully upon the position, and as to the measures which he would recommend to be taken.

The Army And Navy Estimates

I wish to ask the First Lord of the Treasury when he proposes to lay the Navy Estimates and the Army Estimates on the Table of the House; and I would ask the First Lord of the Treasury whether his attention has been called to the Rule of the House that Estimates relating to the Army and Navy must be laid on the Table within ten days after the House goes into Committee of Supply, which ten days have now expired?

I am afraid it is not always possible to adhere to that resolution. The Army Estimates, I understand, will be circulated tomorrow, and the Navy Estimates, I hope, in the early part of next week.

Notices Of Motion

Morning Sittings

With relation, more or less, to the question which has been put, I wish to give notice that I will on Thursday, in view of the condition of Supply, move that, on Tuesdays and Fridays, Morning Sittings should be taken for the purpose of dealing with Supply, and for the purpose of reading Bills for the first time, but for those purposes alone.

The first business of the House to-morrow is to promote peace and goodwill in Ireland by providing some means of restoring evicted tenants in that country. If the Sitting begins at 2 o'clock, that will not afford to hon. Members who promote the Bill any fair or adequate opportunity of having their proposals properly considered. And on the principle that the better the day the better the deed, I would suggest that the House meet at 12 o'clock, the usual hour.

For my own part, I have always in past years voted in favour of the adjournment of the House on Ash Wednesday, and I would not on this occasion interfere to express objection to that. But the fortune of the ballot has cast for to-morrow a Bill that Members in every part of the House must acknowledge is one of far-reaching importance. Indeed, the right hon. Gentleman the Leader of the House will be the last to deny that it is an important question. There are at this moment in Ireland many hundreds of families of evicted tenants, whose position is such that so long as these tenants remain as they are, the public peace must be imperilled. The right hon. Gentleman the Leader of the House himself recognised the importance of the matter, for in the Act of last year he inserted a clause for the purpose of enabling them to be restored to their holdings. That clause was limited as to time, and that time has expired, and the tenants are still out of their homes. Under these circumstances, Mr. Speaker, no one will deny, least of all the right hon. Gentleman, the importance of considering this question from the point of view of the tenants, of the landlords, and of those who are responsible for the government and tranquillity of Ireland. That is the subject to be dealt with by the Bill first in the Orders for to-morrow, and no one will deny that it cannot be adequately discussed in the three hours which will be at our disposal if the House meets at 2 o'clock. Under these circumstances, Mr. Speaker, I think we have a strong case for saying that it would be in the interests of the people of Ireland if the House were to meet at the ordinary hour to-morrow. It may be that the old custom of the Adjournment is venerable by its age; but I am bound to say that I think, in the case of the vast majority of the Members of the House, the Adjournment is very little short of an act of hyprocrisy; and if an inquiry were made as to the number of Members who take advantage of the Adjournment to attend Divine Service, the result would be very extraordinary. I appeal to the House not to stand in the way of a complete discussion of this Bill. The meeting at 12 would not prevent any hon. Member from attending Divine Service and then coming to the House to express his views and record his vote, for the discussion is certain to go on all the after- noon. For these reasons I agree with the hon. Member for West Belfast (Mr. Sexton) in voting against the Adjournment of the House, and I appeal to hon. Members to assist us the Representatives of Ireland, in our effort to obtain for this Bill, which affects so greatly the well-being of our people, a full discussion.

Schools (Ireland)

Returns [Feb 29] ordered—

  • Individual Schools. The total Grants, per the annual School Returns certified by the Managers, made by the Irish National Board of Educatien in the year 1890 to each of the ordinary Schools under (a) Episcopalian Protestant management; (b) Roman Catholic management; (c) Presbyterian management; also, to (d) Schools under the management of other Denominations; (e) Schools under the joint Protestant management of Episcopalians and Presbyterians; or (f) other Protestant management exclusively; and (g) Schools under the joint management of Protestants and Roman Catholics (exclusive of Grants to Convent and Monastic Schools, Gaol and Workhouse and other (Model, &c.) Schools): The Return to specify—
  • Whether the School is under a local Committee recognised by the Commissioners; and
  • To give in separate columns for each ordinary School (a) the number on the rolls; (b) the average attendance;
  • In separate columns, Details under the several heads for each ordinary School: (a) salaries, gratuities, premiums to teaching staff, including assistants, monitors, and teachers of needlework; (b) results payments; (c) books and free stock;
  • The average Cost of each Scholar in average daily attendance, calculated on the total of the Board's Grants;
  • The amount of local Aid raised for each School (a) in School fees; (b) from other sources, including Rates and Customs and Excise payments;
  • The average Cost of each Scholar in average daily attendance, calculated on the total local Aid:
  • Similar Return in the case of all Convent and Monastic Schools for the year 1890, for (a) Attendances; (b) Grants; (c) local Aid; (d) average Cost per Pupil in average daily attendance, computed (a) on the Board's Grant; (b) on the local Aid:
  • The total number of ordinary Schools for the years 1860, 1870, 1880, 1890, with total number of pupils on rolls, and average attendance, with percentage of average attendance to total on rolls; the total amount of Grants made, distinguishing (a) results fees; (b) salaries and other payments; and giving the average cost of each pupil in average attendance on the totals of the columns under (a) results fees; (b) salaries, &c.;
  • (a) Total local Aid; and (b) average cost per pupll (in average attendance) on local Aid:
  • Similar Return for Convent and Monastic Schools for the same years:
  • Similar Return for the Board's Model Schools for the same years (specific charges for dietary and other residential expenses connected with the training departments of the Model Schools to be excluded):
  • Return from the several Denominational Training Colleges in Ireland aided by the Board, for each year since their establishment, and ending with the session terminated on the 31st day of August. 1890, and showing—
  • The length of the course of training (a) the total amount of Board's Grants, and the total certified college expenditure for each session; (b) the total numbers trained (males and females separate); (c) the average cost of each Queen's scholar who completed the course of training (1) Board's Grants, (2) total certified college expenditure;
  • The total number of Queen's scholars for each College who, since completing the final course of training ended on or before the 31st day of August, 1890, have obtained charge of National or other public elementary Schools in Ireland;
  • The names, titles, functions, and salaries, &c., of each of the professors appointed on the Staffs of these Colleges:
  • The Return also to include particulars for the principal and for each of the officials of these Colleges, and to distinguish lay and clerical;
  • Corresponding Returns for the Board's own Training College in Marlborough Street for five years ending with the 31st day of August, 1890, with religious denominations of Queen's scholars in residence:
  • Summaries and averages in case of last two Returns."—(Mr. T. W. Russell.)
  • Sittings Of The House

    (Ash Wednesday)

    Motion made, and Question put, "That this House do meet Tomorrow, at Two of the clock."—( Mr. A. J. Balfour.)

    The House divided:—Ayes 17; Noes 154.—(Div. List, No. 14.)

    Recreation Grounds Bill

    On Motion of Mr. Llewellyn, Bill to facilitate the provision of Recreation Grounds in Rural Parishes, ordered to be brought in by Mr. Llewellyn and Sir Edward Birkbeck.
    Bill presented, and read first time. [Bill 201.]

    Greenwich Hospital

    (6.45.)

    I beg, Sir, to move the Motion which is printed on the Paper in my name. I have considered this question during the Recess, in order to make myself thoroughly acquainted with the minutiœ of the case, and I also wrote to the First Lord of the Admiralty and received a reply, which, while not admitting that there was any great injustice, admitted that the funds were short, and that for a considerable number of years the claims had been greater than the fund was able to satisfy. I came to the conclusion that the plea of the money not being sufficient was not an answer to the claim of the seamen, if there had been a contract or anything in the nature of an implied contract. It seemed to me the only way to dispose of the matter was to ask for a Select Committee, which would settle the question once for all, so that the agitation might cease. I am happy to inform the House that the Government have agreed with me that it would be better to deal with the subject by referring it to a Select Committee, and though I acknowledge with thankfulness the support which I know I should have received from all parts of the House if I went to a Division, I am glad to be relieved of the unpleasantness and uncertainty of such a course by the Government having acceded to my solicitation and granted the Committee. The Committee having been granted, I do not think I have a right to detain the House. Suffice it is to say that my letter to the First Lord of the Admiralty and his reply have been issued to-day, and I hope every Member of the House will take the trouble to read that correspondence, as it contains all that I could have said. I ask, therefore, to be excused from doing more than move the Motion which stands in my name, which I do with a great deal of pleasure, and the hope that at last justice will be done to seamen who have served their country well and should have a just reward.

    (6.50.)

    I am delighted to hear that the Government have granted the Committee. The main fact it will have to deal with is that there are about 2,000 men who are very dissatisfied with their position, and that itself seems to me almost sufficient justification for the action of the Government. Under the circumstances just stated, I shall not venture to take up the time of the House, but shall content myself with seconding the Motion.

    Motion made, and Question proposed,

    "That a Select Committee be appointed to inquire into the causes which have led to the limitation in the number of seamen receiving age pensions out of Greenwich Hospital Funds, and to consider whether any steps can properly be taken to make provision for a larger number of age pensioners, and to, inquire into their alleged grievances:
    That the Committee do consist of Nine Members:
    That the Committee have power to send for persons, papers, and records:
    That Five be the quorum."—(Colonel Hughes.)

    (6.52.)

    I desire, in a few words, to express my satisfaction at the course the Government have adopted. The subject is one which has been brought before the House by myself and others for a number of years, and it is a growing grievance, the men affected being something like double the number that it was when I first called attention to the matter. There are several grievances to be considered. We have to consider whether the fund has been properly dealt with, whether there has been any misappropriation or not, and how the funds may be increased. It is a general idea among the pensioners that they have not been treated fairly in this matter, and that faith has been broken with them. When after their first term of service they agreed for a second term, they did so in the belief that this Greenwich age pension was an inalienable right, and that they would get it without, doubt at 55 or 60 years of age. The Admiralty have introduced rules that were not thought of at the time of the Hospital Charter, and, as a matter of fact, some of the men do not now enjoy those benefits which were then held out to them. In the old days there were only two principles to guide the granting of these pensions: one the question of age, and the other that of the roster. All that is set on one side now, and a principle of selection is, adopted. That will be a point for the Committee to inquire into.

    *

    As representing the dockyard town of Sheerness, where many persons claiming this pension reside, I must ask permission to say a word or two in support of the Motion of my hon. and gallant Friend. There is no doubt that many of these men entered the Service in the full belief that at 55 they would, as a matter of course, become entitled to this pension, and they think themselves hardly treated that, by the retrospective operation of a rule passed after they had entered the Service, they should be deprived of their pensions. It is alleged that this fund has been diverted, and that point could be looked into by the Committee. I am very glad this justice is to be done, and in the name of my constituents I thank the Government.

    I know there are many on this side of the House who would have supported the hon. and gallant Member for Woolwich (Colonel Hughes) in his Motion had it gone to a Division. Many of us have had the case brought before us by our constituents, and we are aware that at least they think they are suffering under a great grievance. It is unnecessary to go into the case; but I am sure only justice is being done to them by appointing this Committee to into their case; and if there be no grievance, it will tend to set their minds at rest.

    (6.55.)

    The modified form of the Motion enables the Government to assent to an inquiry into the claims of the naval pensioners. Since the Motion has been on the Paper the Government have become aware that there is a widespread feeling amongst the naval pensioners that their claims to Greenwich age pensions have not been fully satisfied, and the Government feel that there is no class of men whose interests, sentiments, and even prejudices are more deserving of generous consideration than those gallant sailors and marines who have so long served their Queen with loyalty and credit. The Government, therefore, while not receding from the view which has been expressed on this question by successive Boards of Admiralty, and both Parties, are glad to concede the inquiry. By the first of next month there will be no less than 7,500 naval pensioners in receipt of Greenwich age pensions, being an increase of 400 on last year. The Admiralty have also decided that the amount of naval pension is no longer to be taken into account in awarding Greenwich age pensions. That is a boon very much pressed by the Committee which sat last year. I may also say that at the present time, out of a total expenditure of £168,000, no less than £148,000 is directly devoted to the benefit of the sailors and marines. The Government grant this Committee with satisfaction at the request of the hon. and gallant Member who has taken such great interest in the claims of these pensioners, and are confident that the result of the investigation will be to the credit of the direction and administration of the funds of this most useful institution, Greenwich Hospital.

