HC Deb 21 April 1885 vol 297 cc323-83
MR. HEALY

, in moving an Amendment, in page 101, to leave out from line 21 to line 4 of page 102, and insert— Barony of North-West Liberties of Londonderry. Barony of Tikeeran (except the parish of Learmount, and that part of the parish of Banagher which is in this barony). Barony of Kennaught (except the parish of Dungiven, and that part of the parish of Banagher which is in this barony, and except that part of the parish of Bovevagh which is bounded by the parishes of Dungiven and Errigal. Barony of Coleraine. Barony of North-East Liberties of Coleraine. No. 2.—The South Londonderry Division. Barony of Tikeeran (parish of Learmount, and that part of the parish of Banagher which is in this barony). Barony of Kennaught (parish of Dungiven, and that part of the parish of Banagher which is bounded by the parishes of Dungiven and Errigal). Barony of Loughinshollin, said, it was necessary to call the attention of the Committee to the manner in which the Boundary Commissioners had acted in regard to this division, and the changes which they had made in the division as originally laid down. In the first place, he was reminded that the hon. and learned Gentleman Her Majesty's Solicitor General for Ireland (Mr. Walker) was represented before the Commissioners by counsel. ["No, no!"] He understood that hon. and learned Gentleman denied the soft impeachment; but the counsel who appeared at the inquiry stated that he represented Mr. Walker, and that he was exceedingly dissatisfied with the boundaries which had been agreed upon. Now, he (Mr. Healy) must say, that for any counsel who appeared on behalf of a Law Officer of the Government, or of any Member of the Government, to attempt to intimidate the Commissioners by alleging that fact was extremely unsatisfactory, unprecedented, and he might almost say shocking, and especially so when viewed from a point of general policy. What must have been the effect produced on the minds of the Commissioners when they were told that the Irish Solicitor General, and a strong supporter of Her Majesty's Government—namely, the hon. Baronet the Member for the county of Londonderry (Sir Thomas M'Clure), were disappointed at the arrangement which had been made. He would say, at the outset, that the inquiry was prejudiced to a very large extent by that unfortunate statement. He was quite willing to admit that the proposal put forward by the hon. and learned Gentleman was not adopted; and that it would have been worse for the popular Party in Derry than the scheme finally adopted by the Commissioners. As he had said on a former occasion, the object of the Commissioners had been, not to jerrymander the divisions altogether, but just to jerrymander them enough; and the proposal of the hon. and learned Gentleman to draw a line through the barony of Loughlinshollin, which was largely Catholic, was so indecent and outrageous that it was even too much for the strong stomachs of the Boundary Commissioners. The Irish Members had been attacked by the right hon. Baronet the President of the Local Government Board (Sir Charles W. Dilke) for having imported religious distinctions and some sectarian bitterness into this controversy. For his own part, he altogether repudiated any charge of the kind. The religious element had been introduced into the discussion by the Commissioners themselves, who, at the instigation of the Tory Party, had undertaken the inquiry with a theodolite in one hand and a Religious Census Table in the other In point of fact, the Religious Census Table, from first to last, had been the guide which had been followed in Ulster. And what had happened? The county of Derry had been divided into four baronies, one of them being the barony of Loughinshollin—a very large Catholic barony; and the question arose—what parishes of the Northern baronies were to be thrown into the division which comprised that barony? The original scheme of the Commissioners was to throw in bits of the barony of Tikeeran and the barony of Kennaught in order to obtain the requisite amount of population. That provision would have given the popular Party a Member for South Derry, the Catholics being 47 or 48 per cent of the entire county. Seeing how persons of other denominations were divided, it was not too much to say that the Catholic Party, under that arrangement, would have been entitled to one Member. It happened that in the lower division, as it was at first arranger], the Catholics, not to speak of the Nationalists, would have had a majority of over 2,000. When that fact came out the hon. and learned Gentleman the Solicitor General for Ireland, who, of course, was extremely well informed with regard to the county of Londonderry, and was kept well supplied with information by his agents, immediately presented a counter-proposal to the Commissioners. Before he (Mr. Healy) touched upon that proposal he wished to draw the attention of the Committee to this extraordinary fact—that with the exception of the counties of Dublin and Kildare, the scheme for the county of Londonderry was the last issued by the Commissioners. It was the third of the schemes published, and it was not kept back until the very last moment without a purpose, for the operations of the Commissioners had not been of such an unbiased character that it could be supposed they had been occupied in the interim with an entirely innocent investigation. However, in spite of the delay they were not able to hit the mark accurately enough for the Solicitor General; but, at all events, the fact remained that the county represented by the hon. and learned Gentleman opposite supplied nearly the last scheme that was made public. However, when the Commissioners held their inquiry the hon. and learned Gentleman was represented at it by counsel, who protested, in the strongest terms, against the scheme of the Commissioners. He would leave the House to imagine what kind of impression was produced on the minds of the Commissioners, connected as they were with Dublin Castle, when they were informed that Her Majesty's Solicitor General was opposed to their scheme; and he would ask what guarantee of fair play the Nationalists had in the matter? The Government, or the Whig Party, were represented upon the Commission by Mr. Piers White; the Tories had two representatives—Major Macpherson and Captain Johnston; and the Irish Official Party were represented by a member of the Irish Local Government Board—Mr. Burke; while the popular Party, with whose constituents the Government were dealing in five out of six cases, were not afforded a single representative. They were not even consulted in regard to the names of any individual appointed upon the Commission. The Conservatives had two representatives, and the Whigs two; but the Nationalists had no representative at all, although 85 out of 103 seats to be dealt with were Nationalist constituencies. He thought that fact alone was sufficient to damn the Report made by the Commission in the opinion of every fair-minded man. In the next place, they had the operations of the hon. and learned Solicitor General for Ireland. Perhaps it was indiscreet for the Liberal agent in Derry to have employed Dr. Todd, notwithstanding the fact that he was a distinguished bar- rister; and it might have been indiscreet for Dr. Todd to have avowed to the Commissioners that he represented the Solicitor General for Ireland. He (Mr. Healy) had no doubt that by-and-bye the hon. and learned Gentleman would get up at the Table and tell the Committee that Dr. Todd was altogether unjustified in stating that he represented him (Mr. Walker); because the hon. and learned Gentleman could not but feel the extraordinary position in which the Commissioners were placed by having a distinct statement made to them that one of the chief Law Officers of the Crown in Ireland, possessing a seat in the House of Commons, disapproved of the Commissioners' scheme. He would ask the Tory Party in the House what interest they had in backing up this scheme, which was a scheme for returning two Whigs for the county of Derry, although the Tories had not a single Member in that county at present, except for the city of Derry; and the present scheme of division no more interested the Tory Party than it interested any political Party not connected at all with the county. It was purely a Whig scheme, from first to last; for the Tories would have no chance of returning a Member for Derry. He asked, then, was it right or fair, in the interests of decency, for a lawyer and advocate to get up in Court and tell the Boundary Commissioners that Her Majesty's Solicitor General disapproved of their scheme? He maintained that it was a monstrous attempt to interfere with the judgment and liberty of action of the Commissioners, and that it was an indecent attempt to wrest from them a scheme in favour of the views of the Government themselves, and what they considered to be best for their own purposes. No doubt the hon. and learned Solicitor General for Ireland would say that this was not his scheme, or that of the Government. How dared the hon. and learned Gentleman have a scheme at all? He had no business whatever to put forward a scheme for any county, even although he happened to represent that county in the House of Commons. The hon. and learned Gentleman could not sink his position as one of Her Majesty's Advisers, and as one of the Gentlemen whose advice the Lord Lieutenant was bound to take when he appointed this Commission. He should like to know what English Members would have said if the Attorney or Solicitor General had gone down to Taunton, or Durham, and said—"We disapprove of the scheme of the Commissioners?" What would have been said in England if such a declaration had been made—if the declaration received no disclaimer from Her Majesty's Government? It might suit the hon. and learned Solicitor General for Ireland in that House to disclaim the action of Dr. Todd; but he did not disclaim it at the time, or before the Commissioners seat in their Report—which was the proper time to make it, if the disclaimer was to have any effect at all. It was only after the hon. and learned Gentleman found that the views of his representative bad been adopted, and when the statements of Dr. Todd had been reported, and made the subject of adverse comment in the Dublin newspapers, that the hon. and learned Gentleman came out with a disclaimer. He (Mr. Healy) contended that the present scheme was tainted by the action of the hon. and learned Gentleman; and on that ground, if upon no other, he would ask the Government to send it back to the Commissioners, and call upon them to make a fresh Report, seeing that it was a scheme which had been obtained, to a large extent, by undue influence, if not by actual intimidation. What were the merits, or rather the demerits, of the original scheme? What fault was to be found with the original scheme? As far as he knew, no fault whatever could be found with it. The Commissioners said—and this was a remarkable point, to which he would call the attention of the right hon. Baronet (Sir Charles W. Dilke)—that Mr. James O'Doherty, the solicitor, and others who represented the Nationalists, had contented themselves with saying that they were satisfied with the proposition of the Commissioners, and that they objected to any alteration of it. What was that but a sneer, with the intention of implying that the Nationalists had put themselves in the wrong by not proposing any scheme of their own? The Commissioners then went on to make a very remarkable admission. They said that the alternative scheme was supported by maps and Schedules, put forward by Mr. Lane, the solicitor for the Conservative Party, and by Dr. Todd, the counsel for the Liberal Party. "Both of these schemes," they added, "concurred to a certain point." No doubt, both of them concurred in cutting off people of the barony of Loughinshollin from their co-religionists. Both Whig and Tory concurred in that; and, therefore, the Commissioners said that it would be an improvement upon their original proposal, and they agreed to provide that the barony of Kennaught should not be divided, as had been proposed originally. Probably the defence of the Government would be that the present scheme of the Commissioners only divided one barony; whereas the original scheme divided two. The right hon. Baronet had pointed out that the area of the Derry boundaries was divided only in one instance now. That would have been an admirable argument if the Government had adopted it in the case of Armagh, Donegal, Tyrone, or Down, or in any other single instance in connection with an Irish county; and if the right hon. Baronet put forward that make-believe and absurd argument, he (Mr. Healy) would only say that, on the Report stage of the Bill, he would call upon the right hon. Gentleman to re-propose the old divisions of Armagh, Donegal, Tyrone, and Down, or otherwise the argument would put him entirely out of court; and, certainly, what was sauce for the goose was sauce for the gander. The Commissioners went on to say that these detached parishes contained a population of 9,000 persons, and that, by leaving them united to their own baronies, a more compact division was formed. But where was the compactness of the division? He defied any Member of the Government to show in what the compactness consisted. The Commissioners said that the two baronies under the old scheme were divided by a high and almost uninhabited range of mountains; but was not that the case in the county of Donegal? How was that argument allowed to hold good in the case of Donegal? Kilmacreenan was separated by mountains, and utterly uninhabited spaces of ocean—visited only by herrings and seagulls from Innishowen, yet both were shamelessly united in one division. If that argument had been used in the case of Donegal, it would have been entirely worthless, in the view of the Government; but as this was a case in which the Government were anxious to suit their own purposes, they introduced the argument of separation by a range of mountains. It must be borne in mind that in no other case had such a ground been allowed to stand in the way of the connection of one district with another; and in this case, under the old scheme, the population was entirely homogeneous. It was a Catholic population, having intimate communications with each other—one in blood and in religion, and also in language; and also, from a geographical point of view, far more compact than the division which had been substituted for it. For the Commissioners, who scarcely spent an entire hour over the matter, to setup their opinion against that of the inhabitants of the district was simply hypocrisy and audacity. The Commissioners went on to state, in their Report, that the suggested improvement was one which recommended itself, and that it necessitated a corresponding reduction from Division No. 1, in order to make up and complete Division No. 2. Nevertheless, it was a remarkable fact that the parishes struck out were parishes containing a purely Catholic population, and that the two parishes put in from the barony of Coleraine contained a purely Protestant population. As a matter of fact, out of the barony of Coleraine, the Commissioners had taken the two most Protestant parishes of the entire division; and out of the original Northern Division they had struck out the two most Catholic parishes; and this course could only be defended by arguments which it was admitted had no force in regard to other counties—such as the counties of Armagh, Donegal, Tyrone, and Down. It was monstrous, then, that the Nationalist Party should be attempted to be stalled off by this miserable threadbare argument. First of all, he would state to the Committee the religious effect of the scheme. In the original scheme of the Commissioners the Southern Division had a majority of 3,000 Catholics. By the present scheme of the Commissioners, a majority of 3,000 Protestants had been secured. Wherever any change had been made in Ulster, time after time and in county after county, the effect of the change had been to put the Catholics in a minority; and therefore the action of the Commissioners and of the Government was capable of but one interpreta- tion. These schemes bore the brand of infamy upon them, and so long as these boundaries were allowed to exist they would be a monument of the bigotry, the prejudice, and the partiality of the Commissioners appointed by Lord Spencer. In Deny, as in the case of Down, Donegal, Armagh, and Tyrone, every change which had been made told against the popular Party; and, bearing in mind that in no single instance had the Tory Party come forward and asked for an alteration which had not been adopted, it was impossible to draw any other conclusion than that the object was to keep the Nationalists down as far as possible. The two Whig Representatives and the two Tories upon the Commission had put their heads together to cheat and chouse the Nationalists out of the rights to which they were fairly entitled. How did the Government defend their scheme? They threw out the parishes of Learmount, Dungiven, and Moville, and put in their stead from the barony of Coleraine the Protestant parishes of Aghadowey and Desertoghill. He would ask the Government for some explanation upon another point—namely, why it was that they had taken so much of these parishes? Why was it that there were now 3,000 more persons in the South Derry Division than in the North Derry Division? Surely it was not necessary to take so large a portion of these parishes if they only wanted to equalize the population. In the original scheme the number in each division was nearly equal; but now, for the purpose of swamping the Catholics in the barony of Loughinshollin, they took out 3,000 Protestants from the barony of Coleraine. They had had mountains and lakes flung in their faces, compactness, the squareness of the barony, and everything except a frank admission, which, of course, the Government could not with decency make, that the design from first to last was to deprive the Nationalists of their rights by moans of fraud and chicane. He viewed the boundaries now proposed by the Bill with all the more apprehension, because he believed that the Government had made them, although that assertion would, doubtless, be denied, not merely for the purpose of Parliamentary areas, but for the purpose of Local Government arrangements hereafter, so that not merely were the Nationalists to be swindled now, but later on they were to be equally swindled when the areas in connection with the Local Government Boards were formed. Lord Spencer appeared to have pointed out, in his secret instructions to the Commissioners, that these areas would be subsequently used for Local Government purposes; so that not only would the popular Party be swamped at the present moment in the constituencies in connection with the return of Representatives to Parliament, but later on, when the Local Government scheme was on the anvil, the areas now applotted would be rendered available for cheating the popular Party in the North in the matter of Local Government Boards. He believed that that was really one of the main reasons which had influenced the Government. He would only say, in conclusion, that turn where they might in the case of these counties— The trail of the serpent is over it all. In all other cases in the South of Ireland, in over 90 constituencies, except Dublin, Kerry, and an island in Mayo, no change whatever had been made in the schemes of the Commissioners; but no less than 11 changes had been made in the nine counties of the North of Ireland. There were changes in Down, in Antrim, in Belfast, in Derry, in Tyrone, in Armagh, in Donegal—and only two practically throughout the rest of Ireland—namely, in Dublin and in the county of Kerry. What did it all mean? Could they ever succeed in eradicating from the minds of the popular Party the feeling that they had been choused and cheated, and defrauded of their rights? The boundaries of county after county in Ulster had been changed, and complaint after complaint had been made in that House by those who represented the popular feeling. The Tory Party and the Whig Party had no complaint whatever to make. It was the Nationalists alone, who were not represented on the Commission, who were compelled to stand up in the House of Commons and put forward their claims, and urge their grievances, although they knew beforehand that the compact which existed between the two Front Benches would prevent them from securing their rights or obtaining justice. He trusted that, at any rate, this debate would prove to the people of the North of Ire- land that they had nothing to expect in the shape of justice from the Government of Dublin Castle, or from any Commission which Earl Spencer might appoint. They had been cheated once before by the Commission appointed under the Land Act. They were being cheated now by a Commission under the Redistribution Bill. Whatever Commission Lord Spencer appointed, it would be found that he was unable to give a fair and decent representation to the popular or Catholic Party. Every Commissioner was appointed in the Tory or Whig interest; and so long as these divisions lasted they would recall to the popular mind the unfairness, indecency, and fraud of the British Government in Ireland.