    Motion agreed to.

    School Board For London

    Motion For An Address

    (7.0.)

    I beg to move—

    "That an humble Address be presented to Her Majesty, asking Her to appoint a Royal Commission to investigate the action and the extravagance of the London School Board, and the cause of the high rates raised for its use in the Metropolis."
    I wish, in the first place, to say that I do not propose to take up unnecessarily the time of the House, but the documents I have to deal with are of a character which may require some time in the treatment of them, and to justify my action in asking for a Royal Commission. In the first place, I wish to say that the Motion is not intended in any way as an attack upon education. It is, in fact, in its favour; as anything which tends to make education unpopular is injurious to education itself. Under the name of promoting education the money of the ratepayers has been shamefully squandered; the pockets of the Metropolitan ratepayers have been scandalously picked; and this has been fully recognised by Mr. Diggle, Mr. Helby, Mr. Lobb, and many other members of the Board. They have shown that they considered that this is a case which should be thoroughly investigated. In July, 1888, the following resolution was placed upon the agenda paper of the Board:—
    "That Sir Richard Temple and Colonel Hughes be requested to take the necessary steps in the House of Commons to obtain a Royal Commission, with powers to call for necessary papers and persons, to investigate upon oath the whole mode by which sites have been acquired and school buildings erected thereon by the School Board for London,"
    which, of course, was not carried, and in July, 1890, a similar motion was also defeated. Now, first, with regard to the cost of the School Board, I find that up to the 23rd March, 1891, it has been no less than £26,399,066, less about £1,000,000 for the payment of loans. The debt was £7,309,000, and the interest and repayment on that amount was about £400,000, or about 3d. in the £1, the amount which we were told in 1870 would never be exceeded, and yet that is now necessary for the loan only. As late as the year 1875 the rate was only 3d. in the £1, and now it is 1s., with every probability of its being increased 1d. per year for some years to come. I ask you, what would be said to the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he proposed to add a penny a year to the Income Tax? If the rateable value of the Metropolis had continued as it was in 1871, the rate would have been 1s. 6d. in the £1; but the increase in the value from £19,970,000 to £33,000,000, or an increase of 65 per cent., has alone kept the rate to 1s. This is more strongly shown by the rate in 1871, which produced £83,200, whilst in 1891 it produced £137,800. During the last three years the rate has been increasing by leaps and bounds, till in 1891 it has reached £1,483,174, or £454,291 increase. It may be said that this is due to the increase of scholars. But what are the facts? I find that in the year 1891 the average attendance was only 14,130 more than in 1889; while the increase of rates has been 44·15 per cent., the increase of attend- ance has been only 4·12 per cent. In the year 1875 the precept of the Board was for £551,247, while in 1890 it amounted to nearly £1,500,000, or what is practically about treble the amount. In order to show, further, that the vast increase of expenditure has not been accounted for by the additional numbers educated, I may say that while in 1883 240,000 were educated for £679,595, in 1891 it cost £1,403,280 to educate 349,291 children, or, in fact, more than double the amount to educate only 100,000 more. Now, having given these facts, I wish to refer to the reasons which I believe have led to this extraordinary increase of expenditure. It is equally intelligible how the extravagance arises. Given a body of men, many of whom have no practical acquaintance with business, and some of whom are possessed by impracticable notions, and given still further that they are not bound by the limitations which affect a man who is carrying on business on his own account, but has a practically unlimited fund upon which to draw, and it stands to reason that an extravagant expenditure will follow, almost as a matter of course. But when, in addition to fads, you have to consider the dishonesty of contractors and the carelessness of Boards, and the gross negligence, if not worse, of architects and clerks of works, and fraud in the purchase of sites, to which must be added the exorbitant salaries of the staff and teachers, it is not difficult to see how the expenditure of the School Board has so enormously increased, all which subjects can only be thoroughly brought to light by a Royal Commission. The School Management Committee is one of the great spending departments of the Board. It at present pays to teachers £910,790 a year, the salaries rising automatically. The teachers now receive 52s. 4d. per child, or 1s. 10d. more than in 1890, and I find that a large number of them are husbands and wives. Seven of those couples receive over £600 a year, 28 over £500, 27 over £400, 40 over £300, 108 over £200, whilst there are only 21 receiving under £200 a year. The highest single salary paid to a teacher is £460. I can only say that if the teachers are worth all this money, they are too good, as they certainly are too expensive, for Board schools, and their salaries are such as would be welcomed by clergymen and ministers. The present salaries of men teachers is £326 1s. 0d. to £136 10s. 2d., and women teachers, £234 6s. 10d. to £111 5s. 1d. The salaries of the teachers have increased during the past ten years 107 per cent., to nearly £1,000,000, or 7d. in the £1 on the rates, with no increase of educational progress or practical training; and whilst the average from 1886 to 1888 was £1 17s. 2d. per child per annum only for school management, it is now no less than £2 9s. 1d. I think that the following, taken from the Report of the Committee of Council on Education for 1890–91, page 26, will show how much higher this cost is than that of the voluntary schools—
    "We may mention, with regard to the principal teachers in the Metropolitan district, that in the past year the average salary of 368 masters in voluntary schools was £152 17s. 2d., and that of 379 masters in Board schools £283 10s. 10d., while 762 schoolmistresses in Board schools enjoyed an average income of £199 11s. 5d., as compared with £90 18s. 6d.—that of 797 teachers in voluntary schools. The salaries of 11 masters in voluntary schools and 167 in Board schools amounted to £300 a year and upwards, whilst three mistresses in voluntary and 366 in Board schools had salaries of £200 and upwards."
    And to show that the cost is beyond that of other districts, it will be found that teachers of equal capacity outside the London School Board receive salaries from 25 to 33 per cent. less, and at the same time do their duty with equal satisfaction to the Government Inspectors. Those are matters into which I think the strictest investigation is required, and matters into which only a Royal Commission can adequately inquire into; because it is known that teachers have actively canvassed for members of committees, many of whom owe their election to them, and that some of these members have had the whole of their election expenses paid by the teachers, the result being that paid officers of the Board combine to elect the members whose duty it is to decide how much these officers shall be paid. This surely is a scandal, and one which should be investigated. While dealing with this part of the question, it may not be amiss to state that the cost of each scholar in the London Board schools is £3 2s. 7½d. while in voluntary schools it is £2 4s. 1d. The cost borne by the ratepayers of London, £1 15s. 8¼d.; Birmingham, 18s. 8¾d.; Bradford, 8s. 9d.; Bristol, £1 3s. 10¼d.; Leeds, 14s. 2¼d.; Liverpool, 13s. 7¼d.; Manchester, 7s. 11¼d.; Sheffield, 8s. 10d.; to which 10s. for new Education Act must now be added. I should like to refer to the stores department. No proper records are kept, and teachers have only to ask and to have. The stores superintendents are allowed to order what they please, and from what firms they please. In answer to a return to teachers, it has been shown that 329,129 books, or 50 tons, were returned as unnecessary. The cost of books had risen from £31,619 to £52,800 per annum, or from 1s. 10d. to 3s. per child. Amongst the requisitions that were made the other day there was one for skeletons to cost £82 10s., and that was for a single school, which asked for the skeletons of twelve codfish, amounting to £3 each, and, would it be believed, the University of Cambridge has only one of these skeletons for all its pupils. Such Votes as these are really so much money extorted from the ratepayers and thrown away. And only two days ago the mistress of the Belleville Road school prayed to have a full sized human skeleton taken away, as it frightened the children. In regard to the question of sites, I have to say that up to September, 1891, the cost was £3,044,682, including legal charges and surveyors' expenses. The sites previous to 1885 were selected (many during the recess) by the Board's surveyor, Mr. Andrew Young, a man who has had no practical knowledge, having simply been a clerk in the finance department. These sites were in many cases costly and unsuitable, and the surveyor had his own brother, Mr. Douglas Young, as auctioneer to sell the materials on such sites. Naturally he did not select sites where materials had not to be sold. The architect's brother-in-law, Mr. Longden, supplied all the iron for twelve years, and although iron went down between 60 and 70 per cent., the schedule price was never revised, and the clause in the contract was that the iron was to be supplied by the Board who did it through this official. An official of the Board—the architect's clerk, Mr. McFarlane—(who is still in their employment), when a stir was made about the matter, on a bank-holiday devoted his time, unknown to the Board, in examining and destroying documents; and yet, though the Chairman, both in committee and at the Board, moved for his dismissal he is still kept on. The sites are not only the most extravagant that can be found, but it will be found, on looking at the deeds, that directly it is mooted that a site is likely to be wanted it changes hands a number of times, and reaches the Board at a great increase in price. Take, for instance, the Raywood Street site, opposite the Dog's Home at Battersea. It eventually was purchased for £7,000, when it could first have been purchased for £2,000. Take the Ponton Street site, at Nine Elms, for which £14,000 was given, and a school erected where it was not wanted, and is never half filled. These are striking instances, but sites were also purchased where all the gravel had been dug out, and they were simply dust heaps. What is worse still, there are sites which, having been bought at ridiculous prices, have been proved to be not fit for use, and had to be sold again, or attempts made to sell them. For instance, the St. George's Road, Pimlico, site, which cost £11,000; the best offer that could be obtained for it was £5,000, a price which could not now be obtained. This inquiry is, I say, wanted in order to find out who had the money, in numberless cases, and the information can only be obtained by means of such an inquiry as I ask for, and which, I believe, the public demand. In regard to the question of buildings, up to March, 1891, the amount spent was £4,778,746, exclusive of land and fittings. Thirteen builders received contracts for £2,153,345 6s. 6d. The Board has 410 schools, of which 356 were erected by the Board, and 163 have been found faulty or insanitary, and not single school was in accordance with the specification. In a Report dealing with the question as to how the schools have been built, it is stated:—
    "With some exceptions they have been badly planned and badly built; many of them are only huge barns, with an ornamental exterior, defectively ventilated and defectively lighted. The materials used in the schools complained of are the veriest rubbish, whilst the best have been specified in the contracts and paid for; the work scamped and executed in a disgraceful manner. Instead of the schools resting upon solid foundations, investigations have shown that they rest upon loose and soapy foundations, foundry-ashes foundations, mud foundations, and in some cases no foundations at all. The brickwork, both inside and outside, has been altogether inferior to that specified and paid for. … The mortar used was absolutely rotten—containing no binding or adhesive properties and no grit, and on being touched crushes to powder; also an entire absence of hair in the mortar, although it was specified in the contract and has been paid for. Half-burnt clay has been used in the place of sand; instead of the best quality of Portland stone, free from all defects, the commonest has been used, full of sand-hole fractures and the edges broken; evidently taken from the outside beds of the quarry instead of from the inside. In the matter of the lath and plastering, single laths instead of a lath and a-half have been used. The plastering being rotten, the result is that large patches are constantly falling. The painters' work has been scamped shamefully; the doors and framings improperly fixed; the glass 21 oz. only, instead of 26 oz., as specified and paid for; lead of one weight was paid for, whilst that used was 1 or 2 lbs. per square foot less weight; the woodwork and the floors executed in a most dishonest manner, laid with absolutely no concrete on them, covered only with wet clay and muck, with the result that dry rot has set in.
    Take, out of many examples, the case of the Goodrich Road schools, opened in 1886 by Mr. G. C. Whitely, and who then described it as a model school. On 2nd June, 1890, the assistant architect for repairs drew attention to the repairs that would be necessary in consequence of the defective manner in which the school had been built. Exclusive of the work to drains, the cost of undermining, repairs, &c., to the school has been £2,700. From this school five cartloads of sewerage were removed from under the floor, and the architect, Mr. Bailey, wrote to the contractors to say he must call the Board's attention to its state, but never did, because he had actually given a final certificate five weeks before, without even inspecting the work. In regard to the Latimer Road school, it has been shown that on 1st December, 1890, a portion of the ceiling in one of the class rooms came down with a great crash on the children's heads, and as this was the fourth time that such a thing had taken place, the assistant architect was called upon to examine and report, and in his Report stated that—
    "The ceilings in the girls' and infants' departments are in a more or less unsafe condition, and liable to fall at any time."
    This school was opened in 1880, at a cost of £20,767 17s. 10d. In the case of the Princess Road School, opened February, 1885, in November, 1889, the assistant architect found the walls, chimney-stacks, and piers carrying the superstructure of the school very defective: subsequently he reported settlements, which, upon being watched, were found to increase and became dangerous, the whole superstructure being liable to collapse. This had to be repaired at a cost of over £2,000. In the case of Salters Hill School, 8th November, 1889, the Clerk of the Works in charge of the school building reported serious cracks and settlements in the lofty gable walls. The architect and assistant architect for repairs made an examination, and found a 6-in. drainpipe running along the wall under the concrete foundation, the concrete having been placed upon it; the drainpipe consequently broke and became choked, the drainage going into the foundation. Immediate steps were taken to shore up the school to prevent its falling. The walls subsequently were underpinned with cement concrete down to a good foundation. It has been repaired at a cost of £800. I do not think it is necessary to go through the whole list, but I could show that every one of the 163 schools has been repaired at the cost of the ratepayers. But what is far worse is the insanitary condition of the buildings, scattering illness and death amongst the teachers and children of the poor. In some cases the flooring covered leaky drains and soil-pipes. In others the pipes were not even jointed; in others the pipes were laid the wrong way, or with no fall, and not even connected with the main drains. In fact, the children were living in a vast sewer, and no wonder the bereaved parents complained whose children died from diphtheria, scarlet, or typhoid fever. Take, as examples, the Hamond Square Schoolhouse, Hoxton. After the caretaker's five children had been removed by death, the parish Sanitary Inspector found that the contractors had erected the building over a series of running cesspools, which were immediately under the floors of his rooms. The doctors' and funeral bills amounted to over £100, and that poor caretaker has never had a penny compensation. This was brought before the Board of Hoxton, and here is an extract from the medical officer's Report for the parish of St. Leonard's, Shoreditch, for 1886, p. 81:—
    "The Board School in Hamond Square it was necessary for the medical officer to bring, more especially under the notice of your Sanitary Committee to receive instructions thereon. It might have been inferred that, at the time of the construction, ordinary precautionary measures would have been adopted to keep the premises of the school from proximate contact with noxious decaying accumulations; but, instead of that, accumulations of sewage matter had been allowed to remain buried within the walls of the house, and, as the Inspector says, when the ground under one room was opened to the depth of about three or four feet, it was seen to be made up of old bricks and other rubbish, and under that was an old brick drain. Further examination showed that the wall of the house had been built over this drain, the wall being carried on a 'relieving stone template' to avoid disturbing or removing the old drain. In the removal of the made-up ground from within the walls of the house, by orders of your Sanitary Committee, a large cesspool was found, and five loads of sewage accumulation had to be removed. These conditions had made the walls of the house foully damp."
    With respect to the Globe Terrace School, Bethnal Green, in consequence of 70 children being absent on account of illness, and the repeated complaints of teachers, an investigation was made, with the result that from under the floor of the infants' room two cart-loads of decomposed vegetable and other refuse matter were removed, and nine inches of concrete have since been laid there. In the case of Stockwell Road School divisional offices, built in 1882, complaints were made of repeated illness amongst the staff, and that bad smells were prevalent. It was found that the drains and the sewer were being freely ventilated into the space under the boarded floor, and through the joints of the boards into the apartment. The earth below the floor was saturated with the discharge from a defective pipe, and was very offensive. The iron soil-pipe had open joints, which admitted sewer gas into the staircase and passages. This school was built on a dust heap. With reference to Curtain Road School, Hoxton (in the parish of Shoreditch), here is an extract from the Report of the Medical Officer of Health, Mr. Alexander, for the year ending 1889:—
    "Immediately under a window in the girls' department were the closets of the infas department, fitted with an ordinary iron trough, the emanations from which passed into the girls' class-rooms."
    With respect to Plassy Road School, complaints of bad smells and sickness of children led to examination of drains, with the result that the whole drainage and sanitary arrangements had to be remodelled at a cost of £600, meanwhile blood-poisoning had been going on at a wholesale rate. At Everington Street School there were reported bad smells in the offices, and that upwards of 300 children were absent through illness. An examination showed that the troughs or latrines were not trapped, but that drain air had free access into the closets, and was inhaled by the children. I think that is sufficient to trouble the House with on that point. It is an appalling fact that every school discloses a shocking insanitary condition, and it seems incredible that the Board have disregarded the numerous complaints of teachers and local managers, and have not taken action until they have been compelled by the parish sanitary officer, whose numerous legal documents under the Nuisances Removal Acts may be seen at the offices of the Board. No less than ten such official documents or threats of legal process were received by the Board with regard to the dilapidated and unsanitary condition of Gainsborough Road School, Hackney Wick. For 15 months the caretaker of Catherine Street School, Hoxton, im- plored the Board to remove a nuisance by which two of his children had been twice stricken down with gastric fever, and it was only when the parish sanitary officer gave the usual legal threat that action was taken. The same with Tottenham Road School, Kingsland; after there had been five deaths from diphtheria in the infants' department the parish sanitary officers threatened the Board. Mr. Diggle, Chairman of the Board, made a Report from the Board on the re-establishment of the Board on 1st October, 1891, and summing up he says—
    "So far as I have been able to ascertain the facts, not a single school which has been thoroughly examined has been found to be in the state in which it ought to have been; and the cost of remedying these defects and deficiencies not only swells our expenditure now, but must be a considerable burden upon the finances of the Board for many years to come.
    It will, doubtless, be thought that all this carelessness was caused by the Board School officers not being properly paid, but I find in the Report of the hon. Member for Evesham (Sir Richard Temple), Chairman of the Finance Committee, that not less than £117,855 12s. 5d. was paid to these gentlemen for ten years during which these scandalous buildings were being erected. The various members of the Board did everything they could to prevent the responsibility being brought home to offenders, and, as I before stated, positively refused to move till ten official documents were before them. In April, 1891, a motion was made that the Works Committee recommend the Board to take action against Mr. Robson, the architect, for neglect of duty. It is hardly necessary to say that was not carried. Mr. Robson was the architect for nearly all the defective schools yet examined, and yet he has been rewarded for the work which he utterly neglected by being made Consulting Architect of the Department of Education for Schools all over the country at a salary of £750 a year and fees; and I am told these fees are considerable. He also kept receiving £500 a year for two years from the London School Board, to see that the buildings which he had planned were completed, and which he never attended to. Then with respect to the contractors, many of these escaped because of the four years' limit in the contract, and many others escaped because they got the architects' certificates before even the work was finished. Such enquiry as the School Board has, however, been able to make, has obtained back about £10,000; that is a very small proportion of about a quarter of a million which has been lost by the defects that have taken place. In one case their own architect actually gave evidence against them as to the character of the work. When Mr. Euan Christian, their quantity surveyor, stated at the trial that the work was such as ought not to have been passed, he actually came forward and stated that it was all right. And the Board not only lost the case, but actually had to pay the costs; although before the trial the builders had offered to give up a certain sum, admitting they were wrong. In another case the Board obtained a verdict for £2,141 in the case of the Kilburn Lane Schools, out of a sum of £325,995 9s. 10d. paid the firm on various contracts. But before the money was recovered the firm (Wall Brothers) went into bankruptcy; and when they were examined in reference to this large sum they stated that they never kept any books, and they could not give the Court a single item as to how the money had gone. I think there must have been gross peculation there. A large sum of money must have been given away; and I think this one of the most scandalous cases that ever was brought under my notice. In that case Mr. Justice Day said—
    "It is really scarcely conceivable that a public body should have conducted its business in the exceedingly lax manner in which their business seems to have been conducted by the School Board in 1884. You had an architect who actually told you that from the time when he prepared these plans he never went to the school; and he does not limit it to that date at all, but he told you that he never went to this school at all until it was all completed—never went near the place."
    Then the jury also, in giving their verdict, added the following rider—
    "The jury desire, without absolving the defendants in this case, to express their strong condemnation of the state of things in the Architects Department, as disclosed by this inquiry."
    I think that shows that the officers of the Board have not done their duty. The Chairman of the Finance Committee, the hon. Member for Evesham, in his last Report, put it down that it will cost £40,000 a year for some years on extraordinary expenditure on these schools, in addition to £60,000 required for ordinary repairs. I do not know what steps the hon. Gentleman is going to take, but all I can say is to refer to his own election address, which he published the other day, when he applied for re-election, in which he says—
    "Much has undoubtedly been done by the present Board in these directions, but much remains to be done. When the evidence taken by the Special Committee appointed by the present Board proves that past Boards have paid for a depth of foundations for schools which do not exist to the stated depth; that they have been charged and have paid for material under the tar pavement in school playgrounds which does not exist at all; that in the matter of the bricks, the mortar, the woodwork, the lead, and other materials used in the construction of schools the requirements of the building specifications have not been observed; and that the manner in which accounts for buildings have been presented and passed by the Works Committee has been of the flimsiest and most perfunctory character, and has resulted in the existence of irregularities of the gravest kind, without the knowledge of that Committee or of the Board, it is evident that reforms were and still are imperatively required."
    Now, there is one point which I think worthy of the attention of this Committee, and that is the rate, which began at 3d. in the £ and is now 1s. I think that some limit ought to be fixed which School Boards could not exceed. When Viscount Cranbrook brought in the Free Education Bill the other day, in moving the Second Reading he said—
    "The time has come when it will be necessary to put some stop on the amount which School Boards are to expend. This is absolutely necessary, or there will be a serious reaction, and education must suffer."
    Now, I think that that is one of the points which this Committee could properly inquire into, because there is no doubt that if schools were properly conducted our rates would not be so high. This is not a matter which concerns the rich people so much as the poor. It does not matter much to the rich man whether he pays a rate of 6d. or 1s.; but when we come to think of the poor shopkeepers who are only just able to make a living it is a very different thing, and I am quite sure that all over the Metropolis they must feel, when this robbery is going on, that it is very hard lines that they should be taxed to pay not only for education, but for waste and wrong. I am told that the present School Board are in favour of this inquiry, and that they hope by exposing the past to protect the future. I am told that they would like to have an inquiry into these matters themselves, but they are unable to do so because they have no power to get at information by calling witnesses or for documents from hostile persons, who naturally have all to conceal, and also have no power to take evidence on oath, and in addition to this they have the fear of libel actions before their eyes, which, even when successfully defended, are attended with great loss of time and money. This inquiry will bring out all the facts, and it is absolutely necessary to restore public confidence. I hope I have made out my case. I have tried to bring forward every fact fairly. I have documents here to prove everything I have mentioned, and, so far as I know, I have not exaggerated a single fact. I believe if this inquiry is held that it will bring out a mass of corruption that will astonish the people of London; and I think that if the effect of this is to bring down the rates the Government will have earned the gratitude of the people of London for having exposed what has been such a crying scandal, and having reduced the rates for them in the future. The reason for rooting up the past is that when a gross scandal like this has been exposed it prevents men in the future from doing such things. I do not want to ask for anything that the Government would not be justified in giving; but I think they will feel that the responsibility rests upon them of granting an inquiry of some sort or kind which the public expect and feel ought to be granted; and I think it ought to strengthen their hands to have a request on the part of the School Board themselves that such inquiry should be held. I beg to thank the House for the very kind way in which it has listened to me. I have tried to take up as little time as possible. I have brought this matter forward as a simple public duty, and I hope the effect of what I have done will be for the good of this Metropolis. I beg to move the Resolution which stands in my name.