Amendment proposed, In page 101, to leave out from the words "The Baronies of," in line 21, to the word "Shanlongford," in line 35, and insert the words "Barony of North-West Liberties of Londonderry."—(Mr. Healy.)

Question proposed, "That the words proposed to be left out stand part of the Schedule."

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, the hon. and learned Member for Monaghan had stated once again what he had said before—that some secret instructions had been given by Lord Spencer to the Boundary Commissioners with regard to the alterations they ought to effect in the original scheme. If so, such instructions were so secret that he himself (Sir Charles W. Dilke) did not know of them. But even beyond that extraordinary secrecy with regard to himself, he was bound to say that Lord Spencer had authorized him to state that nothing of the kind had taken place. The hon. and learned Gentleman had alluded before to the presence at the inquiry of a legal gentleman, who said that he appeared for the hon. and learned Solicitor General for Ireland (Mr. Walker). That statement was also inaccurate.

MR. HEALY

said, that it had appeared in the public Press, where it had gone uncontradicted as having been made by Dr. Todd himself.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he had had some communication with the Members for the county of Derry, and they denied that they were in any way represented before the Commissioners. But however that might be, if his hon. and learned Friend the Solicitor General for Ireland had felt inclined to attend before the Commissioners himself, he would have been altogether justified in doing so. For his own part, he (Sir Charles W. Dilke) had been present at the inquiry which took place in regard to his own division; and, as a matter of fact, he had taken an active part in the proceedings.

MR. T. P. O'CONNOR

said, that occurred in England, and not in Ireland.

MR. HEALY

remarked that, while the Liberals were represented upon the Commission, the National Party were not.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he would only say what, so far as he was personally concerned, was the fact. He now came to the merits of this particular case. There had been a Paper laid upon the Table of the House, in which the reasons of the Commissioners for making this change in their scheme were submitted. The alterations which had been made in the original scheme had been made in consequence of its being found that the maps, which formed the basis of the original scheme, did not show the physical conformation of the country. There was a range of mountains which ran North and South, and the present scheme followed the geographical arrangements. He did not think it was desirable to carry a division across a mountainous range; and there had been several cases in England where hills much less considerable had been taken into view by the Boundary Commissioners. The hon. and learned Member (Mr. Healy) complained that the result of the change had been to make a difference of 3,000 between the population of the Northern and of the Southern Divisions; but the Northern Division would contain three large towns, and it was necessary to allow for an increase of the population in those towns.

MR. HEALY

remarked, that Londonderry had a Member already, and was not included in the county divisions.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he only wished to point out that the tendency of the population in the neighbourhood of large towns was to increase; whereas in the rural districts of Ireland the tendency was the other way. Certainly the decrease of population had been much less rapid in the Northern than in the Southern parts of the county. It was said by the hon. and learned Member that the changes had been suggested by the Tory and Liberal agents.

MR. HEALY

said, it was the Commissioners themselves who said that.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, it must be borne in mind that additional changes were suggested that were not accepted by the Commissioners. So far as the religious point was concerned, the Protestant population in the county was about 78,500; while the Catholic population was only 57,000, so that it did happen that the Protestant section had a majority in each division.

MR. HEALY

said, that that would not have been the case if the first scheme of the Commissioners had been adhered to.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, that the first scheme was exceptionally objectionable, and the moment it came to be inquired into it became evident that it must be changed.

MR. HEALY

said, that the Catholics were always cheated in that way.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

continued. The hon. and learned Gentleman said that no change had been made in other counties; but in three Conservative counties changes had been made, and the reason why changes had been made from the scheme as originally prepared was owing to the evidence given before the Commissioners at the local inquiry. Presumably the present scheme was the best that could be devised. He altogether denied that there had been any intention on the part of the Government or of the Boundary Commissioners to make such a division of the county as would be adverse to either the Catholic or the National Party of Ireland. He must, therefore, oppose the Amendment.

MR. SEXTON

said, that some reference had been made to the constitution of the Commission which had prepared the boundaries of the Irish counties. It was proposed, first of all, that these important functions should be entrusted entirely to military officers. He almost thought it might have been better if military officers had been allowed to do the work. Military officers were not, as was sometimes claimed for them, altogether free from political passion; but they usually gained their promotion for military and professional reasons, and if military officers solely had been employed in framing the boundaries, it might have been hoped that there would have been nothing in the character of the work to induce them to plan unfair divisions for the sake of pleasing their employers, or in the hope of obtaining more rapid promotion. As a matter of fact, however, the work of the Boundary Commission in Ireland was confided to three gentlemen, one of whom was a military officer; another an official, who, of course, would like promotion; while the third was a Queen's Counsel, who was not a Government officer now, but who doubtless expected to be one soon. He thought it was a mistake to transfer the work from military officers to civilians, either officials now or officials expectant. When the scheme of the Commissioners was originally proposed the popular Party, unfortunately, went through the ancient and time-honoured, though not very sensible, practice of "holloaing before they were out of the wood." The right hon. Baronet (Sir Charles W. Dilke) now stated that no secret instructions were issued by Lord Spencer. Well, there were more ways than one of doing things at Dublin Castle. Of course, it was not necessary for Lord Spencer to put down on paper secret instructions to the Commissioners; but when he (Mr. Sexton) found, as he did find, that the boundaries were drawn in this county, and in other counties in Ireland, not in obedience to the public instructions of the Commissioners, but in contravention of them; when he found that the boundaries were drawn in conformity with some other instruction not included in the public instructions in order to minimize the influence of the Catholic population as much as possible in the Province of Ulster, it was open for him to assume that if Lord Spencer did not convey that desire by secret instructions, at any rate somebody on the part of the Government did convey such an intimation to the Commissioners, or, if not, they were appointed and selected from a conviction in the mind of the Government that they were men of such a complexion as not to need instructions, but that their own power of initiation would be stimulated by a lively sense of favours to come. The hon. and learned Gentleman the Solicitor General for Ireland (Mr. Walker) appeared to disclaim the position asserted for him of having been represented on the inquiry by counsel. He (Mr. Sexton) did not know whether it mattered very much whether the hon. and learned Gentleman was represented by counsel or not. Whether or not he was represented at the De cry inquiry, the hon. and learned Gentleman was in the House that day to represent himself; and he doubted whether the hon. and learned Gentleman, after hearing the statement which had been made, would have the hardihood to get up and say that he was dissatisfied with the division of the county which had been made by the Commissioners. The familiar argument of the maps not showing the configuration of the county had once more been trotted out. Did the right hon. Baronet the President of the Local Government Board really expect the Committee to believe, or hope to make them accept the statement, that these three gentlemen, sitting in Dublin, with all the resources of the Valuation Office at their disposal, with all the maps of every county in Ireland which had been taken officially during the last half-century deposited at their elbows—did the right hon. Gentleman mean to tell the Committee that these official gentlemen in Dublin went through the farce of dividing the county of Derry, without knowing from the Ordnance maps, from the geological maps, from the physical maps, and all the maps which had been produced from time to time, what every schoolboy knew, that this range of mountains cut the county from North-West to North-East? There was not an intelligent child of 10 in any National school of Ireland who was not acquainted with that fact, and there was hardly a map hanging on the wall in any school in Ireland which did not clearly show this range of mountains. When the right hon. Gentleman made use of a statement of that kind, he must credit the Irish Members with a degree of credulity which usually ceased in the human mind before a man arrived at the age which would enable him to enter that House. The first remark he (Mr. Sexton) had to make on the scheme of the Commissioners was that it afforded, perhaps, the most striking instance they had of the remarkable, and hitherto unexplained, fact that wherever the Nationalists had agreed to the first scheme of the Commissioners, the Commissioners immediately proceeded to alter it. If the Commissioners had no object, except the ardent performance of their duty, their attitude, wherever the Nationalists were concerned, was certainly most singular. If the National Party objected to a scheme, as they did in many cases, and said they were not satisfied with it, the Commissioners declared at once—"We are not able to satisfy you, but we stand to our scheme, and we will make no attempt to alter it. "But if, on the other hand, the Nationalists said—"We think your scheme in a very good one, and we are quite satisfied with it," what did the Commissioners do then? They said at once—"If you are satisfied with our scheme, there must be something wrong in it;" and then they immediately proceeded to ascertain what the Whig and Tory agents had to say in regard to it, ultimately altering the scheme in accordance with the recommendations they received. It would be observed that this particular scheme had been unnecessarily kept back. The Commissioners were appointed in the month of December last year, but they did not produce this scheme until the month of February; and there was a shrewd suspicion in Ireland that the delay on the part of the Commissioners, who were alert enough in completing the other scheme for the Irish counties, was not altogether unconnected with the fact that the county had the honour to be represented in that House by Her Majesty's Solicitor General for Ireland. The Commissioners said the second scheme was more compact than the first. That was a matter that was capable of being judged by the human eye. The first division was marked by a blue line, which ran across the county. That blue line divided the county pretty equally from a point in the West to a point in the East. It left an equal area on both sides of the line. It gave an equal population to either side of the line; it almost left inviolable the well-known areas, and it only separated three or four parishes from a barony in one case. It was a division that was not open to any strong objection. In fact, Mr. O'Doherty, who appeared at the inquiry on behalf of the Nationalist Party, read a statement which had been drawn up at Dungannon on the previous day. That state- ment was to the effect that the line fixed upon by the Commissioners, which divided the county East and West, met with their approval, and they gave their reasons for that approval. But the moment the Nationalists approved of the scheme, from that moment it was damned in the minds of its authors. The moment the Nationalists expressed their approval of any scheme, the Commissioners went a step further with respect to their scheme, and set about destroying it. In the original scheme of the Commissioners the creeds of the county were fairly divided; the non-Catholics had the Northern Division and the Catholics had the Southern Division; and by that arrangement the Commissioners had met the rough and general demands of justice. As the Committee was aware, the Whigs and Tories did not always agree in Ireland; but lately, in Ulster, they had been tending towards agreement, and the Whig and Tory agents, who appeared in Derry, agreed that the first scheme should be amended by taking four Catholic parishes out of the Southern Division, in order to swamp it with Protestants—both Parties agreed upon that. The next argument, so-called, he had to deal with was in the shape of a range of mountains, with respect to which he would observe that the mountain range was there, but no argument. The right hon. Baronet thought nothing of jumping over a range of mountains in Armagh—he thought nothing of jumping over a range of mountains in Donegal, between Boylagh and Kilmacrenan. But wherever there was an excrescence on the surface of the earth, were it but the size of an anthill, if it could be used as an argument to weaken the influence of the Catholic Body in Ulster, it immediately assumed the proportions of a range of mountains—but the Himalayas themselves, whenever the matter went the other way, would be diminished in the eyes of the Government. Having thrown the four Catholic parishes into the Northern Division, a number of Protestant parishes were thrown into the Southern Division. The first scheme of the Commissioners had respect to the barony boundaries; but in the second scheme the baronies were cut into pieces. Anyone who compared the two schemes would say that the first was intelligible and reasonable; and he would think that Mr. P. White, in claiming for the second scheme compactness, was guilty of an audacity which had not been manifested in other cases. The Protestant majority in the Southern Division was between 1,000 and 2,000. Considering that the Protestants were better off in the North than the Catholics, it was clear that this county had been jerrymandered in such a way as not to lose one Protestant vote in the Southern Division, and so as to maintain Protestant ascendancy in the Northern Division. If the Commissioners had any desire to allow fair play as between the two creeds, why had they thrown 2,000 out of their own district? It was clear that the Instructions given to the Commissioners had been thrown aside. The Instructions which the Government had given them, from beginning to end, was the unconfessed but still operative and dominant one—to cut up the county of Londonderry in the manner they liked best; to have no regard to the sympathies of the people, or creeds, or local interests; to jump over mountains and to produce the result that the Catholics should be deprived of their fair proportion of representation, and that the Protestants should be allowed to predominate. It was a pretty scheme, but a contemptible one, and he ventured to doubt that it would be successful. He believed that there would be found a great number of Protestant voters whose sympathies were with the Nationalist Party, and whose interests lay on the side of those reforms which that Party advocated, and which both Whigs and Tories despised. He did not the Government could assure themselves that any success would result from these discreditable intrigues. He believed that intrigues more mean, more petty, and therefore more repugnant to a manly mind than this had never been engaged in by a Government; and he thought it would be found that as their various schemes for maintaining British Government and suppressing public opinion in Ireland had failed, so this device would prove the least successful of all.