    7.48.)

    I have much pleasure indeed in seconding the Motion. I did not come here to make a speech, but to listen to the speech of my hon. Friend which has been a most extraordinary exposé of bribery and corruption. I rose to-day, not as a London ratepayer, but, as the hon. Member has said, in the interest of the public. It is most desirable that it should be known over the length and breadth of the land that when public men, occupying public posts, undertake duties and do not discharge them honestly and fairly, sooner or later they will have to give an account before their constituencies. I think the Government ought to give this matter, now that it has been fairly brought before the House, most careful consideration; for it is quite certain that they will be liable to very adverse criticism if, having these facts fairly brought before them, they do nothing to make adequate inquiry. What I would strongly advise is that there should be an independent authority to make inquiry as to the past transactions and these matters referred to to-day, so that the country may have some guarantee that the matters have been fairly and judiciously considered. I am not by any means one of those that desire to economise money, and so stint education. Far from it, but as a ratepayer in favour of the best education for the people of England, I am anxious to see that when we do spend money, our money should be judiciously spent, and not improperly squandered. As I have said, I did not come here to make a speech and, therefore, I shall content myself with merely seconding this Motion. Motion made, and Question proposed,

    "That an humble Address be presented to Her Majesty, praying Her Majesty to appoint a Royal Commission to investigate the action and extravagance of the London School Board and the cause of the high rates raised for its use in the Metropolis."—(Mr. Dixon-Hartland.)

    (7.50.)

    I trust the hon. Member will permit me to say that everyone will admit that the hon. Member, has brought forward his case with great moderation and great lucidity. I am not here to defend the School Board. It is some years ago since I had the honour of being a member of the Board, but I should like to make a few remarks on this subject. It would seem from the look of the Resolution that the hon. Member was going to speak, not so much about the malversation of the School Board as in reference to what is called the extravagance of the School Board. But he really said little in reference to that, and to a certain extent it is a subsidiary point, and a fact more for the ratepayers than for this House, and I will not allude further to this portion of the subject. But when he referred to the very high salaries of the teachers I think he forgot one or two points—namely, that in one respect, at all events, the London School Board compares favourably with other School Boards, that they are very much larger, that they have a poorer class of children in them, and that living in London is very much higher than anywhere else, and that the salaries are absolutely inclusive salaries, whereas in many other cases, in the provincial towns, the rent, and house, and light, are provided in addition to the salary. The hon. Member has made a very much more serious charge against the London School Board than extravagance. I think myself that in the case of the expenses incurred in respect of sites for buildings, &c., the School Board have a very good reply. But he has made other charges: that there has been great maladministration and considerable corruption with respect to the work of the Board. I, for one, should be very glad if there has been corruption of the description he speaks of, that it should be made public, and not in any way hid by the School Board or any other Body. If corruption has taken place, let it be exposed to the light of day. But, in listening to the observations of the hon. Member, if he will allow me to say so, I think he has somewhat exaggerated the case he has made out. It seems to me, in reference to certain schools, he did not take the whole work of the Board, as he ought to have taken it, in bulk. He forgets that this representative Board, representative of the ratepayers, has its work extended over 20 years; that it has had about 400 schools, nearly, under its care, and about 500,000 children under its charge. I do not think that any past member of the Board would say that everything that the Board has done has been entirely free from mistake in every respect. I do not suppose any member would say that that or any other Board was infallible. The hon. Member referred to certain cases of certain buildings and certain sites. With regard to the question of buildings, there is this, I think, to be said, that when the Board was first brought into existence some 20 years ago, it was a question for them, should they hurry and struggle as quickly as possible, in order to supply the admitted deficiency in school accommodation with as little delay as possible. I think that in some cases they made rather too much speed in respect of the schools, and that in a very large number of cases the buildings were erected too quickly, and were not, therefore, as permanent or as efficient as they ought to have been. To the system of accepting the lowest tender for the erection of buildings much of the faulty construction must be ascribed. I have always felt in reference to the question of Government contracts and others, that the system of accepting the lowest tender quite irrespective of what was contained in that tender—quite irrespective of the firm itself—is not a system on which any Public Body ought to act. I think we ought to remember that there has been a considerable amount of litigation in regard to these particular schools, and I believe that in no single case has the Board been able to justify its allegation that there had been fraud and corruption on the part of the builders. And further, I believe that in one or two cases, actions for libel have been brought by builders against members of the Board for making assertions the hon. Member has made this afternoon.

    There have been actions for libel brought with respect to certain charges; but with respect to the charges which I have brought forward this afternoon, so far as I know, no actions for libel have been brought.

    Well, I do not know, but with regard to some assertions, I believe that is correct. Not that I say that there has been no fraud on the part of the builders. I am sorry to say in my opinion there has been considerable fraud on the part of some of the builders. But I think that these loose assertions made in this House and in the School Board by certain Members are not altogether warranted by the facts of the case. I believe myself that while there is a considerable amount of truth in them, there is a considerable amount of exaggeration in them. I think the House should remember this, when they see the great cost the School Board has been put to in purchasing these sites that these sites have been bought by this Public Body after arbitration; and every one knows the tendency of juries to give as high a price as possible to the seller if a Public Body is one of the parties to the case. The result was that a very great number of most expensive sites had to be purchased. I think it ought not to go to the discredit of the School Board, because they were obliged to go Were the children were, quite irrespec- tive of the price. I think, it should also be remembered, as the hon. Member's own speech shows, that no matter what may have been the case in the past, at all events the present School Board is perfectly alive to its responsibilities. It is perfectly clear that the existing School Board ought to get at the bottom of all these frauds and this corruption if they existed. I think the mere fact that they have made an inquiry themselves show that they are in earnest in the matter. The hon. Member said just now that the present Board are in favour of a public inquiry. I may at once say that if the School Board by a considerable majority desire to have a public inquiry I should support that public inquiry. I cannot help feeling that nothing would be more fatal to the administration of our Public Bodies than inquiry by a Select Committee or a Royal Commission. It necessarily weakens their responsibility if they know that when they go wrong there will be such an inquiry. The hon. Gentleman said that millions had been spent on fraud and corruption. Does the hon. Member think that if he got this Commission those millions would reappear? The only thing this inquiry could do would be to give a warning to the School Board, which, it seems to me, the School Board does not require. The publicity given to this matter—and we are under an obligation to the hon. Gentleman for bringing his Motion forward—will be adequate for the purpose he has in view. I am with the hon. Member in saying that if there has been fraud and corruption it should be brought to light; but the School Board are making what I believe will be an effective inquiry, and I think we had better leave it there. Notice taken, that 40 Members were not present; House counted, and 40 Members not being present,

    House adjourned at ten minutes after Eight o'clock.

    Private Business

    Southampton Docks Bill (By Order)

    Second Reading

    Order for Second Reading read.

    (3.6.)

    In moving the Second Reading of this Bill I will be as brief as is consistent with the interests of those I represent on this occasion. It is a Bill that seriously affects the interest of the town of Southampton, indeed I may say the County of Southampton, and especially it interests the railway and dock undertakings of the port. The proposal in the Bill is the sale of the property of the Dock Company to the South Western Railway Company, and I understand the opposition which emanates from the representatives of dock interests in the North of England rests on a question of principle, but of course it is easy to argue how a general principle does or does not apply to a particular case. The hon. Members who have given notice antagonistic to this Bill represent two Northern boroughs, and I cannot for the life of me see what they have to do with the arrangements of the Southampton Docks. The great dock interests of London have exhi- bited no opposition; recognising this as a means by which the Southampton Dock Company can get out of its financial difficulties. It is not the Railway Company which is the principal promoter of this Bill. It is not in any sense from a desire to create a railway monopoly the Bill is promoted, it is the only feasible means for the Dock Company to relieve itself from serious and increasing depreciation. The Railway Company are holders of £50,000 4 per cent. mortgage debentures and £250,000 4 per cent. preference stock of the Dock Company, and at the same time they have advanced £30,000 by way of temporary loan, making a total of £330,000. They hold about a quarter of the whole property of the Company, and have therefore a large amount of power in the Company's affairs. A subscription of £250,000 was authorised for assistance in the construction of a new deep water dock. We have endeavoured, as far as possible, to keep pace with the demands of the times and the requirements of the port. We are on good terms with the Dock Companies on the Thames, and I cannot see why the North Country dockowners should oppose a Bill of such a reasonable character. The Railway Company has already a very large interest in the dock. The net revenue of the dock has declined during the last four years, and the opening of the new dock has not brought the increased traffic which was anticipated. The Company only paid 2 per cent. in 1891 on the 4 per cent. preference stock, and the revenue is still declining; and I may point out that a large portion of the stock is held by trustees for widows and children, and much is in the hands of working men. No dividend on the ordinary stock has been paid since 1890, when ½per cent. was distributed among the shareholders. This movement was initiated by the shareholders, and not by the Railway Company. I may also mention the severe loss the docks suffered in 1873 by the withdrawal of the Peninsular and Oriental Company. We have attempted to make good this loss, but we have taken nothing, certainly, from the Northern Docks. We employ a large amount of labour, as the hon. Gentleman opposite, the Member for Southampton, can tell you, and if the docks are closed, as, possibly, they might be if the money is not forthcoming, this important town and port of Southampton may be ruined, and the labourers there will be in a state of penury and destitution. I believe nearly every Railway Company in the Kingdom having coast communication has docks of its own; the Great Western and the North Western have docks, and the North Eastern has, or is endeavouring to secure, docks of its own. The London and Brighton Company has the port of Newhaven, and the South Eastern has docks of its own. Therefore, it seems to me very much like a dog-in-the-manger policy for these North Country docks to interfere in regard to what we are doing for the port and town of Southampton. I hope the Government will assist us in the endeavour to obtain a Second Reading of this Bill. It is a question of local interests and local self-government, and I hope those hon. Gentlemen who justify the principle of local self-government will support the Second Reading. There is no other principle involved here. In the circular sent round by our opponents—lukewarm opponents I hope I may call them—a lame pretext is put forward, and no strong argument against the Bill. They say that in 1872 there was a Joint Committee of the two Houses of Parliament, which gave utterance to the assertion of a certain principle, or the expression of a sentiment, in regard to the amalgamation of Docks and Railway Companies. But, as hon. Gentlemen will understand, we have advanced and progressed since 1872, and principles that then held good are different from those which obtain to-day. To treat this as a matter of general public principle seems to me a most unnecessary interference with local interests. It is little to the interest of the Railway Company, though, of course, they would not undertake the purchase unless they found that the two undertakings could be worked better and more cheaply, with advantage to the interests of all parties concerned. Without going into the history of the docks, I may say they have made the most laborious endeavours to keep the docks up to the requirements of the time. We are ready to receive the largest ships, and if the great Union Steamship Company, the Royal Mail Company, and others do not come to us, they certainly will not go to any of the ports represented in any way by the hon. Members for Whitehaven and South Shields. So I think their interference in our proposal is wholly uncalled for. At any rate, we are in an almost destitute condition. I might almost say we are pleading before the House in formâ pauperis for the good of the property, for the good of the working classes of Southampton. I hope we shall have the support of the hon. Member for Poplar (Mr. Buxton), whom I see opposite, and others who interest themselves in labour questions. I think we ought to have the sympathy of those hon. Members who have in recollection the labour strikes at Southampton, and the position of working men there. We object to a Hybrid Committee, because reference to such a Committee must lead to a postponement of the carrying out of the proposal, and will entail much additional expense, which we are not able to bear. I do hope that the Government will justify their own principle of local self-government, and assist us in passing the Second Reading.

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

    (3.15.)

    I rise to support the Motion for Second Reading. The Bill is introduced by the Southampton Docks Company, because that company finds itself in the position of having a very large accommodation for shipping and not the means and appliances sufficient to attract the larger shipping, and make the undertaking pay. The borrowing powers of the company are nearly exhausted, and the means of raising money gone. Capital is required to complete the finest docks in the Channel. The hon. Gentleman who has just spoken has pointed out that a large amount of labour has been expended to keep the docks open. I cannot go so far as he has gone in the apprehension of the danger of the docks being closed, and I think even if the Bill were thrown out still we should find the Southampton Docks would be maintained; and I do not join in pleading in, formâ pauperis. The opposition to the Second Reading, so far as I can make out, is based on the general principle that Railway Companies should not be allowed to acquire docks. My own experience is that general principles exist in theory, and may be sustained so long as there is nothing to apply them to, but as soon as they are applied to individual instances, then general principles are likely to get more and more attenuated. If, in the present instance, the Dock Companies were opposed to the amalgamation, then there would be good reason for the House to hesitate before granting a Second Reading to the Bill, but that is not the case here. The Southampton Corporation have passed a resolution in favour of the Bill. The railway shareholders have passed a resolution in favour of the purchase, and the dock shareholders, by a very large majority, have agreed to the sale, and I do not see that opposition should come in on the ground of general principles to the carrying out of a measure which all parties are eager to have passed. I do not see on what principle the House should refuse a Second Reading to the Bill. It is not because the London and North Western do not happen to possess the Liverpool Docks. Surely hon. Members will not apply an analogy of that kind. It is not that the London and South Western Railway Company want to obtain possession to the exclusion of all other railway interests, for there are provisions to secure the public weal, so that the London and South Western Company will not obtain power of that kind. I agree with my hon. Friend that a Hybrid Committee will be an expensive solution of the difficulty. I prefer inquiry by an ordinary Select Committee, and I do hope that the House will, in the interest of the town of Southampton, which I represent, and in the interest of the Dock Company, which I also represent in this case, grant a Second Reading to the Bill to the advantage of all parties concerned.

    (3.20.)

    I rise thus early in the Debate to ask the House to consider the real point involved in this discussion, because the hon. Members who have spoken have shown considerable ingenuity in avoiding altogether what is the matter in dispute. We have had an interesting view of the force of general principles from the hon. Member who has just sat down, who seems to think they are only useful on platforms in view of elections, but are to be put aside when concrete cases present themselves for the application of those principles. There is no real objection to the Second Reading of the Bill, but there is involved a principle long recognised as beyond the immediate interest of a locality. We have a Standing Order of the House that in the case of any Bill which contemplates the acquisition of a dock by a Railway Company, that Bill shall not be referred to a Select Committee unless there is a special Report made thereon showing reasons for a departure from the general rule. That has been a Standing Order of the House for a long while. But a Joint Committee of the two Houses came to the conclusion that the Standing Order was not sufficiently strong, and that proposals of the kind, the acquisition of a dock by a Railway Company, and possibly the creation of a powerful monopoly, should be referred to a Hybrid Committee. Now, the question before the House is not really the acceptance or rejection of a Motion for Second Reading, but whether the Bill should be referred to an ordinary Select Committee of four Members, or whether it should go before a Hybrid Committee. Now, questions of general public interest cannot be sufficiently examined by an ordinary Select Committee, for no one appears before it to represent the wider interest beyond that of the locality, but before a Hybrid Committee there will be evidence and arguments on points affecting the general public interest, as well as the local interests. The hon. Member for Lime-house (Mr. Norris) has an apprehension that much more expense is involved in the examination by a Hybrid Committee, but I think he will find that examination before a Hybrid Committee is not much more, if at all more, expensive than examination by a Select Committee of four Members. This would be an expensive business, looking to the character of the opposition raised, if all the Dock Companies who are endeavouring to maintain their independence in competition were represented, but I am assured that the opposition will be brought to a single representation, and there is no intention to go through the reduplication of evidence. I do not think, therefore, there will be much additional expense, and I should recommend that the Bill be read a second time, and referred to a Hybrid Committee. Motion agreed to. Bill read a second time.

    Motion made, and Question proposed,

    "That the Bill be committed to a Select Committee to consist of Seven Members, Four to be nominated by the House, and Three by the Committee of Selection."

    (3.25.)

    Of course, in face of the representations made by the right hon. Gentleman the Chairman of Committees, and understanding from him that this course will not lead to delay or great additional expense, I will, with the concurrence of the House, fall in with his view.

    Question put, and agreed to.

    Resolved, That all Petitions against the Bill presented three clear days before the meeting of the Committee be referred to the Committee; and that such of the Petitioners as pray to be heard by their Counsel, Agents, or Witnesses, be heard on their Petitions if they think fit, and Counsel heard in favour of the Bill against such Petitioners.
    That the Committee have power to send for persons, papers and records.
    That Three be the quorum.

    Belfast Corporation (Lunatic Asylums, &C) Bill—(By Order)

    Adjourned Debate

    Order read, for resuming Adjourned Debate on Question [29th February]—

    "That it be an Instruction to the Committee to insert in the Bill clauses re-arranging the existing division of the City of Belfast into wards, so as to make it possible for all classes of its inhabitants to obtain representation in the Town Council."—(Mr. Sexton.)

    Question again proposed.

    Debate resumed.

    (3.28.)

    Again I have to regret the absence of the Minister of the Crown responsible for Irish affairs on the discussion of this Irish question. I appeal to the House to adopt this very simple mode, strictly relevant to the Bill, of redressing a monstrous and undeniable grievance, the nature of which I can state in a very few words. The City of Belfast has, according to the last Census, a population of 273,055, governed by a Corporation consisting of 40 members. In that population is included 70,000 Catholics, who have no representation on the Corporation. It is obvious that, in a city with a population of 273,000 and 40 members of the Corporation, each member of the Corporation represents an average of 6,000 or 7,000, and yet this population of 70,000 Catholics—nearly a fourth of the whole population—is without a single representative among the 40 who control municipal affairs. This Catholic population live for the most part in one quarter of the city, and have a special interest in the paving, lighting, sanitation, and other details of municipal service. It is therefore necessary that they should be represented on the Local Council by men in sympathy with their views and on whom they can rely. Is it not discreditable to this House that a state of affairs should be allowed to continue in Belfast the like of which does not exist in any other city in the United Kingdom? What is the cause of the grievance? Simply this: that the wards of the city were fixed 40 years ago, and they have never been redistributed since. In 1853, when the population of Belfast was 115,000, the town was divided into five wards. Since then Belfast has become a city with 273,000 inhabitants; and yet, though the population has more than doubled, the division into five wards remains, with two Aldermen and six Councillors to each—a state of things to which no parallel can be found elsewhere. Now I am asking for nothing new. A Royal Commission was appointed by a Conservative Government in 1879 to consider this question. The Commission took evidence on the spot, examined all the details exhaustively, and reported in 1881, eleven years ago. In this Report, the Commissioners recommended that the wards should be redistributed, and that instead of five there should be eight. The Corporation of Belfast, the promoters of this Bill, agreed that the wards should be re-adjusted, and that they should be eight in number, and it deserves to be noticed by the House that two other Municipal bodies, the Belfast Water Board and the Board of Guardians, submitted schemes in which they recommended that the five wards should be subdivided into 15. No one in Belfast then thought five wards sufficient, and yet here we are, in 1892, with the population of the city more than doubled since 1853, and still the division into five wards exists, with the anomalous and discreditable state of things that 70,000 inhabitants are left without a voice in the management of civic affairs. I have two reasons relevant to this Bill why the instruction I propose to give to the Committee should be granted. If I were asking anything irrelevant to the Bill, I should expect to meet with opposition, but I ask nothing beyond the scope of the Bill. The Corporation are asking for new powers of expenditure and control in regard to payments for children in industrial schools. I beg the House to observe that payments by Corporations in Ireland in this respect are optional. If payment were compulsory, I should have not a word to say—our endeavours would be directed to see that the Corporation did not evade the law; but a Corporation has a free choice in such matters as to when they shall pay anything and when they shall not pay anything. It should be further observed that the system of industrial schools in Ireland is denominational, every school being under Catholic or Protestant management, Catholic children being sent to the one class, Protestant to the other. Does any man expect me to admit that on a Corporation consisting of 40 members, on which the large minority of the Catholic population have no representation, due regard is had to the interest of Catholic children in those schools? I do not agree to anything of the kind, and I tell the promoters of this Bill that unless they will agree that representatives of the minority shall be allowed some voice in the allocation of funds to the maintenance of Catholic children, this Bill will be met at every stage with the most stubborn opposition. In the towns of Dublin, Cork, and Limerick there is a Protestant minority not so large as is the Catholic minority in Belfast—not a fraction of it, and yet in Dublin, Cork, and Limerick the Protestant minority have on the Councils a proportion of representation far greater than their share of the population. I know from my own knowledge that in Dublin this is so, and in Cork and Limerick there is a decent liberality shown towards the minorities, while in Belfast a shameful intolerance excludes and outlaws a fourth of the population. We are not prepared to grant the powers sought in the Bill, unless this instruction is granted and acted upon. The Corporation also ask for a new franchise, and to this point I would beg the special attention of the Chairman of Committees. By Clause 4 of the Bill they ask power substantially to appoint a large majority of the Governors of the Lunatic Asylum. I do not care whether they have a virtual majority or not. Under the present system the proposition is this: that a purely Protestant body asks power to nominate the majority of the Governors of an asylum in which the ratepayers of all creeds are equally interested and concerned; and I who represent the Catholics in Belfast, we who represent the Catholics in Ireland, demand that the large proportion of our contributions towards the maintenance of these institutions should find some representation among the 40 Protestant gentlemen who are to direct the mode in which the asylums shall be conducted. This is a new Franchise Clause, and therefore my Instruction is strictly relevant to the question that the Committee should, in the way I think I have shown, take immediate steps to secure representation for the Catholics of the city on the Governing Body, should do what the Royal Commission recommended eleven years ago should be done, should sub-divide the wards into eight, ten, or fifteen, not allowing a state of things to con- tinue which gives to each ward a population equal to an ordinary Parliamentary Division. I do not think any gentleman will get up and say that in any other city in the Kingdom in the present state of municipal representation such a state of things exists. What is the policy of the Government displayed in their Local Government Bill? They propose to establish the cumulative vote over the counties in Ireland. And for what purpose? For this and no other purpose to give the Protestant and Conservative minority in the country a voice, a share in the government, of their county or local and fiscal affairs. This I ask you to give in the City of Belfast.