MR. SMALL

said, it was strange that this arrangement with regard to the county of Londonderry should have been made. In the case of Armagh, the Southern Division, under any possible arrangement, would go with the Nationalist Party; and it was only with re- gard to the Mid Division of the county that any doubt existed. The Commissioners, accordingly, took every Protestant district out of that division, and threw them into the Southern Division. But in the case of the county of Londonderry, the Northern Division could not be captured for the Nationalists—it was the Southern Division only with regard to which any doubt existed, and hence the different action of the Commissioners in the two cases. The Commissioners here took a course quite opposite to that which they had pursued in reference to Armagh; in the one case they took the Catholic districts from the South Division, and threw them into the North Division; and in the other they took the Protestant districts out of the North, and threw them into the Southern Division. As the Commissioners had transferred several parishes from the Southern to the Northern Division of the county, it might be interesting to the Committee to know the relative proportion of Protestants to Catholics in those parishes. They contained Catholics to a number which was in the proportion of 50 per cent and 75 per cent of all other denominations. Three of the parishes were possibly the most Catholic in the entire county. Then, with regard to the parishes which the Commissioners had transferred from the North to the South, the position was reversed, the various denominations being enormously in excess of the Catholics; in fact, out of 14,115 Denominationalists there were only 4, 773 Catholics. It did, indeed, seem strange that the Commissioners, who were said to be actuated by the best intentions, should have transferred from the Northern to the Southern Division parishes only where there were Protestants enormously in excess of the Catholics; and, on the other hand, that in all the parishes which they had transferred from the Southern to the Northern Division there should be a large majority of Catholics. It seemed to him that the Nationalists were fairly entitled to one seat at least for the county. By the Census of 1881 the Catholics formed 15 per cent of the entire population; and they knew that amongst the rest of the population there were as many Nationalists as amongst the Catholic Body. The Nationalists of to-day must, in his (Mr. Sexton's) opinion, form one-half of the entire population of the county; and he said that if there were to be two seats for the county, and the two Parties were balanced, it would have been only fair for the Commissioners to have made such a division as would leave one Member to the Nationalist and one Member to the non-Nationalist Body, rather than to give two Members to the non-Nationalists and none at all to the Nationalist Body. The Bill said that the North-West Liberties of Londonderry, except so much as is comprised in the Parliamentary borough of Londonderry, was to be included in the North-West Division, and the barony of Tikeeran, also, except so much as is comprised in the Parliamentary borough of Londonderry. Now, it appeared from this that, the Parliamentary borough of Londonderry was not to be included for any purpose whatever in either of the divisions of the county of Londonderry; and that being so, he would ask the hon. and learned Solicitor General for Ireland what he meant to do with the freeholders who voted in the City of Londonderry? Were they to be disfranchised? Because that would be the effect of the scheme as now framed by the Commissioners. Possibly the hon. and learned Gentleman would get up and say that the freeholders would vote in the City of Derry; but that was not the case, because if the freeholders were not enfranchised in the City of Derry, and if they were excluded from all the divisions of the county, they would not be allowed to vote either in the county or the city. He did not know whether the freeholders in question would be friendly to the hon. and learned Gentleman; but he rather thought that at the next General Election it would be found that they were not so on account of the way they had been treated in this matter; at any rate, the effect of the Schedule would be to disfranchise them. The hon. and learned Member for Monaghan (Mr. Healy) had pointed out that the barony of Loughinshollin was entirely a Catholic barony. That was the case, and it was also true of the adjoining baronies of Tikeeran and Kennaught. Other matters being equal, would it not have been fairer for the Commissioners to have joined the Catholic parishes to the Catholic baronies rather than joining them to Coleraine, and thus uniting Catholics with men who were alien to them in interest and religious feeling. Many meet- ings had been held, and the people of Loughinshollin had unanimously protested against the scheme which joined them to the uncongenial inhabitants of Coleraine, rather than to those with whom they had sympathy of feeling and community of interest in the baronies of Kennaught and Tikeeran. The right hon. Baronet (Sir Charles W. Dilke) had endeavoured to prove that the revised scheme was better than the first scheme, as there was a chain of mountains between the two baronies; but was the right hon. Baronet aware that there was also a considerable chain of mountains between the barony of Loughinshollin and the places in Coleraine which it was, by the present Amendment, proposed to join to the other division? He could assure the right hon. Baronet that the mountains in the one case were as considerable as those in the other. But supposing that the obstacles between the two baronies were not so great, he would point out that there were other barriers of a far more serious character between the barony of Coleraine and the barony of Loughinshollin. He thought the Commissioners might have taken into consideration, as between the two baronies, the entire absence of intercourse, community of interest, and religious feeling. He trusted, therefore, that this scheme would not be agreed to by the Committee; but if it were, and notwithstanding that the Catholics in the county had been placed in a considerable minority, they would still be able to give a very good account of themselves; and when the next General Election took place it would, he thought, be seen by the Commissioners and the Treasury Bench that they might as well have left the people of the district in question where they wished to remain, and not have joined them with people they did not want to be associated with for the purpose of this Bill. Having proposed reasonable Amendments to the Government scheme in the case of Armagh, Donegal, and Londonderry without success, he and his hon. Friends would look with concern to the course the Government would take in respect of Ulster, in order to see whether any concession would be made to them when the name of that county was reached in the Schedule.

THE SOLICITOR GENERAL FOR IRELAND (Mr. WALKER)

said, he did not know why he should speak on this question at all, and he should not have done so were it not for the manner in which the hon. and learned Member for Monaghan (Mr. Healy) had used his name—that was to say, as if he (the Solicitor General for Ireland) were to blame for the arrangement made by the Commissioners in respect of the county of Londonderry. The hon. and learned Member said he (the Solicitor General for Ireland) appeared by counsel before the Commissioners. But no counsel appeared before the Commissioners at all, and that statement of the hon. and learned Member had been met when the general question was before the Committee. He decided to take no part in the inquiry at the time, and had not appeared there directly or indirectly. But the agent of the Liberal Party in Londonderry bad written to him on the subject, and his Colleague in the representation and himself had instructed him that they "did not think that we should interfere or take any part in the inquiry." That contradicted the statement that he had, either one way or the other, taken part in this matter. He did not know what scheme was proposed; be had not appeared, and he had instructed no counsel or solicitor to appear for him; and this arrangement with regard to Londonderry was not made at his suggestion. Of course, what he was saying did not touch the merits of the scheme which hon. Gentlemen opposite had discussed; but as regarded that scheme he would say that he thought it better it should have been made, because, in his opinion, the original scheme was wholly unsupportable from a geographical point of view, inasmuch as it did detach baronies and interfere with the compactness of the divisions, and put a range of mountains between the two baronies, as his right hon. Friend (Sir Charles W. Dilke) had stated. He believed that a proper division of the county had been made, and be should be going out of his way if he were to appear in that House to join with hon. Members opposite in condemning it. With regard to Mr. Piers White, everyone knew that be was a man of honour and integrity; and he would say, in conclusion, with respect to the scheme of the Boundary Commissioners, that he believed it was properly made; at any rate, he was prepared to acquiesce in it.

MR. T. P. O'CONNOR

said, that the hon. and learned Gentleman the Solicitor General for Ireland (Mr. Walker) was well known as a dexterous counsel, and he had proved his title to that reputation on this occasion by the defence he had just made. The hon. and learned Gentleman had said that Dr. Todd did not appear for the Liberal Party for Derry; but he had not sat down without saying that Dr. Todd represented the Liberal Party, for he had said that he had represented him, the Solicitor General for Ireland. As Louis XIV. said—"L'etat c'est moi," so the hon. and learned Gentleman might say under these circumstances—"I am the Liberal Party." The distinction the hon. and learned Gentleman sought to draw between Dr. Todd representing him and representing the Liberal Party was about as remarkable as the statement that counsel had not appeared, but only a solicitor. When the hon. and learned Gentleman had thought it necessary and proper to correct the hon. and learned Gentleman the Member for Monaghan (Mr. Healy) upon the small fact that it was a solicitor and not a barrister that had appeared, he must have been very hard up indeed for an argument with which to defend his position. He (Mr. T. P. O'Connor) did not, generally speaking, deny the right of a Member of the Government to take part in the settlement of these matters. The right hon. Gentleman the President of the Local Government Board (Sir Charles W. Dilke) had told them how, in his constituency, he had appeared and had justified, as he was entitled to justify, his action in the matter; but he (Mr. T. P. O'Connor) had ventured to interject that the right hon. Gentleman was speaking of England, while they were speaking of Ireland, and that the action of officials in England differed entirely from the action of officials in Ireland. The two things might be called by the same name; but they were, as a matter of fact, very different things indeed. Everyone knew that the official hierarchy in Ireland were able to exercise the pressure upon all proceedings in their country, judicial and otherwise, which officials could not exercise in England; and if he (Mr. T. P. O'Connor) had not been called to Order by a recent decree in the House for stating that such a thing was possible as a partizan Judge, he should say that even the Judges in Ireland were at the beck and call of the Executive Government. What did the hon. and learned Gentleman say in defence of this proposal? He professed to be shocked at the Irish Members bringing the question of religious creed into this matter. But, unfortunately, religion marked political differences in the North and in other parts of that country. He was sorry to say it, but such was the case. He hoped that the fact that religion did mark political differences would gradually disappear, and that there would be other divisions of opinion in Ireland in future than those marked out by Catholicism and Protestantism. But they must take things as they were, and unquestionably they could only tell a man's politics in Ireland from the religious creed he professed. It was not the members of the National Party in that House who had introduced this question of religious difference at all. Their whole effort and aim, in the course of the struggle they had been engaged in during the last four or five years in Ireland, had been to drive sectarian differences from the platforms, and nowhere had they made more strained and consistent efforts than in the sacred conclaves of the Churches. He thought that by this time they would have succeeded in welding men of different religious creeds into one political society, if it had not been for the malignant, and he was afraid he must say shameful, effort on the part of the Conservative Party in the North of Ireland to revive the dying and almost dead sectarian spirit in that part of the country. Therefore, no one would misunderstand him when he spoke of the difference of religious creeds being one of the elements at work in this matter. He hoped that, in spite of the fact that the Boundary Commissioners had thrown Catholics into Protestant divisions, and Protestants into Catholic divisions, for the benefit of Whigs and Tories, the only effect would be to draw to the Nationalists a considerable section of those who professed the Protestant religion. Several matters had been alluded to in the course of a discussion with regard to which he would like to say a word. The right hon. Gentleman the President of the Local Government Board had said that the hon. and learned Member for Mona- ghan (Mr. Healy) had stated that there were secret instructions issued by Lord Spencer to the Boundary Commissioners, and that the Lord Lieutenant had sedulously denied that statement. Well, his (Mr. T. P. O'Connor's) reply was that there was no necessity for issuing any instructions, either open or secret, to such Boundary Commissioners as had been appointed by Dublin Castle. Lord Spencer knew very well, when he selected the four gentlemen he did select, that there was no necessity on his part for preparing any instructions. He was perfectly sure that they would do the work of Dublin Castle without even a nod or a wink from him, or from anyone else in the Government. What was the character of these four gentlemen? He was not going to say anything about them personally, for he had no doubt that they were gentlemen of very high character indeed. But what he wished someone on the Treasury Bench to answer was this—Was it proper that in the appointments made representatives of the vast majority of the Irish people should be carefully excluded? Supposing they had been dealing with the case of England, and that the Commissioners had all been selected from the Conservative Party, would they not have had a howl from the Liberal Members of the House? Or, supposing all the Commissioners had been selected from the Liberal Party, would there not have been a howl from the Conservatives? Well, in Ireland the Nationalists outnumbered all other Parties in a way in which the Liberals could not claim to outnumber the Conservatives in England, or the Conservatives claim to outnumber the Liberals. The appointment of Boundary Commissioners in Ireland, as a matter of fact, seemed to have been regulated on the extraordinary principle that the only political Party which should not be represented should be the political Party representing three-fourths of the people of the country. When they heard the melancholy lay of the right hon. Gentleman the Postmaster General (Mr. Shaw Lefevre) on this question, he supposed they would be told that the Boundary Commissioners in Ireland were not selected for a political purpose. The right hon. Gentleman might say that; but the Irish Members would reserve to themselves perfect liberty of action as to the amount of credence they might think it necessary to give to the statement. These gentlemen were selected because they did not profess certain political principles. They might not have been selected because they were Whigs, or they might not have been selected because they were Tories; but they certainly were selected because they were not Nationalists. Who were these gentlemen? Well, two of them were Engineer officers, he believed, and he would grant for the sake of argument that they had no pronounced political opinions. But what did an Irish Nationalist mean to an Engineer officer? Why, every Parnellite meant to such an individual a rebel. Every Nationalist in Ireland was a rebel—everyone who dared to follow the lead of the hon. Member for the City of Cork (Mr. Parnell) was to an Engineer officer that which he was to the hon. and learned Member for Bridport (Mr. Warton)—that was to say, a person who had more or less trampled on the Oath of Allegiance. As a matter of fact, Engineer officers did not require any instructions from the Lord Lieutenant at all; their duty, as they would interpret it, to the Queen and the State, was to do everything they could to put down what they would call the Party of Disloyalty and Disorder in Ireland. Who were the other two Commissioners? Why, there was Mr. Bourke, an Inspector of the Local Government Board, and to Government officials, as well as to Engineer officers, of course a Parnellite was a rebel. Mr. Bourke could, of course, be depended upon for doing what he could to weaken the Party of Disorder without instructions from the Lord Lieutenant. Then there was Mr. Piers White, who might be called the pièce de resistance in this matter. The moment the Irish Members raised any objection to the Boundary Commissioners, the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Local Government Board (Sir Charles W. Dilke), and the right hon. Gentleman the Postmaster General, both got up in the most solemn and serious manner and declared that Mr. Piers White was a Roman Catholic gentleman, as if the Irish Members did not know that some of the bitterest and worst enemies of Ireland and her national rights were respectable Roman Catholic gentlemen. Why, if there were no respectable Roman Catholic gentlemen in Ireland— if there were no bad Irishmen, they would have settled the Irish Question to their satisfaction long ago. What was Mr. Piers White? An eminent lawyer, no doubt; a Queen's Counsel, a man who had, he believed, a very large practice at the Bar. In fact, one of the last occasions on which he had seen the learned gentleman was as leader—he might say as bare leader—to his hon. and learned Friend the Member for Monaghan (Mr. Healy) in a case in which he (Mr. T. P. O'Connor) himself had some interest, and nothing could exceed the discretion and ability with which Mr. Piers White conducted his case. So eminent was Mr. Piers Whyte that he performed the same function to the Government in Ireland as the right hon. Gentleman the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (Mr. Trevelyan) was once reported to perform to the Government in general—that was to say, he acted as maid of all work. He got all the jobs which were going which could not be attended to by the Law Officers of the Crown. Mr. Piers White, amongst other things given him to do, had been sent down to Derry on a previous occasion, and his action there was such as ought to have incapacitated him in the eyes of every impartial man from ever going within 50 miles of any disputed matter in Derry again. What did he do on that occasion? There had been a riot in Derry—a most unprovoked and shameful riot. Because the then Lord Mayor of Dublin (Mr. Dawson) had ventured to lecture to his co-religionists and brother politicians, he was sat upon by the Protestant Orangemen. This respectable Irish gentleman was sent down to inquire into the matter, and he had given all the merit to the Orange Tory mob, and had thrown all the blame upon his co-religionists. In his Report the learned gentleman said—"Mr. O'Donnell, solicitor, and others represented the Nationalists;" and he put the word Nationalists in inverted commas, after the style affected by The Dublin Daily Express. He acted under the delusion that those who called themselves Nationalists could only be described with the shameful and sarcastic addition of inverted commas. Mr. Piers White was, in fact, as anti-National as anyone in the House could possibly be. The triumph of the National Party was just as obnoxious to Mr. Piers White as it was to the right hon. and learned Gen- tlemen who represented the Irish Conservative Party on the Front Opposition Bench at the present moment (Mr. Gibson and Mr. Plunket)—in fact, Mr. Piers White belonged to the class of gentlemen who could never forget their Party, because they had been banished for ever from the political platforms of Ireland and from that House. In fact, he was sure Mr. Piers White would greatly prefer the time when an Irish constituency and seat in that House was the path of the dirt of corruption, and of treason to the dignity of the Judicial Bench. What had been the effect of the operations of the Boundary Commissioners on the city of Derry? Why, to disproportion, or very much diminish, the chances of the Catholics of the place finding a Representative in that House. He agreed Avith the remarks of the hon. Member for Wexford County (Mr. Small) in the able speech he had made on this question. The hon. Member was an Ulster Catholic himself, and could speak with feeling upon this question. He had spoken of the cruelty of separating the Catholics of three parishes from their co-religionists in the barony. The hon. and learned Gentleman the Solicitor General for Ireland (Mr. Walker) had talked of the barrier of a mountain; but the hon. Member for Wexford County (Mr. Small) had very properly said there were barriers far more impassable and far more insurmountable in Derry and other parts of the North of Ireland than barriers of that kind. Did the inhabitants of these three parishes, whose convenience, forsooth, had been so consulted, object to be thrown in with their coreligionists on the other side of this mountain? Did they make any representation of the inconvenience that the mountain would cause them in going to the polling booth? Were they not, on the contrary, all protesting as one voice against being thrown in with men of a different creed to themselves? The hon. Member for Sligo (Mr. Sexton) had reminded him (Mr. T. P. O'Connor) that these people could have a temporary polling booth constructed for them on one side of the mountain, and that was perfectly true. But the barrier was not the mountain in that part of Ireland. The barrier was one of religious dissension and consequent political differences. He thought that in this matter the action of the Boundary Commissioners had been something horribly cruel. He did not envy those hon. Members who would have to fight the Ulster constituencies. He certainly should not go through a contest in any of these places if he could possibly avoid it. Those who had the small, but disagreeable, experience that he had had on one occasion, marching, as he did, between two companies of soldiers and a large body of police drawn up at the railway station amidst a shower bath of bricks, would know that an election in the North of Ireland was about as ugly a business as any political man could be called upon to face. But in the future what would be the state of things when the Catholics, instead of being left alone, would be mixed up in this way with Protestants? If the Catholics had been congregated into one district, elections would have taken place in peace and quietness; but now there would be every incentive and stimulus to horrible political excitement, and a terrible disproportion would be established between the Catholics and the Protestants in the North of Derry. He did not exaggerate when he said that the lives of the Catholics would scarcely be safe. He did not know how the Government would be able to cope with the difficulty, although, of course, it would be their duty to protect those who were likely to suffer. An hon. Friend of his suggested that they would have to add an additional sum to the Vote in order to meet the expenses of the police. On the present occasion, he thought the Irish Members had made as reasonable a demand as had been made during the whole discussion of this question of the Seats Bill. The proceedings of the Boundary Commissioners had been most unjust and unfair; they had acted in the interests of the so-called Loyal Party in Ireland. One would have thought that by this time the Government of this country and all English Parties would have become alive to the fact that injustice was the best way to compel and extend a spirit of disloyalty amongst the Irish people. The only hope of the Irish Members was that their protest, even if it were futile so far as that Assembly was concerned, would be heard and attended to outside, and that it would give every true Nationalist in Derry, and in other parts of Ireland, another argument in favour of putting an end to the revolting system by which Irish rights were at the mercy of English jerrymandering and trickery.

MR. T. D. SULLIVAN

said, it was, perhaps, useless to prolong the discussion—no good result seemed likely to be derived from it. They were appealing here to no tribunal. They had no verdict to expect from the Assembly on this question; because, as he had said on a previous occasion, the matter was one which had been already squared and settled between the two chief Parties in that House. The question they were now debating was a foregone conclusion, and nothing that hon. Members on those (the Irish) Benches could say would tend to alter it in the slightest degree. Nevertheless, they felt it their duty to make their protest against the arrangements which had been made in Ireland by the Boundary Commissioners, which the Irish Members, and he trusted the Committee, now knew were exceedingly unfair and dishonest to the National Party in that country. It was impossible for any impartial man, English or Irish, who had paid the slightest attention to the course of this discussion, not to see that in the North of Ireland, when the Commissioners reached debateable ground, they accepted the proposals of, and gave heed to, the arguments and representations put before them by the anti-National Party, and entirely disregarded there presentations and claims of the National Party. The evidence upon that point was conclusive. How was it possible that the anti-National Party could be right in every one of their proposals?—and yet in every case their views had been acceded to. One could understand it if, in laying their cases before a fair tribunal, two or three or four decisions were given in their favour, and here and there others were given against them; but in these cases hon. Members were face to face with the remarkable fact that in every instance, with scarcely an exception, the claims of the anti-National Party had been accepted by the Commissioners, while the claims and pleadings of the National Party had been given to the winds. Not only was that the case, but, as had been already stated in the Committee, whenever the Nationalists objected to the schemes of the Commissioners, or to the schemes of the Tory Party, their objections went for nothing. Whenever the Nationalists had agreed with the Com- missioners' schemes, and had said they would take no action in the matter—whenever the representatives of the National Party, in reply to the question—"Do you think this is a fair arrangement?" said—"We could wish for something a little better, but we do not expect to have everything exactly as we wish it, and therefore we do not object"—did they think the Commissioners had acted upon their own suggestion? Not they. Directly the Nationalists took up that course of action and seemed to be satisfied with the arrangement, the Commissioners appeared to lose confidence in their original scheme, and at once proceeded to alter it. These were plain and patent facts, and the conclusion to which they pointed must be obvious to every Member of the Committee. The hon. and learned Gentleman the Solicitor General for Ireland was an able lawyer and knew the value of evidence. Eight well he knew the value of the evidence produced in this debate by the Nationalist Members. He knew that it was irresistible. He knew that if he had such strong evidence in every case in which he was engaged in Ireland for the Crown he would be able invariably to secure a conviction. Aye, on evidence less cogent and conclusive than that produced by the Nationalists in these cases, men had been hung in Ireland. But they had further proof of the fact that the Orange or anti-National Party in the North of Ireland had been unfairly benefited by the revised schemes of the Commissioners. Her Majesty's Government had been charged with a desire to make peace with their enemies and opponents in various parts of the world. They had made peace with the Boers, and they were now going to scuttle out of the Soudan. But they had done more than that; they had made Peace with the Orangemen of the North of Ireland. There was not a word or a whisper against the scheme of the Boundary Commissioners in the North of Ireland, for the reason that the anti-Nationalists had got all they claimed. The Government, through their Commissioners, had made a complete surrender to this Party, and in this way peace had been purchased from the anti-National Party and the Orange and Emergency men of the North; but they had yet to learn whether the peace of Ireland would be pro- moted by the surrender to this Party. For himself, he did not think it would. He was of opinion that, by these unfair arrangements, a fund of trouble had been stored up both for Ireland and for England too. The arrangements, he felt convinced, would lead to the continuation of strife and heartburnings, because the consciousness was in the minds of the National Party that they had been unjustly treated, and that the divisions had been made without right and justice in consequence of the partizanship and political bigotry of the Commissioners appointed to deal with the matter. A good deal had been said about Catholics and Protestants; but he wished to say, and he believed the Committee recognized the fact, that the Irish Members had really no sectarian feeling in the matter at all. This was not a question of creed. The Irish Members merely asked for political justice and fair play in these arrangements, and they had not got it. Still they meant to fight a good battle for their rights in the North of Ireland, and it appeared to him that by-and-bye they would prove triumphant. However that might be, he was sure that the interests of justice and public peace and content would have been greatly advanced if the Commissioners had acted in an upright, honest, and impartial manner, instead of making a surrender to the advantage of one Party and to the disadvantage of the other.