    I know that in three or four counties the Catholics are in the minority, but is this done for these minorities? Have the minorities in the four Eastern counties asked for it? They have not. Let no one tell me that the benevolence of the Government towards the Catholics of Ireland is of that voluntary character that they rush to the rescue of the Catholics in those four counties where they happen to be in a minority. No; the proposal is in the interest of the Protestant minorities in the 28 other counties. Therefore, the Government propose to establish cumulative voting to give the minority the chance of representation on the County Councils. Further, you propose to give to the Lord Lieutenant power to cut up each county into electoral divisions, so that by the system of cumulative voting the Protestant minorities may be enabled to secure representation. Do the same thing in the City of Belfast. Cut up the city into suitable and equitable divisions such as obtain in every other municipal town in the Kingdom, so that 70,000 of the inhabitants out of 270,000 may elect at least one representative to the Governing Body. Is that an excessive, an unreasonable demand? Can the Government resist it when their own suggestion for local government is cumulative voting and the power of the Lord Lieutenant to mark out electoral divisions, so that an insignificant and infinitesimal mino- rity may find representation in counties? I shall not trouble the House further, only adding that if the mandatory terms of my instruction are open to objection, and this has been suggested to me, I am willing to conciliate opposition—though there is no conciliating opposition of a certain character in Belfast—I am willing to alter the terms of my Motion declaring that the Committee "have power," so that a certain amount of discretion will be left to the Committee. Five years ago, when I urged an extension of the Municipal Franchise, I was bitterly opposed by the Corporation of Belfast in two Sessions. I was able to bring some leverage to bear then; the Corporation wanted a Private Bill, which the House refused to grant unless the Franchise Reform was granted, and it was granted. After fighting hard in this House for two years against this reform, the Corporation have ever since in Belfast pretended that they initiated the reform, and that I opposed it. I do not doubt, if the House passes this instruction, a similar result will follow, and the Corporation will claim credit for a reform as soon as it is granted, and which now they oppose. I earnestly appeal to every Member of the House to give his vote as the justice of the case requires.

    *(3.40.)

    I quite hoped on Friday, when at the suggestion of the Chief Secretary the consideration of this Bill was referred to a Hybrid Committee, all points raised might, by the Committee, be fully gone into. I regret that the hon. Member for West Belfast should have introduced the question of religion into this discussion. There is nothing in the Bill touching religious differences, and the introduction of religion into political matters creates a large amount of ill-feeling. Within the four corners of the Bill there is no reference to the re-division of the city into wards, but I may say that so far as the Corporation of Belfast is concerned there is not the slightest objection to the re-arrangement of the wards in number and area, but we maintain that the Bill does not deal with that matter, and if it is a thing to be done then it should be done by another Bill, or by means of the Bill dealing with the general question of Local Government, in which Clause 30 provides the procedure for dealing with such a question. It is not desirable to trammel this Bill with any such considerations, and a Committee upstairs has not the machinery for redistributing the city wards. For such a purpose a Commission should sit and take evidence on the spot, and consider the whole thing thoroughly, and probably, seeing that Belfast has increased so largely, it might also be necessary to enlarge the boundaries of the city. (Mr. SEXTON: No.) Certainly it would have to be considered. These are serious matters, not serious in the sense that there would be opposition, but requiring very careful consideration, particularly in view of the wishes of the hon. Member that the arrangement should be such as to give his immediate religious friends the opportunity of taking seats on the Council. As to the distribution of seats, what difference can it possibly make to Belfast? Has anyone ever drawn attention to mismanagement of municipal affairs there? I will undertake to say there is not a city in the three Kingdoms where municipal affairs are better managed than they are in Belfast, and no city shows a more healthy and prosperous condition of affairs. Why does the hon. Member seek to introduce into this matter the religious question? Refer to the origin and history of Belfast, and we find that Belfast is not an Irish town—really not an Irish town in the view of Irish towns held by hon. Gentlemen below the Gangway opposite. Trace its origin from the time when it ceased to be a country town, the centre for such industries as are connected with an agricultural district, and you find that the manufactures of various descriptions which were taken up were not established by manufacturers and workmen in Ireland, for they did not exist. The prosperity of Belfast took its rise from the energy and labour of Scotchmen and Englishmen. Three out of every four of the inhabitants of Belfast are of Scotch or English origin, and they are mostly Protestants. It is the jealousy of the Catholic element which seeks to over-ride the Protestant feeling of the city, and just as Belfast has prospered under Protestant Government, so would it cease to prosper if Catholic methods of Government had predominance. No injustice is inflicted on the Catholic inhabitants; they pursue their industry under precisely the same conditions, so far as Local Government is concerned, as their Protestant neighbours; they have every consideration shown to them, and their children in industrial schools have exactly the same treatment as Protestant children in those schools. The hon. Member is raising an entirely false issue upon this Bill. We do not object to a revision of the city boundaries and wards, but we do submit that this is not the Bill by which this revision should be carried out. Let it be done either by means of the Local Government Bill or through a Special Commission, and do not hamper the Committee upstairs with matters it is scarcely possible they can deal with.

    (3.47.)

    I hope the House has taken note of the objections offered to the Motion of the hon. Member for West Belfast, culminating in the statement that Belfast is not an Irish town. It is not, I think, the view that will generally be taken. Are we to have an imperium in imperio in Belfast? Is Belfast, with its 70,000 Catholic inhabitants, to be outside the principle that is embodied in the government of any other city in the Kingdom? I venture to say the House will never sanction such a theory as that put forward by the hon. Baronet. Have we not in our hands the Government Local Government Bill, in which the principles of Local Government are recognised, however the Bill falls short of our desires? And yet the Corporation of Belfast would take this city out of the provisions of that Bill. The hon. Baronet makes the astounding statement that Belfast is not an Irish town, and never have I heard a statement from a responsible Member of this House more calculated to sow widely abroad the seeds of discord and animosity. Unless some of the hon. Member's friends withdraw this opposition to the Instruction I hope we shall go to a Division, and that the result will show the appreciation of the House of this attempt to force exceptional legislation for Belfast.

    (3.50.)

    I support the opposition to the Instruction in the strongest possible manner. The introduction of the religious element into this discussion is due not to the promoters of the Bill, but to the hon. Member for West Belfast himself. The House must have taken note how from time to time, when measures for the promotion of the interests of Belfast have been brought forward, they have been met by persistent and consistent opposition from hon. Gentlemen opposite.

    *

    This arises from jealousy of the progress and prosperity of Belfast, and because Belfast is preeminently and distinctly Protestant. The prosperity of Belfast is largely due to its Protestantism, and though hon. Members may laugh at the statement, it is borne out by such historians as Macaulay, who traces the prosperity of Ulster to Protestantism. In contradistinction to the rest of Ireland, Belfast has increased in prosperity and population, and it is the habit of the hon. Member for West Belfast to claim credit for action on behalf of Belfast in recent years. I do not know that he lays claim to any credit for the increase in population, but he does claim to have assisted towards the prosperity of the city. Belfast, I trust, will continue in a prosperous career. Belfast is distinctly and earnestly a portion of the United Kingdom, strongly opposed to the revolutionary projects of hon. Gentlemen opposite, and determined to remain an integral part of the United Kingdom. The Corporation of Belfast will always encourage liberty and fair play to the Roman Catholics in that city. The hon. Member has told us that there are three or four counties in Ulster where Roman Catholics are in the minority, but he indignantly disclaimed the idea that they claimed to be represented on the Local Government; he made no claim on their behalf.

    Nothing of the kind. The hon. Member is, as usual, inexact. I said they had not asked the Govern- ment, and the cumulative vote had not been introduced in their interest, but in the interest of the minorities in the 28 other counties.

    *

    The hon. Member comes forward as the champion of the minority in Belfast, but he repudiates the action of the Government with regard to minorities in other parts of Ireland. I trust the House will decisively reject the proposal now before us, and that we shall have the support of all Members who desire to see the integrity of the United Kingdom maintained. It is the fashion of hon. Gentlemen opposite to laugh at Protestantism—

    *

    The hon. Member for Donegal is himself the son of a Protestant clergyman.

    *

    I trust that the position taken by hon. Members opposite will be carefully regarded by the Protestants of Ulster. I hope the House will decisively reject the proposition before us.

    (3.57.)

    On Friday the principle of this Bill was affirmed by only a small majority, and now the hon. Baronet (Sir E. Harland) has given away the principle on which opposition was raised to the present proposal, for he says the Belfast Corporation have no objection to the revision of the wards. But still opposition is made, not on the merits of the proposal, but founded on arguments of religion and race. The hon. Baronet, not being an Irishman himself, declares that Belfast is not an Irish town. But he lives in Ireland and he is "making his pile" in Ireland through Irish trade and energy. The hon. Member for South Belfast ascribes the prosperity of Belfast to its Protestantism. I am not one of those he accuses of laughing at Protestantism, and, for myself, I am a Protestant first and a politician afterwards. I claim to be as sound a Protestant as any Representative of Belfast, but I hate injustice, and I say it is a scandal to the Protestantism of Belfast that the Catholic citizens should be unjustly treated. The prosperity of Belfast has been largely due to exceptional circumstances. It has been partly due to the bounty on the linen industry; it has been partly due to the long prevalence of the Ulster custom in the land tenure of the province, and there are other exceptional circumstances in addition to the undoubted energy of the Protestant population. There is no one prouder of the success and prosperity of Belfast than I am; but I am sorry to say, Mr. Speaker, that the majority of the Belfast people are ungenerous, illiberal, and prejudiced in the highest extreme. Belfast sends to this House Representatives as narrow as itself, and they tell you —"This is the great Belfast we are building." In their narrow self-importance the Protestants of Belfast refuse the least justice to their Catholic fellow-townsmen, though, I ask, what have they to fear? Why, Sir, they have everything to gain by giving this justice. If you in Belfast persist in acting in this illiberal manner you will create a force outside Belfast antagonistic to you. Where is the danger to the Belfast Protestants or their property in showing fair justice to the 70,000 Catholics in the city? Have the Catholics no interests, no property, no liberties to protect? Some of them are extremely wealthy, and are well known to the merchants of London and Liverpool, and yet not one of these men, who have helped to build up the prestige of Belfast, is admitted to the Municipal Council because he is a Catholic. Protestantism ought to be ashamed of itself in this matter. Could any fair representation of these 70,000 Catholics on the Council override the representation of the 200,000 Protestants, or injure their interests in any way? If I thought that Protestant interests, or property, or capital would be jeopardised by asking you to allow Catholic interests to be represented on the Council I would not support the proposition. But I have no fear on the matter. If it be right that the privileges of Catholics should be extended we should throw aside our race prejudices, our religious and political prejudices—be just and fear not, and allow this Instruction to be carried.

    *(4.10.)

    I am very sorry that the Catholics are not represented on the Council, and I should be glad if they were. But why should Belfast be singled out for special treatment of this sort? If Manchester or Liverpool came before this House to ask for power to deal with their lunatic asylums, would anybody think of tacking on to their Bill a Parliamentary Instruction that they should enlarge their boundaries or change their wards? Belfast is singled out for this hostility because of the jealousy of hon. Members below the Gangway. It is a standing monument to the benefit of the Union, and, therefore, you propose to subject it to special treatment which no great city in England would submit to. Surely the Catholic inhabitants of Belfast vote now; they have equal voting power with the Protestants. I put this point strongly before the House: that Belfast ought not to be singled out for special treatment in this matter, but that the Bill should go before the Select Committee in the usual way.

    (4.15.)

    The hon. Member for Londonderry referred to Liverpool, and says that there is no reason to suppose that if Liverpool came for a similar measure you would treat it in the same way. The case of Liverpool is remarkably interesting. It is a larger town than Belfast, but the proportion of Catholics and Protestants is about the same, the former being about one-fourth of the inhabitants. Now, Sir, suppose that the ward arrangements were so jerrymandered that the Catholics never had a single representative on the City Council. I am persuaded that the House would not permit any more duties to be thrown upon the Council till some reform was made. This country, Protestant as it is, would be ashamed to have a city like Liverpool so arranged as to carefully exclude from the City Council any representative of so large a proportion of the inhabitants Anything which is wrong in England is wrong in Ireland, and ought to be remedied, and I think this is a very good time to deal with the matter, inasmuch as additional duties are to be thrown on the Council in which the Catholics have a large interest. I would appeal to the sense of fairness of hon. Gentlemen opposite, and ask them to contrast the position of Belfast in the North of Ireland and Liverpool in Lancashire, and so let the two towns be on something of an equality. I earnestly hope that the Instruction will be carried.