MR. BIGGAR

said, there was a Dr. Todd, a member of the Irish Bar, and a Mr. Todd, a solicitor, and therefore it was very easy for the hon. and learned Gentleman the Member for Monaghan (Mr. Healy) to have confused one with the other. Now, the letter which was referred to by the hon. and learned Gentleman the Solicitor General for Ireland (Mr. Walker) did not faithfully represent the facts of the case as far as Mr. Todd was concerned. He (Mr. Biggar) knew very little of Mr. Todd; but this he did know—that Mr. Todd had not obtained in Derry a reputation for truthfulness. It was generally accepted that Mr. Todd's word was not to be believed. Certainly, the letter which he had written, and which the hon. and learned Solicitor General for Ireland had referred to, did not coincide with what Mr. Todd stated at the inquiry in Derry before Mr. White. Mr. Todd stated at the inquiry that he appeared for the Liberal Party, and that he had a letter from Sir Thomas M'Clure and one from the Solicitor General for Ireland, and both those Gentlemen expressed themselves dissatisfied with the scheme propounded by the Commissioners, but they approved of the scheme which he (Mr. Todd) proposed on behalf of the Liberal Party. The proposition made by Mr. Todd was that the county, instead of being divided into North and South Derry, as proposed by the Boundary Commissioners, should be divided into East and West Derry. One of the points which Mr. Todd pressed upon the Commissioner, Mr. White, was that there was great community of interest between those who lived on the Eastern side of the county of Derry. Mr. Hunter, a wholesale grocer from Coleraine, was called to show that he was selling goods so far South as the town of Maghera, which was in the Southern part of the county. If Mr. Hunter's evidence was of any value at all, it had a closer connection with the towns of Kilrea and Garvagh, which were now placed in the Southern Division of the county. The tendency of Mr. Hunter's trade must be towards Coleraine. He (Mr. Biggar) knew quite well that the produce of Kilrea and Garvagh—two places which had been changed from the Northern to the Southern Division of the county—was taken to Coleraine and not to Belfast. There was no community of interest with these places and the Southern part of the county such as there should be if community of interest was the ground upon which the scheme was propounded. Evidence was given by parties who lived on each side of the mountain range near to the town of Dungivan to show that the connection was very strong between the inhabitants of the two sides of the range. He was not disposed, however, to press that point too strongly on the Committee; but what he did maintain was that the proposition to take from the barony of Coleraine the part which laid North of the town of Kilrea was a most reasonable one. The argument of the Government that the Southern Division of Derry should have a larger population than the Northern part, because of the possible or probable increase of the population of the town of Coleraine and the city of Derry, was quite untenable. The increase in the population of the city of Derry could never have any influence on the voting power of the county proper, for the very reason that the liberties of Derry extended far beyond the city walls. That part of the argument, therefore, had no weight whatever, and was not entitled to any consideration. Then, with regard to the expected increase in the population of the town of Coleraine. One of the arguments adduced by the hon. Baronet the Member for Coleraine (Sir Hervey Bruce) in favour of Coleraine being allowed to retain its Member, was that Coleraine was an ancient town. It was said that this ancient town was likely to increase its population by 3,000 within a very limited time. Now, the present population was only 7,000; so that at the rate of progress in times past they would have to wait for very many generations before the population reached 10,000. Reference had been made by some of his hon. Friends to the fact that Mr. White, the Commissioner who held the inquiry in Derry, was a Catholic in religion. He (Mr. Biggar) did not like to mention questions of religion, because he believed that, in time to come, a large proportion of the non-Catholics would vote with the Catholic Nationalists. But he was informed on very good authority that this Mr. White, who was sent down by the Government to act as their agent in Derry, went over to the Conservative agent at Kingstown in 1883, and made a perfectly bogus claim to a vote—a claim which was refused by the Revising Barrister. He (Mr. Biggar) thought that the Government, when they were making selections of gentlemen to represent them, should select gentlemen of a higher character for integrity than Mr. White seemed to possess. Taking all the circumstances into account, the Government ought to amend the scheme to such an extent as would bring the populations of the Northern and Southern Divisions more alike. By the original scheme of the Boundary Commissioners there was a very fair equalization of population between the Northern and Southern parts of the county; indeed, he was disposed to regard the original divisions as impartial and honest. The divisions as finally arranged were partial and dishonest, and could not be defended in reason by anyone. Even if the divisions were altered as suggested, he believed that in both divisions there would be, according to present expectations, a majority against the popular Party; but then the divisions would be honest and reasonable, and capable of being defended. As far as compactness or any argument of that sort was concerned, the present scheme was perfectly outrageous. The Government ought to agree to a more compact and reasonable scheme, and one more in conformity with the Instructions to the Commissioners.

MR. KENNY

said, he thought that the attitude of the Government in the case of Derry was extremely unreasonable. The divisions of Derry were entirely at variance with local opinion. It was contended, in support of the scheme, that the Commissioners had been forced to follow the natural boundaries of the county. It was perfectly true, as stated by the Boundary Commissioners, that they had had regard to the fact that a range of mountains naturally divided the two divisions. But there was this to be said in reply to such a contention, that, no matter in what direction they adopted boundaries in Derry, they would have to follow more or less some range of mountains, because mountains were so numerous; no matter what course was pursued, a range of mountains might be used for the purpose of making what would be called a natural division. If the contention of the Boundary Commissioners was worth anything at all, they should, instead of running the line of demarcation Eastwards, have pursued a line further Northwards. They would then have obtained two perfectly compact divisions. Furthermore, although the Commissioners were instructed to observe as far as possible the ancient divisions of counties, they had, in the case of the county of Londonderry, set those divisions entirely aside. He could not understand how the Boundary Commissioners believed that the scheme they had proposed would command anything like general consent, for they had adopted lines which were utterly at variance with anything which would make it possible for the divisions to be considered compact. As to the names of the divisions, they were forced, owing to the lines of division pursued by the Boundary Commissioners in Ulster, to use the terms North-West Londonderry and North-East Londonderry. If, how- ever, the divisions had been made properly in accordance with the points of the compass, the names North or South or East or West Londonderry might have been used. It was perfectly clear that, owing to the peculiar position of Parties in the county, the lines pursued by the Commissioners were dictated more by political expediency than by any real regard to the Instructions issued to them by the Lord Lieutenant. Under the original scheme, it was very probable that for the Southern part of the county a Nationalist would have been returned. As soon as this was observed by the Whigs and Tories, the boundaries were altered so that the Nationalist element in the South should be split up. So strong were the Nationalists in Londonderry, that they were fully entitled to return one of the Members. The Government would do well to accept the Amendment, which he would support if his hon. and learned Friend (Mr. Healy) carried it to a division.

MR. SMALL

asked if it was not the fact that, owing to the new arrangements, the freeholders would be disfranchised for the city of Derry?

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he thought the freeholders would vote in the city as borough voters.

MR. SMALL

said, that if the right hon. Baronet would refer to the Return presented in 1883, he would find he was quite in error. The city of Derry was not a county in itself, as the right hon. Baronet seemed to imagine.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he was much obliged to the hon. Gentleman for mentioning the matter. He would make inquiries on the subject, and promise the hon. Member that the matter should be set right if a mistake had been made.

MR. HEALY

said, that this was a very important point; because, if the freeholders were to be thrown into the county from the borough, a re-arrangement of the scheme of the Commissioners would be necessitated. It was impossible to let the matter stand as it was, for 300 or 400 people would be thrown into the county. They had, in this fact, a good reason for referring the entire scheme to the Commissioners, and he thought he and his hon. Friends must press the right hon. Baronet to promise them that the whole question should be referred back to the Commis- sioners. This was not a trifling matter. A mistake had been made, and strange to say in the county for which the hon. and learned Gentleman the Solicitor General for Ireland (Mr. Walker) was Member. It was proper to assume that the voters thrown into the county would be Tories, and it would be very interesting to discover why the Commissioners had made the mistake. The right hon. Baronet had got a precedent in the case of Southwark, for referring the scheme back to the Commissioners.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he would undertake to make immediate inquiries into the matter.

MR. HEALY

said, that the chief point involved was that the voters thrown into the county would unquestionably be Tories.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

asked if the allegation of the hon. and learned Gentleman was that the Boundary Commissioners had purposely made a mistake?

MR. HEALY

said, he did not make such an allegation; but what he did maintain was that these voters, who were all Tories, would be disfranchised for the city of Derry. That was, no doubt, a very convenient thing for the hon. and learned Gentleman the Solicitor General for Ireland (Mr. Walker), who was the Member for the county. When the Nationalists had been cheated by dodges, as they had been in Donegal, Tyrone, Armagh, Derry, Belfast, and Antrim, there was no reason why they should be chary in giving their opinion. The right hon. Baronet (Sir Charles W. Dilke) had hardly met the matter fairly; he stated he would look into the matter. That was not the way he met the case of the borough of Southwark. In that case he ordered a fresh inquiry. Surely, the people of Derry were quite as much entitled to a fresh inquiry as the people of Southwark.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, that if the hon. and learned Gentleman (Mr. Healy) preferred it, he (Sir Charles W. Dilke) would ask Sir John Lambert and Sir Francis Sandford to reconsider the matter and report upon it.

MR. HEALY

said, there was an excess population in the division of 3,000, and there was no reason in the world why the figures should not be correct. The borough of Londonderry had in- creased; but as far as he could see the borough of Coleraine had not; if the population of Coleraine had increased, it had not done so by more than a score in the course of 10 years. Why should this fictitious reverence of the borough of Londonderry influence the Government? The overplus of 3,000 made a vast difference, and he appealed to the Government to bring about a balance of population.

MR. SMALL

said, the right hon. Baronet (Sir Charles W. Dilke) had expressed his readiness to reconsider the matter. That he should have time to do so, be (Mr. Small) begged to move that the Chairman should now report Progress.

Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Chairman do report Progress, and ask leave to sit again."—(Mr. Small.)

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

I will make every possible inquiry, and if I can remedy the mistake, supposing one to have been made, I will be happy to do so.

Question put.

The Committee proceeded to a Division, and the Chairman stated that he thought the Noes had it, and, his decision being challenged, he directed the Ayes to stand up in their places; and 17 Members only having stood up, he declared the Noes had it.

Question again proposed, "That the words proposed to be left out stand part of the Schedule."

MR. HEALY

said, the incident which had just occurred formed an admirable example of the way in which the Bill had been got up. The Commissioner when he went down to Derry alleged, as a reason for putting 3,000 more people into one division than into another, that the city of Londonderry would act as a counterpoise; and yet it had been shown that it was not included in the division, and that the freeholders of the city of Londonderry were excluded from the Bill altogether and deprived of their votes. The Irish Members, in calling attention to the shortcomings of the measure, were met in Committee by no single shred or scrap of reason for anything that had been done. And it had further been pointed out that the scheme for the two divisions of the county of Londonderry was among the last issued by the Commissioners, and that it carried out, upon the face of it, the same principle of chicanery which had guided the House of Commons all through. Of course, the Irish Members were powerless in that House; and when they moved to report Progress in order to afford time for further consideration, the New Rules, for the first time since they had been passed, were put in force against them in Committee, and they were called upon to stand up in their places. That was an example of the way in which important Irish questions were always treated. The Irish Members were blocked and stopped by the Government and their majority in all their endeavours to obtain justice; but, at all events, they had convicted the Government and the gentleman deputed to conduct the Boundary Inquiry at Derry, not only of malignity, but of a conspiracy to deprive the Nationalist Party of their rights. They had also shown that so far as the Commissioner himself was concerned, he was in absolute ignorance of everything he professed to know so much about.

Question put.

The Committee divided:—Ayes 59; Noes 17: Majority 42.—(Div. List, No. 116.)

On the Motion of Mr. SEXTON, the following Amendment made:—In page 102, line 1, leave out "North."

On the Motion of Sir CHARLES W. DILKE, the following Amendment made:—In page 102, at end of line 13, leave out "and."

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

, in moving, in line 14, after "Street," to insert— And in the parish of Clonhroney the townlands of Rinvanny and Cartronreagh, and in the parish of Grannard the townland of Castlenugent, explained that the object of the Amendment was to place in the Schedule three small townlands which had been omitted in the North Longford Division.

Amendment proposed, In page 102, line 14, after "Street," insert "and in the parish of Clonbroney the townlands of Rinvanny and Cartronreagh, and in the parish of Grannard the townland of Castlenugent."—(Sir Charles W. Dilke.)

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

MR. SEXTON

asked if the Amendment would alter the scheme?

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

replied in the negative. At present, these townlands were entirely omitted.

Question put, and agreed to; words inserted accordingly.

On the Motion of Mr. CALLAN, the following Amendment made:—In page 102, leave out, in line 21, the words "The Dundalk Division," and insert the words "North Louth."

MR. CALLAN

proposed an Amendment, in the North Louth Division, to insert, after "Lower Dundalk," "and the parish of Killaney, and that part of the parish of Louth included in the barony of Ardee." He said he did not anticipate any opposition on the part of the right hon. Gentleman in charge of the Bill. It was not a matter which affected Party politics in the slightest degree. He saw that the right hon. and learned Gentleman the Member for the University of Dublin (Mr. Plunket) had been speaking to the President of the Local Government Board, and he presumed that it was in reference to this Amendment. He could, however, assure the right hon. and learned Gentleman that his proposal would make no difference as to the state of Parties in the county, and that, however they might jerrymander and twist and turn the county of Louth, the result would be just the same.

MR. PLUNKET

said, the hon. Member (Mr. Callan) was under a misapprehension. He had not been speaking to the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Local Government Board in reference to this question at all.

MR. CALLAN

said, he was glad to find that his suspicion was unfounded; but he might add that no amount of jerrymandering to which the division could be subjected would prevent the return of Nationalist Members for the county of Louth, and his proposal only affected a matter which was deemed to be for the convenience of the inhabitants of the district. If hon. Members would look at the map, they would see that the parish of Killaney was 27 miles from the town of Drogheda, and only eight from the town of Dundalk, and he might almost offer a reward of £5 for every Killaney man who had ever been found in the town of Drogheda, without ever being called upon to pay the money. No Killaney man was ever found there, except, perhaps, on a fair day. He made this proposal simply on the ground of convenience to the people of Killaney, who were separated from Drogheda by a river, and if a man wished to go to Drogheda from Killaney, he would in the first place have to travel for some miles through the county of Monaghan. He hoped the right hon. Gentleman the President of the Local Government Board would accept the proposition, and would refer this point back to the Boundary Commissioners, in order that they might make report to him simply how the question stood as a matter of convenience to the people of the locality. He had no intention of pressing the Amendment now; but he would be prepared to accept the assurance of the right hon. Gentleman that the matter would be referred to the Commissioners. In return, he would assure the right hon. Gentleman that the proposal had nothing of a jerrymandering nature about it, but simply related to a matter of convenience.

Amendment proposed, In page 102, after line 27, to insert "And the parish of Killaney, and that part of the parish of Louth included in the barony of Ardee."—(Mr. Callan.)

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

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he accepted the representation of the hon. Member (Mr. Callan). So far as he could find out there was no objection whatever to the change. The district proposed to be added to the North Division was in the Northern part of the county, in the barony of Ardee; and, no doubt, the Amendment would give a clearer and a more compact boundary. The figures also would be left pretty nearly as they now were. That being so, he would be very glad to refer the matter to the Boundary Commissioners, and if the hon. Member would move his Amendment on the Report, he would have no objection to it.

MR. CALLAN

intimated that he would withdraw the Amendment on the assurance just given that it would be referred to the Boundary Commissioners, and would be accepted if it were not considered by them to be objectionable.

Amendment, by leave, withdrawn.

On the Motion of Mr. CALLAN, the following Amendment made:—In page 103, line 1, leave out the words "The Drogheda Division," and insert "South Louth."

On the Motion of Mr. KENNY, the following Amendments made:—In page 103 line 8, leave out "The," and after the word "Mayo," "Division;" in line 13, leave out "The," and after the word "Mayo," "Division;" in line 18, leave out "The," and after the word "Mayo," "Division;" and in line 23, leave out "The," and after the word "Mayo," "Division."

On the Motion of Mr. SMALL, the following Amendments made:—In page 104, line 4, leave out "The," and after the word "Meath," leave out "Division;" in line 12, leave out "The," and after the word "Meath," leave out "Division;" and in line 25, leave out "The," and after the word "Monaghan," leave out "Division."

Amendment proposed, In page 104, line 28, to leave out the words "The South Monaghan Division," in order to insert the words "South Monaghan,"—(Mr. Small,) —instead thereof.

Question, "That the words 'The South Monaghan Division' stand part of the Schedule," put, and negatived.

Question proposed, "That the words South Monaghan' be there inserted."

MR. WARTON

said, that before the Amendment was agreed to, he wished to ask the President of the Local Government Board (Sir Charles W. Dilke) what the effect of the Amendment would be? Would it not still be necessary to describe the division, when a new Writ was issued, as "The Southern Division of the county of Monaghan," so that it could not be strictly called "East" or "South?"

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, that it was intended to insert a clause on the Report to explain this and other matters. For instance, in the case of Tullamore, it would be necessary, upon the Report, to show that that was one of the divisions of King's County.

MR. SEXTON

said, there was no barony of Tullamore, and it would be impossible to call a Member by that name; but it might be convenient to call him the Member for the Tullamore Division of King's County. In regard to the objection which had been taken by the hon. and learned Member for Bridport (Mr. Warton), he saw no force in it. In this county there would be two divisions, "North" and "South," and two Members.

MR. WARTON

said, he spoke of the full title which it would be necessary to give in moving a new Writ. He was not speaking of the name which would have to be given to a Member from the Speaker's Chair.

Question put, and agreed to; words inserted accordingly.

MR. LALOR moved, in Queen's County, to describe "the Upper Ossory Division" as "Ossory" only.

Amendment proposed, In page 105, line 4, leave out the words "The Upper Ossory Division," in order to insert the word"Ossory,"—(Mr. Lalor,) —instead thereof.

Question proposed, "That the words 'The Upper Ossory Division' stand part of the Schedule."

MR. WARTON

asked what was the ground for this Amendment? He did not profess to have a very intimate acquaintance with Ireland; but he always understood that Upper Ossory was a well-known place, and that it was known by that name in order to distinguish it from Lower Ossory. By the Amendment moved by the hon. Member there would be no distinction between the two.

MR. LALOR

explained that there were both an Upper and a Lower Ossory at one time, but there was no distinction between the two now.

MR. SEXTON

said, he wished to point out to the hon. and learned Member (Mr. Warton) that those names had been recommended to the Commissioner by two eminent Members of the Tory Party, of whom Lord Castletown was one.

Question put, and negatived.

Question, "That the word 'Ossory' be there inserted," put, and agreed to.

On the Motion of Mr. KENNY, the following Amendment made:—In pages 105, line 10, leave out "The," and after the word "Leix," leave out "Division."

On the Motion of Mr. SEXTON, the following Amendments made:— In page 105, line 20, leave out "The," and after the word "Roscommon," leave out "Division;" in line 25, leave out "The," and after the word "Roscommon," leave out "Division;" in page 106, line 4, leave out "The," and after the word "Sligo," leave out "Division;" in line 9, leave out "The," and after the word "Sligo," leave out "Division;" in line 17, leave out "The," and after the word "Tipperary," leave out "Division;" in line 22, leave out "The," and after the word "Tipperary," leave out "Division;" in line 29, leave out "The West Tipperary Division," and insert "South Tipperary;" and in line 32, leave out "The," and after the word "Tipperary," leave out "Division.

Amendment proposed, In page 107, line 4, leave out "The," and after the word "Tyrone," leave out"Division."—(Mr. Small.)

Question proposed, "That the words proposed to be left out stand part of the Schedule."

MR. CALLAN

said, he desired, before the Chairman put the Amendment, to say a word in regard to the divisions of the county of Tyrone. He had understood the President of the Local Government Board (Sir Charles W. Dilke) to suggest, at an earlier part of the debate upon the Schedules of the Bill, that if it was considered desirable to give a Member to the city of Drogheda, it would be necessary to withdraw one of the Members from the county of Tyrone, and therefore the divisions of Tyrone, instead of consisting of four, would only be three. He intended to make no Motion on the subject; but he took that opportunity of intimating that on the Report it was his intention to move that one Member should be taken from the county of Tyrone and given to Drogheda. Instead of Drogheda being constituted one of the divisions of Louth, Drogheda was the only borough in Ireland which was extinguished by the Bill in regard to which a strong desire had been expressed to preserve its representation. That representation, however, could only be preserved on the Report; and he wished the right hon. Baronet the President of the Local Government Board to be in a position to give Instructions to the Boundary Commissioners, so that if the House, upon the Report, should be of opinion that the borough representation of Drogheda should be preserved, and a Member taken from the county of Tyrone, there would be the alternative of dividing Tyrone into three divisions instead of four. He did not wish to be met with the argument on the Report, presuming that the Committee was in favour of his proposition, that there was no time to do it.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, that it was out of Order to discuss, in connection with this division, what they were to do with the borough of Drogheda. He would, however, promise the hon. Member (Mr. Callan), that when the question was raised on the Report, he would not raise against the proposal the argument the hon. Member hinted at in regard to time. At the same time, he could not hold out any hope that he would be prepared to accept the proposal. All that he had said was that the town of Drogheda had a better case for having its representation continued to it than some other boroughs. But that representation could only have been continued in the event of some general agreement being arrived at; and he had no reason to suppose that there was anything like a general agreement, even among the Irish Members themselves. However, as the Committee were not upon that point now, it was not necessary to discuss it further.

MR. CALLAN

said, he did not wish to prejudice the merits of the case in any way; but all he desired was to take the first opportunity, now that they had reached the county of Tyrone, to intimate that it was his intention to make this proposal on the Report, and he certainly thought that he ought not to be met with the remark that the time was inappropriate for making the proposal. He quite accepted the statement of the right hon. Gentleman, which fully met his object in calling attention to the matter now.

Question put, and negatived; words left out accordingly.

MR. KENNY moved an Amendment for the purpose of fixing the boundaries of North Tyrone according to the original scheme of the Commissioners, instead of in the manner proposed by the Bill. He would, therefore, move, in page 107, to leave out— Strabane, Lower, and West Omagh, and so much of the barony of Strabane, Upper, as comprises the following Townlands in the Parish of Upper Bodoney, namely,—Aghalane, Ballynasollus, Bradkeel, Carnargan, Corickmore, Craigatuke, Cruckaelady, Dergbrough, Eden Back, Eden Fore, Eden Mill, Glencoppogagh, Glenga, Glashygolgan, Landa-hussy Lower, Landahussy Upper, Learden Lower, Learden Upper, Letterbrat, Lislea North, Lislea South, Lisnaereaght, Meenagarragh, Mecnagorp, Tullagherin, and Tullynadall. The effect of the Amendment would be to prevent the division of certain parishes and townlands in an objectionable manner. By the original scheme, the baronies of Stranorlar and West Omagh, which were united both commercially and physically with Lower Strabane, were connected, and the adoption of the Amendment would only have the effect of reverting to the original scheme of the Commissioners. He hoped his hon. Friend the Member for Tyrone (Mr. T. A. Dickson) would see his way to support the Amendment, and that it would also commend itself to the right hon. Gentleman in charge of the Bill (Sir Charles W. Dilke). Certainly the simplicity of the arrangement was much more complete than that of the plan now proposed, and the original scheme had also the advantage of having received general approval from the people of the county of Tyrone.