    (4.18.)

    Hon. Members do not oppose this Instruction on the question of principle, or the merits of the case, and it is evident that if the Instruction were carried, one or two sittings of the Committee would deal with it. Hon. Gentlemen opposite blamed the hon. Member for West Belfast (Mr. Sexton) for referring to religious differences, but he is here to represent Belfast, and to look after the interests of the population of that city. We have a Catholic population of 70,000 not represented on the Council, and the Corporation is seeking an extension of powers on two questions in which the Catholics are deeply interested. There is the question of the industrial schools, in connection with which the question of religion may arise from time to time, and if the Council be an exclusively Protestant body the Catholics cannot expect fair-play and justice in the matter. It also applies in a more limited sense to the asylums. We contend that there is a public principle in this Bill, and that the promoters must be content to accept this Instruction, or to have the question treated on its merits publicly. On the Belfast Main Drainage Bill the hon. Member for West Belfast (Mr. Sexton) raised the question of the municipal franchise, which was subsequently dealt with in a public manner, and the Public Bodies which were then opposed to his action have since thanked him for the course he took. In the City of Cork, with a municipal population of 80,000, there are seven wards; on the same basis Belfast ought to have 21 wards. If the Instruction be agreed to the Committee would be able to carry it into effect in one or two sittings, as there are already two or three schemes on the subject. The Royal Commission itself recommended the increase of the wards to 15. It is useless for hon. Members to say they are prepared to concede fair-play to the 70,000 Catholics of Belfast if they oppose a reasonable proposition of this kind. I hope hon. Members will allow the Instruction to pass, and no longer give an exhibition of illiberality and bigotry.

    (4.23.)

    The hon. Member for West Belfast (Mr. Sexton) calls attention to the fact that a quarter of the population of that city is Roman Catholic, and that there is not a single Catholic member among the 40 sitting on the Council. I think, Sir, if that be so, it is a very grave circumstance; it is a fact to be condemned; a fact to be remedied, as it shows that in the administration of affairs in Belfast a considerable minority has no share. I do not think it follows that this evil would be best remedied by passing the Instruction proposed by the hon. Member. It appears to me that there are objections on two grounds. In the first place, it would throw on the Committee which had to deal with the Instruction a difficult task, which I do not know that the Committee would be able to discharge, and I doubt very much whether, if they could carry out the Instruction, it would quite answer the aim which the hon. Member has in view. To give this Instruction to the Committee is to impose upon it the difficult task of redistributing the city area into wards, and certainly such a proposition would never be considered, in spite of what has been said by the hon. Member for Leicester (Mr. Picton), in reference to any English city. We have at the present time the Birmingham Water Bill before the House, and I wonder what would be thought of the proposition to re-consider, say, the Parliamentary representation of the city in connection with that Bill. The hon. Member says there are two important powers entrusted to Belfast by the Bill; so there is a new power given by the Birmingham Bill. The hon. Member for Cork (Mr. Flynn) says that it would be easy for the Committee to carry out the Instruction, because there are three plans to select from. I think if there were only one plan perhaps it might be easy, but with three opposing plans the difficulty of the matter is increased.

    Yes. The Commission suggested a plan, but it seems to have been so unfavourably received that the two Local Bodies proposed two other separate plans. All these plans are eleven years old, and the population of Belfast has grown considerably since then. I do not think it can be seriously suggested that this would be a convenient way to settle the question; if it is to be done at all it should be done by a special Bill. The hon. Member for West Belfast (Mr. Sexton) has raised the question of the municipal franchise again and again on other Belfast Private Bills, and I also felt it to be my duty to oppose the principle then. There may be some ground for doing something, but I do not know whether if the city were divided into an additional number of wards the Catholics would get more representation on the Council. We have already had some experience, and it tends to negative the hope that there would be Catholic representation on the Corporation. I will point out to the hon. Member a simple way of securing his object. He can propose a simple clause, when the Bill comes down for report on Third Reading, requiring that in future municipal elections in Belfast the principle of cumulative voting shall be applied. He might then get full representation for the Catholics in a much simpler manner than would be the case under his present proposal.

    (4.27.)

    I venture to think that in one argument he used the right hon. Gentleman was under a misapprehension as to the facts. He says if an English Bill were introduced, with the same object, the House would not listen to a proposal for a re-arrangement of the wards of an English city as part of the Bill. I agree with him, but why? Because there is a special general provision in the Municipal Corporations Act for the re-distribution of the wards of English cities, under which a Commissioner is sent down by the Home Secretary; he inquires into the circumstances, and divides the city into new wards. In Ireland there is no such provision, and the only way we can get a re-distribution is to come to this House and insert a provision in a Private Bill. This, therefore, is not an unusual way; as s matter of fact, it is the only way in which we can attempt to do it. The right hon. Gentleman the Chairman of Ways and Means seems to think that if minorities are not to be represented on Hare's, system, they ought not to be represented at all. What the Irish Members want is that it should be done in the same simple and efficacious way such as is adopted in English towns. It would be quite easy to divide Belfast into wards, and there would be no necessity for going into lengthy details in a Bill; it could be done by some impartial persons, such as the Ordnance Survey Commissioners named in the Bill. Let it be borne in mind that in this Bill it is proposed for the first time to give powers intimately connected with religion in Belfast to the Belfast Municipality. I think if you give these new powers you should at the same time provide for the representation of the religious minority.

    (4.35.)

    I know that Armagh and other towns in the North of Ireland are most anxious that their boundaries should be extended. What all the Irish Members are asking for is that this House should deal with Belfast as it deals with Birmingham and Liverpool and other English towns. The Presbyterian Body of Belfast are as much interested in this matter as the Catholics are, for they are almost in the same need of representation, so that this is a question which interests them quite as much as it interests the Roman Catholics. There are many of the divisions in Belfast where a Presbyterian has no chance of being returned to the Municipal Corporation, and the Presbyterian Body are, therefore, most intimately concerned in the question. This question of the representation of minorities is one which requires the serious attention of the House, and particularly as it affects the North of Ireland. I can speak for the City of Armagh, and I say that it is much required. In Belfast not only the Roman Catholic, but the Presbyterian is deprived of representation— wholly and completely deprived of it, I might say; and we ask the House to remedy this disgraceful condition of affairs. I think the House should listen to the appeal that is being made to it, and that, at least, it should direct that there be some result for all the trouble and all the expense that has been gone to in giving evidence before the Municipal Boundary Commissioners.

    (4.40.)

    I am compelled to say that this matter should not, in my opinion, be managed simply in accordance with the ideas that are so constantly promulgated in Orange Lodges; nor should it be managed in accordance with the ideas of a Tory Municipality. It is only right that the Government should express their intentions with regard to this matter, which I regard as one of great importance. We in the North of Ireland regard the question as one of vast importance, and we ask the House to interfere in relation to it. Why should not such a division of Belfast into wards be effected as would give the Catholic population at least a fair representation on the Municipal Corporation? Belfast occupies at present quite an exceptional position. The Tories there have, in fact, reduced intolerant practices to an exact science; they have crushed out the Presbyterian Body; they have crushed out the Catholic Body; they have managed to keep the representation to themselves, and not in Great Britain can you find a place in which there is such distinct exclusiveness exercised; no man who is not prepared to bow the knee to the Grand Lama of Toryism has, in fact, a chance of filling any office in Belfast. I hold that the opposition to the measure is fully justified, and that we are fully justified in fighting the matter, having regard to the importance of the question and the number of people who are interested in its solution.

    (4.45.)

    I think the constituencies will have to consider whether it is for the advantage of the House that they should find themselves discussing Irish matters of purely local interest night after night. I think the proceedings to-night form an illustration of the method by which this House deals with Irish affairs, but under the existing circumstances, the discussion could not be avoided. Still, it will be for the country to consider whether the system ought not to be changed. But the most appropriate course for dealing with a matter of this kind is not by Private Bill or by Resolution. Everybody, I suppose, admits that the present distribution of the wards in Belfast has caused great political and religious injustice in that city. Under the English Municipal Corporations Act there is a machinery for the re-distribution of wards where altered circumstances demand such a change; but in Ireland there is no such power under present conditions. You say that you are willing to extend equal justice to Ireland as to England. Why do you not do it? I say that if this power which exists in England be not extended to Ireland, the Government will be guilty of injustice to Ireland in spite of their protestations. I ask the Government, will they undertake to bring in a Bill for the purpose of dealing with this question; or will they undertake in some way to do what is necessary, so as to give Belfast the same rights and the same measure of justice as has been given to English cities under the Municipal Corporations Act? I do hope that the Government will take this matter in hand, and not leave it in the condition in which it is at present.

    (4.53.)

    I am afraid the right hon. Gentleman has lost sight of two important matters. We are told that the grievance in Belfast is that the distribution of wards has been so designed that although one-fourth of the population is Catholic still the whole of the Municipal Corporation is Protestant, and that the Roman Catholics cannot get representation upon the Corporation. The House must not run away with the idea, as I am afraid the right hon. Gentleman would have it do, that such a grievance, be that grievance great or small, would be removed if we were to apply to Ireland the same legislation as exists in England. Let it be recollected that under the English Act, when there is a question affecting the distribution of wards in towns, the Home Secretary has only power to move in the matter when two-thirds of the Town Council petition him to exercise his power. In a case like Belfast, where it is said the Council all take the one view, I ask, what probability is there that a two-thirds majority of the Council would petition the Home Secretary to take action in the matter? The right hon. Gentleman seems to think that the state of things which he describes as connected with Belfast is peculiar to Belfast, and to Belfast only. It is nothing of the kind. I understand that a Bill is shortly to be brought into the House to enable the wards in Liverpool to be redistributed, the difference in the size of the wards being at present immense. But I am informed that the Home Rule Party in Liverpool made such strong resistance to the proposal that two-thirds of the Council should petition the Home Secretary to take action that it was absolutely impossible to set matters right in the manner proposed. The second point which the right hon. Gentleman has overlooked is not less interesting. The right hon. Gentleman appealed to the Government to bring in a Bill dealing with this question. Well, my reply is, that the Government have brought in a Bill to deal with it. If the right hon. Gentleman had only taken pains to read the Bill, which I confess he has spent a good deal of time in denouncing, if he had read through the clause of the Irish Local Government Bill—a Bill which could hardly be mentioned in his presence without moving him to indignation—he would have seen that the Government propose measures by means of which the redistribution of Irish boundaries can be effected more easily than can those of wards in English towns at present. I think the Government is doing more than justice to Ireland by giving her a more complete method of dealing with this difficulty than any method possessed by the Municipal Corporations of England.

    (4.57.)

    I think when the right hon. Gentleman the First Lord of the Treasury talks of a remedy which will be applied to the grievances of Belfast under the Local Govern- ment Bill, he refers to a very dim and distant future. The right hon. Gentleman has referred to the case of Liverpool. I ask the House to say, if the grievance was felt as strongly in Liverpool as it is in Belfast, and if the Corporation of Liverpool were to come to this House for aid, would not the House take good care to give it? We have now an opportunity of remedying this grievance, a grievance which the right hon. Gentleman does not deny, and I ask the right hon. Gentleman why not therefore act at once? I admit that the way in which it is proposed to apply the remedy is not the best way; but let the Government propose a better plan, and we will accept it.