Amendment proposed, In page 107, to leave out from the word "Strabane," to the word "Tullynadall," in line 13, inclusive, and insert the words "Strabane Upper and Strabane Lower."—(Mr. Kenny.)

Question proposed, "That the words proposed to be left out stand part of the Schedule."

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he had always understood that the original scheme for the division of the county of Tyrone was not very warmly advocated by Irish Members below the Gangway opposite, and he was not informed that there was any general agreement in its favour in the locality, but, on the contrary, that the people were rather favourable to the scheme as it now stood in the Bill. The hon. Member for Ennis (Mr. Kenny), who moved the Amendment for the hon. and learned Member for Monaghan (Mr. Healy), intimated that there was a general agreement in the county in the direction of the proposal now made. But that view was not borne out by the Report of the Commissioners, and before consenting to a change, it would be necessary to have complete information as to such general agreement. In this case also the districts were principally of the same character—namely, agricultural, but they were separated by a range of mountains. The population in all the four divisions would be about the same.

MR. PLUNKET

said, that he had been consulted by his noble Friend the Member for Fermanagh (Viscount Crichton) upon this subject, and he had been asked to say a few words, as his noble Friend was not able to be present himself. Therefore, on behalf of his noble Friend and those who were interested in the county, he might say that they entertained a great objection to any alteration in the scheme after the very full and complete inquiry which had been made by the Commissioners, on the spot. The fact was that the principal towns in the baronies of West Omagh and Strabane would be separated from their natural surroundings and the district to which they were naturally attached, if the original proposal of the Commissioners had been adopted, and it was mainly on that ground that the original scheme was dropped, and this alternative scheme proposed. If any hon. Member would study the map, and the Report of the Commissioners, he would see that the original proposal would have been most inconvenient, seeing that, in point of fact, there was a mountain between two parts of one of these divisions, and the scheme, as finally adopted, would be in every way more convenient for the population. He put it entirely on the ground of the convenience of the people concerned; and, therefore, he must ask the Government to support the scheme of the Commissioners as it now stood.

MR. T. A. DICKSON

said, that he possessed an intimate knowledge of this part of the county of Tyrone, and he only wished to say that the natural division would be to put West Omagh and Lower Strabane in the same division. They were connected in everyway, both in pursuits and in religious views, and neither politically nor otherwise would it make the slightest difference. From his own knowledge, he was able to say that one division of the county of Tyrone ought to include both West Omagh and Strabane.

MR. SEXTON

said, it was quite reasonable to expect that the right hon. and learned Gentleman the Member for the University of Dublin (Mr. Plunket) would support the scheme as it appeared on the map, because the person who appeared before the Commissioners on the inquiry, and suggested the alteration of the scheme, was the representative of the Tory Party in Tyrone, which Party were represented in that House by the right hon. and learned Gentleman. The right hon. and learned Gentleman had spoken of the existence of a range of mountains; but that was becoming a threadbare argument. Anyone who had attended to the progress of the discussions upon the Bill would find that the Commissioners made use of the argument respecting the existence of a range of mountains in one way upon one occasion, and in an entirely different way upon another, and with equal facility. In Donegal, a range of mountains was no reason for bringing persons together; but in that case it was desirable not to interfere with the baronies of Raphoe and the selected preserves of the house of Hamilton. Therefore, the Commissioners attached no importance, in that instance, to the range of mountains argument. But it was altogether different here, although it might be said that the county of Tyrone consisted of mountains altogether. In one case, the Commissioners appeared to think that a range of mountains was no drawback, so they threw in a river. In another instance, one of the arguments raised was the existence of a tramway. It was pleaded that as between the boundary of West Omagh and Castlederg there was a tramway, it was therefore urged that the whole of that district should be added. In regard to compactness, there was nothing to choose between the two divisions. Anyone who would compare the red with the blue lines would see that the divisions they comprised were of equal compactness. Both were straggling, and there was not one iota of argument in favour of one more than the other on that ground. He did not expect that the right hon. Baronet the President of the Local Government Board would favour any Amendment which had been placed on the Paper by the hon. and learned Mem- ber for Monaghan (Mr. Healy), because the professional gentleman who appeared before the Commissioner at Omagh said he appeared for one of the Members for Tyrone; and he (Mr. Sexton) presumed that he meant the hon. Member opposite. Of course, that learned gentleman said he thought the scheme proposed by the Commissioners was the best that could be suggested; both as to equalization of population, and in following the lines of the baronies most closely. He said, further, that it had its defects, because West Omagh and Lower Strabane would be together. Under these circumstances, he (Mr. Sexton) was not surprised to find the hon. Member for Tyrone (Mr. T. A. Dickson) now supporting his scheme. The right hon. Baronet in charge of the Bill said that it had not been shown that the feeling of the inhabitants of the county was favourable to the Amendment. That was not so, and it proved more conclusively than any other case which had yet come before the Committee that when the Nationalists, with extreme frankness, ventured to express an approval of any scheme, from that moment there was no chance whatever of its being adopted. It was condemned from the moment they gave it their fatal approval. Mr. Reynolds appeared for the National Party before the Commissioner, and he certainly did not speak in complimentary terms of the alteration proposed by Mr. Symonds, and he said he did not think the Commissioners would pay much attention to it, because it was proposed only in the interest of an expiring Party. Dean Byrne, a well-known clergyman, appeared before the Commissioner, and also expressed his unqualified approval of the Commissioners' original scheme; and the parish priest of Donoghmore (the Rev. Mr. Macarthy) said that he was chairman of a meeting of delegates from the entire county, which was held at Omagh, and at which the plan of the Commissioners, and the alternative plan, was discussed, when an unanimous opinion was arrived at to abide by that of the Commissioners. What did the right hon. Baronet say to that as an expression of the opinion of the locality? All these three gentlemen—Mr. Reynolds, Dean Byrne, and Father Macarthy—were in favour of the scheme originally put forward by the Commissioners, and the last gentleman was able to say that the unanimous voice of the assembled delegates, representing the various parishes of the county, was in favour of it. There certainly could be no political object in resisting the Amendment. Take the test of creed, which was no test at all in this case, because whatever Protestants might vote with the Nationalist Party no Catholic would vote against them; but even upon that test, there were in these baronies 27,000 Catholics and 21,000 Protestants.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, the figures given by the hon. Member for Sligo were not accurate.

MR. SEXTON

said, he took the calculation from The Belfast Morning News, and he believed it to be approximately correct.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, the numbers were 31,000 and 19,000.

MR. SEXTON

said, that made the case still more favourable from his point of view; but taking the most favourable view for the other side, let them divide, sub-divide, and cut up these four baronies how they liked in order to form two divisions, it was perfectly obvious that two Nationalist candidates would be returned, unless the Whig and Tory Party had a great deal of money to spare, and did not care how they spent it. There was only one division, in which the Protestants numbered 24,000, and the Catholics and non-Protestants 23,000, in which there could possibly be the semblance of a decent fight. He, therefore, did not see why the opinions of the people of the locality should not receive attention at the hands of the Committee, especially as the interests of no political Party would be advanced by adhering to the proposal put down in the Bill.

MR. HEALY

said, it must have been a great satisfaction to the right hon. Baronet in charge of the Bill (Sir Charles W. Dilke) to hear that for the Northern Division of Tyrone there would be a Catholic Member. But, unfortunately, there were 80 per cent of Catholics in the county, and by no possible means could the division be jerrymandered. The Commissioners had found it necessary to bring two or three baronies together, and accordingly they had used up the parishes in a very remarkable way. He called attention to the fact that they had taken 22 Protestant townlands out of the barony of Strabane Upper, and put thorn into the North Tyrone Division. Of course, that was pure accident; but all the other townlands were left in the Mid Tyrone Division, where they were not wanted. In whatever direction one looked there was shown the same disposition to cheat the Catholics. He was not suspicious or afraid of the politics of his fellow-countrymen; on the contrary, he looked for their votes in favour of the Nationalist Party at the next General Election; he merely pointed to facts, and left the public to draw their own conclusions from them. It appeared that three Liberal gentlemen had put up as candidates for Tyrone County; and he would be glad to know if the right hon. Baronet could explain how it was that Andrew Dunn, of London, expected to be returned, as well as Mr. Herdman and the hon. Gentleman opposite (Mr. T. A. Dickson)? Seeing that there were 80 per cent of Catholics in the county, the hopes of the hon. Gentleman seemed to surpass all notions of probability. The scheme of the Government presented the fact that at the inquiry the Liberals and Tories were once more in coalition, and the Nationalists on the other side. They adopted the proposition of Messrs. Moore and Wilson; Mr. Wilson supported Mr. Moore's scheme, and Mr. Simmonds supported the other. He observed that the hon. Member for Tyrone was not as hopeful over this coalition as were some of his friends; but he (Mr. Healy) would inform him, as he had taken the trouble to inform the other Member for the county, that not a single Whig would get in over the whole of Ireland, unless by the goodwill and pleasure of the Party to which he (Mr. Healy) belonged. Under the new electoral scheme, the Liberals and Conservatives would not be able to secure more than 20 seats in Ireland, of which the Conservatives would obtain nine; but, independently of the Party represented on those Benches, Liberals would not be returned for the remaining 11 seats. It would not be forgotten that the hon. Member for Tyrone had used his influence with the Government to support the scheme of the Commissioners. The hon. Member had already received some proofs that in his county the Nationalists had been able, to some extent, to make a good fight even before the franchise was extended; and yet he ventured to come forward at that time and support this scheme, knowing, as he did, that the people who put him in for Tyrone were in the bitterest manner opposed to it. The hon. Gentleman would not deny that it was by Catholic votes he held a seat in that House—he would not deny it, because he (Mr. Healy) regretted to say that, at the time of his election, the Catholic Party supported him instead of the Nationalist candidate; and, therefore, it appeared to him that the hon. Gentleman showed considerable indiscretion in getting up in that House to support the Government in their scheme, seeing that at the next election he would have to ask for the support of the very men whose Representatives were antagonistic to the scheme proposed. He, no doubt, expected to get the whole of the popular Party with him in South Tyrone; but he might be assured that his support of the Government scheme would not be forgotten at the next election, because in the minds of the popular Party that scheme was based on fraud. They had a right to expect that hon. Gentlemen who represented the Nonconformists of the North of Ireland would have made some return for the support they received in the past; but they had shown themselves ungrateful, they had trampled under foot the favours received at their election, and they had said—"As long as we were able we used you; and now that we have you in our power we shall back up the Government in putting you down—we have done with you, and we expect in future to do without you." But, as he had said, no single Whig would get into Parliament for the North of Ireland. He and his hon. Friends would not forget the treatment they had received in connection with this Bill.

MR. T. P. O'CONNOR

said, he had been astonished, in taking up this scheme, to find that even in a county with 80 per cent of Catholics, the Boundary Commissioners had not scrupled so to jerrymander the constituency as to takeaway nearly half the Catholics from it. His hon. and learned Friend (Mr. Healy) had been severe upon the hon. Member for Tyrone (Mr. T. A. Dickson); but he (Mr. T. P. O'Connor) would call attention to the fact that he was under the impression that a sort of coalition had been formed between the Tories and the Whigs in the North of Ireland. He did not know whether that was true or not; but he remained satisfied that the Liberal Member for Tyrone would be no party to such coalition. If he understood the hon. Gentleman rightly, he repudiated such connection, and denied it entirely, and he was glad that he had disclaimed an alliance of the kind. When some hon. Members on those Benches pointed out that the Catholics in Derry had a right to one of the seats for the county, the right hon. Baronet (Sir Charles W. Dilke) got up and said that the Protestants were in a considerable majority, and that it was by no means unnatural that they should have two seats; but now, when they came to Tyrone, where the Catholics were in a majority of 80 per cent, the right hon. Baronet considered it not at all extravagant that the right of the Catholics to two seats should be considerably endangered. This was, he believed, the last question that would be seriously debated on this Bill in Committee, and he regretted that they must wind up the discussion by saying that wherever an opportunity had' presented itself, the Catholics had been filched of a great portion of what belonged to them.

MR. CALLAN

said, as a Railway Director of many years' experience, he had heard with astonishment the statement that one reason for placing part of the barony of Strabane in the position which it occupied was that a range of mountains separated it from the barony with which it ought to have been united. What justification Mr. Macpherson had for putting the barony into North Tyrone altogether passed his comprehension. Probably he was a Scotchman, and wanted to give his Scotch friends a chance for Tyrone. At any rate, he would challenge the hon. Member opposite (Mr. T. A. Dickson) to got up and justify the arrangement on any but political and religious grounds. If on his honour he considered it a fair division, he would accept his declaration to that effect; but, until he so declared, he (Mr. Callan) should regard it as one of the most disgraceful divisions that had been made in the country.

MR. T. A. DICKSON

said, the hon. and learned Member for Monaghan (Mr. Healy) had not the serious cause of complaint with regard to the scheme which he would have had if the baronies of Dungannon had been separated.

Question put.

The Committee divided:—Ayes SO; Noes 18: Majority 32.—(Div. List, No. 117.)

Amendment negatived.

On the Motion of Mr. SMALL, the following Amendments made:—In page 107, line 14, leave out "The," and after the word "Tyrone," leave out "Division;" in line 17, leave out "The," and after the word "Tyrone," leave out "Division;" and in line 22, leave out "The," and after the word "Tyrone," leave out "Division."

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, that two townlands were in a detached portion of West Waterford, whilst the rest of the division was in East Waterford. These two divisions in West Waterford contained only 25 people in all, so that it was not a very important matter.

Amendment proposed, in page 108, line 6, after "Clonea," insert "(except the townlands of Ballyrandle and Kilgrovan)."—(Sir Charles W. Dilke.)

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

MR. HEALY

said, that with regard to this Amendment, he wished once more to ask the Committee exactly how they stood? It was monstrous that they should have in a Bill such words as these— And the barony of Decies without Drum (except so much as is comprised in Division No. 2, as herein described;.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, these places would not be shown on the maps, as they were detached portions; and they would not be shown in the clause.

MR. HEALY

asked whether a map of the entire country would be prepared by the Government, showing the divisions on a large scale in the manner in which the districts could be divided in the Ordnance map?

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, the question was one of cost. He had done all he could to meet the hon. and learned Gentleman's complaint that the public would not be able to procure the necessary map by purchasing the Returns containing all the information. He was afraid the hon. and learned Member would not be able to get what he wanted without a very strong impression on the part of the House in favour of it. The expense would be very great.

MR. CALLAN

said, that there seemed to be a difficulty in the way of spending a little money in order to convenience hon. Members. The Government, however, did not hesitate to spend any amount for the acquisition of American steamers in the case of a threatened war.

MR. HEALY

said, that if they could not get these maps published for general use, at any rate the Government might see that one was prepared for use in the Library, with all divisions marked out on it. It would not be necessary to prepare a new map, but some Engineer officer could very well mark out on the old Ordnance Survey map the divisions as they had been laid down in the Bill.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

I think that can be done. I will consult with those officials who would have to perform the duty on the matter.

MR. HEALY

Will the right hon. Gentleman let us have a map showing the English divisions marked in the same way?

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

Yes, it could be done; but, probably, when the map was prepared, it would not show such small details as those which we are now discussing.

MR. CALLAN

said, the right hon. Gentleman (Sir Charles W. Dilke) might put himself into communication with the publishers of United Ireland, who had prepared a map showing the manner in which seats would be distributed in Ireland. He did not suppose that the hon. Members for Longford (Mr. Justin M'Carthy) and the City of Cork (Mr. Parnell), who were part owners of that paper, would have any objection to give the right hon. Baronet the used-up wood-cuts of these maps so as to enable him to supply hon. Members with what they required. He thought it did not look seemly on the part of the Representatives of a large Department of the Government to talk about expenses in matters of this kind, seeing that a spirited newspaper had set them the example of publishing these maps as a supplement, and supplying them gratis. If the right hon. Gentleman could not get a copy of this newspaper, and of the maps, in order to form an opinion upon them, he (Mr. Callan) should be happy to supply him with one. It would only cost him 1d. He could supply the right hon. Baronet with one of these maps, showing the divisions of a county. It was a farce to talk here of expense——

THE CHAIRMAN

Order, order!

MR. HEALY

Rule!

MR. ACKERS

I do not rise to a point of Order——

MR. CALLAN

If the hon. Member does not rise to a point of Order, he has no right to rise at all, for I am in possession of the Committee. I was suggesting that it would be desirable, and that there would be no objection in regard to expense, if we were supplied with these United Ireland maps. If we were supplied with proper maps, it would tend to shorten the discussion on Report. I do not suppose the Treasury would object to the plan proposed.

THE CHAIRMAN

The Question is, "That those words be there inserted."

MR. ACKERS

again rose, and

MR. CALLAN

also rose.

THE CHAIRMAN

The speech of the hon. Member for Louth (Mr. Callan) is irrelevant, and I must ask him to resume his seat.

MR. HEALY

You have not declared it.

THE CHAIRMAN

I declare it now, and I ask the hon. Member to resume his seat.

MR. ACKERS

said, he wanted to make an appeal to the right hon. Gentleman in charge of the Bill to reconsider the question of maps. In reply to the request of the hon. and learned Member for Monaghan (Mr. Healy), the right hon. Gentleman had said that everything the Committee desired had been done, and that a full statement had been published; but he (Mr. Ackers) was happy to find that the hon. and learned Member for Monaghan was not satisfied with that, and had again raised the point. The hon. and learned Member was very anxious to get that which, no doubt, the Committee was also desirous of obtaining—namely, maps showing all the alterations made in the divisions, so that at the end of this great Bill, which would be one of the greatest Acts passed for many years, they might have an exact record of the divisions.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he should be very glad to give further consideration to the matter; and he had already told the hon. and learned Mem- ber opposite (Mr. Healy) that he should give the subject further attention. If they were to have county maps, he thought the alterations which would have to be made would not be very numerous. By far the larger number of alterations had been made in the boroughs. Of course, the Committee would bear in mind that the set of maps now in the hands of hon. Members did not show exactly all the divisions in the county. They only showed the divisions that the Commissioners had had to divide. Therefore, a set of maps prepared on the lines of the set already in the hands of hon. Members, showing the alterations effected in Committee, would not give a complete view of the whole case. Sixty-eight maps had been circulated in a large book, showing the proposals of the Commissioners; but many of those had not been adopted.

MR. HEALY

said, that the Ordnance map relating to Ireland was so minute that even the fences in different fields were shown upon it. If a tenant altered a fence, the alteration was shown on the next Ordnance map prepared.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, that would apply to the Ordnance Survey map, which he had said might be put up in the Library. He was not sure that the suggestion could be complied with; but it would be done if practicable.

Question put, and agreed to; words inserted accordingly.

MR. P. J. POWER

said, that, no doubt, the hon. and learned Member for Monaghan would be content with the undertaking just given by the right hon. Baronet. They now came to an Amendment relating to the county of Waterford, which, he was happy to think, would not meet with opposition from any quarter. He did not think it would offend either the Nationalists, or the Whigs, or the Tories, and he proposed it merely with the view of the convenience of the inhabitants of the parish of Seskinan. The Boundary Commissioners, in following their Instructions, had divided the county of Waterford into two divisions, and in making those divisions they had had regard to population. They had endeavoured to make the population of the two divisions as nearly as possible alike; and to carry out that object they had had to cut up this parish of Seskinan. By this pro- cess they had made the population of West Waterford to exceed that of East Waterford by 635; and the Amendment which he proposed had for its object the placing of a part of Seskinan, which the Commissioners had put into East Waterford, into West Waterford, increasing the difference that already existed to about 1,435. The Committee would naturally ask, why not place the portion of Seskinan, which was in the West Waterford District, in the East Waterford District, thereby equalizing the population in the respective divisions? But he wished to point out to the Committee that all the interests of the parishioners of Seskinan lay in the West Waterford District—all their market interests, their fair interests, their dispensary interests, and their Poor Law Unions. As he had said before, the Amendment he proposed to give effect to would be of the greatest possible convenience to the inhabitants of the parish, and would not make the least difference to any particular Party. In moving this proposal, he felt that it was quite unnecessary to point out to the right hon. Baronet in charge of the Bill what the effect of it would be. The matter was one of detail, and the right hon. Baronet had made himself such a perfect master of every detail of the most complicated matter contained in the measure that it was quite unnecessary for any Member in any part of the House to point out what the effect of any Amendment would be. He trusted hon. Members on both sides of the House would see the reasonableness of the Amendment he proposed, and that the Government, as represented by the right hon. Baronet, would have no difficulty in agreeing to it.

Amendment proposed, in page 108, line 7, leave out "Seskinan."—(Mr. P. J. Power.)

Question proposed, "That the word proposed to be left out stand part of the Schedule."

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, that in the case of an Amendment relating to Louth, moved by the hon. Member for that place (Mr. Callan), there was no objection raised to the proposal, and he had not heard any objection raised to the proposal the hon. Member had now made. He should be very glad to accept it, provided that before the Be- port the Boundary Commissioners did not offer any strong objection to it. So far as he knew, there was no objection to it. It would possess the advantages the hon. Member had pointed out; but it would have the drawback of making the population rather less equal than it was at present. As the hon. Member had stated, the population of the Western Division would be 44,000, while that of the Eastern Division would be only 39,500 odd. He had no other objection to the proposal; and if, before Report, no one raised a protest against it, he should propose to take the same course with regard to it as he had taken in the case of Louth.

MR. CALLAN

said, that supposing the Amendment was agreed to by the Boundary Commissioners as to East Waterford, what would be the result? The Amendment was, in page 108, line 7, to leave out "Seskinan;" and if Seskinan was left out, it would not be included anywhere. Unless it were included here, the inhabitants of Seskinan would be disfranchised.

MR. P. J. POWER

said, the hon. Member was quite wrong.

MR. CALLAN

No; unless it was included here in West Waterford, the people in Seskinan would not be able to vote at all.

MR. WARTON

said, he should like to make an observation here, because the mistake which the hon. Member who brought forward the Amendment had fallen into was the result of the eccentric drafting of the Bill, to which he had had occasion to call attention before, and to which the right hon. Gentleman in charge of the Bill so persistently adhered. The hon. Member below the Gangway (Mr. Callan) seemed to be under the impression that if Seskinan disappeared from East Waterford, it would go nowhere. If they took the trouble to look at another part of the Bill they would find that Seskinan would go into West Waterford, because the barony in which it was situated formed part of that division. This was one of the results of neglecting to show the divisions in the Bill. The Bill had been drawn in a most slovenly manner. ["Order, order!"] It was not out of Order to say that. He was entitled to say that the Bill had been drafted in a slovenly manner. He had said it before, and he would probably have to say it again; and he should certainly not be put down by any amount of roaring. The draft of the Bill had given great dissatisfaction to other hon. Members besides himself. He thanked the right hon. Baronet for intimating that, in all probability, the House would be supplied with a Return of all the integral parts of parishes and divisions as finally laid down in the Bill; he thanked the right hon. Baronet for the promise, and also for the performance when he made it. He wished to point out that when they were put in this position, that certain parishes forming part, say, of a barony or Petty Sessional Division, were put into one division of a county, and they found that that division was expressed in another division of the county in very general words, such as "except so much as is comprised in Division No. 2," it would be convenient to have that division in which the parishes were named first, stated first without regard to No. 1 or No. 2. References of this kind had no meaning or sense, and only served to disfigure the Bill. It seemed to him that it would have been far better to have taken the East Waterford Division first, for then they would have the places relating to the barony of Decies set out; and they would then have had, secondly, the remaining part of the parishes mentioned in a less general manner put in. If they were to have this style of drafting it was as well to mitigate, as far as possible, its evil effects when they had the chance. They should do this in dealing fully, in the first instance, with the divisions in which the parishes were enumerated; and, secondly, in dealing with the divisions in which only, so to speak, the surplus part of the parishes were inserted. He mentioned this because it was possible that before Report the right hon. Baronet might desire to change the order of these places in the Waterford Divisions.

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

said, he should be happy to consider the suggestion of the hon. and learned Member.

MR. P. J. POWER

said, that as to the number he had stated, he should like to inform the right hon. Baronet that he was not positive in saying that 800 were the exact figures. He had not been able to ascertain the number precisely before leaving Waterford; but he had been told that that was the number, or about it. As to the question raised by the hon. Member for Louth (Mr. Callan) with regard to disfranchising a portion of the parish, if the Amendment were carried——

SIR CHARLES W. DILKE

Oh, that is all right; we understand that point.

MR. P. J. POWER

Yes; I think that question need not be gone into.

Amendment, by leave, Withdrawn.

THE CHAIRMAN

The hon. Member for the City of Dublin (Dr. Lyons) has the following Amendment on the Paper:—Part 3, page 109, line 26, insert,—"Royal University of Ireland Two Members." I have considered the Amendment, and I must say that as this is a Schedule relating to counties, a proposal to insert in it a provision constituting a new University constituency is not in Order.

DR. LYONS

said, that the Amendment in question appeared in the Paper through an inadvertence for which he was not at all responsible. He merely wished to give Notice that he would put the Amendment on the Paper for consideration on Report.

Further Amendments made.

Schedule, as amended, agreed to.