    I think the speech of the First Lord of the Treasury affords the best justification for the Motion of the hon. Member for West Belfast. If the Government will not introduce a Bill to remove the grievance which is complained of, and will not allow this Instruction to go on the Minutes, because they have already provided a remedy for the grievance in the Irish Local Government Bill—if that Bill ever becomes law, and the probabilities are that it will not become law—in the meantime they get through this Bill increasing the powers of the Belfast Corporation. Therefore, they will increase their powers without removing the grievance which they admit. What I propose is that, if the Government are in earnest, they should postpone this Bill until after the passing of the Local Government Bill, if they are honest. If they are not honest, then I think it is the duty of this House to take such measures as are possible to prevent this Bill going any further.

    *(5.3.)

    The right hon. Gentleman the First Lord of the Treasury has given Liverpool as an instance of the re-distribution of wards, and has stated that it was only the Home Rulers in Liverpool who were a stumbling-block in the way of the re-distribution of wards in Liverpool. ("Hear, hear") I beg to tell the hon. Member who says "hear, hear!" and the right hon. Gentleman that that is not the case. Many years before the Home Rule question became a burning question in Liverpool, or had a representation in the Town Council of that city, there were several motions for the re-distribution of the wards of that city, and they were always opposed by the Tory party, who held a monopoly of that city for over 50 years before, and tried so to jerrymander the re-distribution as to continue for 50 years more to be masters. The Liberal party of the city had increased up to the year 1882, and were nearly able to control the city by the election of Mayor; and it was only when the Tory party got alarmed in that way that they then put forward at that particular period a movement for the re-distribution of the city; because they wanted to incorporate with the city the suburbs, the snobocracy of the city, so that they might be able to make up for what they had lost in the central wards of the city, by re-distribution. I feel bound to say, in justice to the citizens of Liverpool that the religious question never entered into this dispute. The people have been generally willing to let the Catholics have a fair representation, although they are one-third of the city. I wish to refer to that part of the speech of the hon. Member for South Belfast where he said that Belfast disapproved of revolutionary projects. Well, it is something new to me to hear that Belfast and the North of Ireland disapproves of revolutionary projects. I thought that Belfast and the North of Ireland were supporters of the pretensions of the Duke of Cumberland to get on the Throne of England when all the rest of Ireland—

    Undoubtedly, if history is not altogether a lie, the Orangemen of Ireland did support the pretensions of the Duke of Cumberland to get on the Throne of England. There never was a revolution in Ireland that had not its headquarters and its best supporters in the North of Ireland. I wish also to refer to the speech of the hon. Baronet the Member for North Belfast, which to my mind throws a flood of light on the proceedings of five or six years ago, namely, the riots of Belfast on that occasion. We heard that out of the works on the Queen's Island, presided over by the hon. Baronet, men were allowed to carry out tons of nuts and bolt-heads in their pockets to fire at the heads of Catholics—(Cries of "Order, order!")

    Order, order! The question of the Belfast riots has nothing to do with the Bill before the House.

    *

    I beg to withdraw the expression. I do hope the House will support the Motion of the hon. Member for West Belfast, and give the people a fair representation. I think it could be very easily done; and I think the Government should give us some assurance that if it cannot be done in this Bill they will use the powers they have to see that people get fair representation.

    (5.6.)

    As I understand, the Irish Representatives put before the House a grievance, which is fully admitted, with regard to the re-distribution of the wards of Belfast, and the Government have been already appealed to from the Front Opposition Bench as well as by Members below the Gangway, and they have refused to undertake to propose or support any measure of relief for the remedy of this grievance—("No, no!")

    I have distinctly told the House that we have amply dealt with the subject in the Bill now before the House.

    Any special peculiar remedy with regard to Belfast. Now it has been pointed out that there is a Bill which is directed to the special remedy of a legitimate grievance in Liverpool—("No")—and I ask the House to pay attention to the attitude of the Government to-day, and to recollect it, and bear it in mind when that other Bill comes before the House; and I ask them to contrast the attitude of the Government to-day with what we on this side of the House know will be the attitude of the Government when this Bill relating to Liverpool, which is supported by the Liverpool Tories, comes to be dealt with.

    (5.10.)

    I am afraid the right hon. Gentleman the First Lord has a very imperfect acquaintance with the provisions of that great measure, the Local Government Bill for Ireland. He has assured the House that the Government, by that Bill, are going to provide a remedy for the state of things existing in Belfast; and I presume he refers to the 30th clause of that Bill. He cannot have read it, or he would not have misled the House; he would not have made that statement. The clause provides, that, "Whenever it is represented by the Council of any County, Borough, or Municipal Borough"—I omit the other words—then the proceedings may be taken. What remedy is that to begin with?

    Will the hon. and learned Gentleman allow me to interrupt him? I desired to reply to the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Derby; and I said that while the English Act required two-thirds of the Council to take action, the Local Government Bill for Ireland only required a majority. And, therefore, my contention was that we had not only proposed to do all that had been done for England, but to do more than had been done for England.

    I hope the supporters of the First Lord are content with that explanation. It seems to me to fall very far short of being a satisfactory one. The right hon. Gentleman made that statement in reply to my right hon. Friend the Member for Derby, no doubt, but he went on to say—and I believe he was understood by the House to say—that in the measure which the Government were bringing forward they would provide a remedy for the case of Belfast. Now, we all know that it is not a question of the division of parties in the Council at Belfast, for they are all of the one political complexion; and, therefore, under this Local Government Bill, if it ever become law, the grievance would be as great as it is at the present moment, and this Bill would afford no adequate remedy whatever. I agree with my right hon. Friend the Member for Wolverhampton, that nobody can say this is the most convenient way of dealing with the question; but it is the only way we have, and cer- tainly, having an opportunity of dealing with it, and of taking the expression of the opinion of the House upon it, we do not intend to lose that opportunity.

    Question put.

    The House divided:—Ayes 172; Noes 195.—(Div. List, No. 13.)

    Motions

    The Electric And Cable Railway Schemes

    I rise to move the Resolution which stands in my name. There is no doubt at all that the result of the labours of the Joint Committee that sat in 1864 was to give London a perfect system of external communication. Numerous important schemes for electric and cable lines are now before Parliament, and if they are considered independently the result may be that London will be intersected by unnecessary and even conflicting lines, when what is wanted is a scheme as comprehensive and perfect as that of 1864. It is in the hope that that will be the outcome of the labours of a Joint Committee that I venture to move this Resolution.

    *

    Sir, I rise to second the Motion. I brought forward a portion of this subject last Session in connection with a Bill for the construction of a tunnel railway from the City to the West End, and the question then raised was how far the people of London had some right to compensation for the interference with the subsoil of the streets. That is an important question, and will, I suppose, come before the Committee. There is the larger question as to the general arrangements with reference to these railways—the level, the sort of cuttings, the size, the direction they shall take, and the dealing with the subsoil of private property that they may disturb. The Reference to the Committee will probably cover all these questions, so that all the important subjects raised can be considered.

    Motion made, and Question proposed,

    "That a Joint Committee of Lords and Commons be appointed to consider the best method of dealing with the Electric and Cable Railway Schemes proposed to be sanctioned within the limits of the Metropolis by Bills introduced, or to be introduced, in the present Session, and to report their opinion as to whether underground Railways worked by electricity or cable traction are calculated to afford sufficient accommodation for the present and probable future traffic; as to whether any, and which, of the Schemes propose satisfactory lines of route; as to the terms and conditions under which the subsoil should be appropriated; whether any, and, if any, what Schemes should not be proceeded with during the present Session."—(Mr. Whitmore.)

    I rise to move, as an addition to the Resolution, to add after the word "Session" these words—

    "And that such Committee have power to hear the parties promoting such Bill, and, if desired by them, receive evidence thereon."
    Sir, in moving this addition I desire to say that I quite concur in the object of the Resolution moved by my hon. Friend the Member for Chelsea, and all I wish is to give power to the Committee to hear parties and witnesses before pronouncing any judgment which might arrest the progress of many valuable schemes. There are already lodged no fewer than seven Bills of which this Committee would, doubtless, take cognizance and examine into, in order to test the principles which they may lay down for the guidance of Parliament. But it would be most unfair to those who have come to this House with their Bills, having incurred great expense and expecting that their Bills would be considered in the usual way by a Select Committee—I say it would be most unfair to these parties if, without calling upon them to show cause, the Joint Committee were to report that these schemes should not be proceeded with. I therefore move my Amendment. Amendment proposed,
    At the end of the Question, to add the words, "and that such Committee have power to hear the parties promoting such Bills, and, if desired by them, receive evidence thereon.
    —(Mr. Kimber.)

    Question proposed, "That those words be there added."

    Sir, I hope the hon. Member will consent to the withdrawal of these words for the present. There is a great deal in what he said that is, in my opinion, of a decisive character. It would be very unfair that the Joint Committee should express an opinion upon a particular scheme without hearing from the promoters whether it is part of a general scheme or what were its merits. However, I will not enter into those points. I only rose to ask the hon. Member not in the meantime to press the words, which have not been under the consideration of the noble Lord the Chairman of Committees in the other House, but to allow the Resolution to pass in its original form; and if he does that, I will take care that the words are, brought under the notice of the noble Lord and of the Joint Committee.

    Amendment, by leave, withdrawn.

    Original Question again proposed.

    *

    I entirely agree with the hon. Member for Chelsea; but with reference to the Report of this Joint Committee, I think it should be understood that there should in the matter of these electric railways be no such result from this Committee as that resulting from the Committee which sat in 1864. It is very much the habit of Parliament to lay down rules as regards Metropolitan and other Railways, and to lead people to believe, when assenting to these schemes, that they will not sanction any competitive lines. In 1864 the Committee laid it down that the great trunk thoroughfares, such as Oxford Street and Uxbridge Road, should not be interfered with in any way for the formation of railway lines. Nineteen millions of money have been spent in underground railways in London under the impression that Parliament, having imposed that condition, would not at any subsequent period have allowed these thoroughfares, which the promoters I allude to were precluded from touching, to be interfered with. Notwithstanding, however, the Report of the Joint Committee in 1864, Parliament last year sanctioned the Central London Railway Bill for a line of rail from Shepherd's Bush to the City. Looking to the fact that for railway enterprises money must necessarily be largely subscribed, it would be well to bear in mind, when laying down any special rules for lines of railway, that people who promote schemes expect when the routes are once filled that they will not be interfered with by any competing line. Main Question put, and agreed to.

    Resolved, That a Joint Committee of Lords and Commons be appointed to consider the best method of dealing with the Electric and Cable Railway Schemes proposed to be sanctioned within the limits of the Metropolis by Bills introduced, or to be introduced, in the present Session, and to report their opinion as to whether underground Railways worked by electricity or cable traction are calculated to afford sufficient accommodation for the present and probable future traffic; as to whether any, and which, of the Schemes propose satisfactory lines of route; as to the terms and conditions under which the subsoil should be appropriated; whether any, and, if any, what Schemes should not be proceeded with during the present Session.

    Ordered, That a Message be sent to the Lords to communicate this Resolution, and desire their concurrence.

    New Writs Issued

    For County of Wexford (Northern Division), v. John E. Redmond, Esq., Manor of Northstead.—( Sir Thomas Esmonde.)

    For Borough of Belfast (East Division), v. Edward Samuel Wesley de Cobain, Esq., expelled this House. ( Mr. Akers-Douglas.)

    Poor Law (Ireland) Relief

    Moved for—

    "Return showing, as regards each Poor Law Union in Ireland, the number of Persons of each sex of 65 years of age and upwards, and the number under 65 years of age who have attained 16 years of age, and the number of Children under 16 years of age, in receipt from Boards of Guardians of Indoor Relief or Outdoor Relief respectively, during the twelve months ended at Lady Day, 1892."—(Mr. Mahony.)

    I think the hon. Gentleman has put down a Motion for a Return in the same language as the Return I moved for England. We are considering an alteration with the view of getting a little more information, and perhaps the hon. Gentleman will postpone his Motion for a day or two, so that we may have the English and Irish Returns uniform. Motion, by leave, withdrawn.