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-----=----A QUESTION OF '…

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-=- A QUESTION OF PRIVILEGE." In the House of Commons, on Monday night, Mr. Newdegate rose to call attention to a matter personal to himself, and likewise touching the privileges of the House. During the recess a great number of state- ments had appeared with resptct to his conduct, and to the observations he made in moving for the Select Committee of Inquiry respecting monastic and con- ventual institutions and it was surprising that writers in newspapers should venture to assail a member of that House in a manner of which he would now pro- ceed to give one instance. On Saturday last the Tablet contained the following statement: We hefr that in the clubs people are beginning to ask how is it :htt Mr Newdegate cAn stifftir the lie to be given' him as he has by Sir Charles Clifford, Father Gordon. Mr. Langdale, and others, and net come forward hkearrau to attempt to substantiate his charges or to retract them." The House would observe that tais was not only a libel in itself, but a compendium of libels, and that therefore, it constituted a gross breach of privilege. He now rose to state that nothing should induce him to take any action out of the House, either in courts of how or elsewhere, in rtference to statement* based on observations of his own bearing on a matter which the House had appointed a Select Committee to consider. He felt it due to himself to state that, ifi deference to the privileges of the House, he would be tempted by no insult to submit this matter either directly or indirectly to any other tribunal than that the appointment of which the House had been pleased to order. He ventured to make this statement because in 1865 he proposed the appointment of a committee of a somewhat similar character, which was not agreed to, but he was afterwards pursued by these same persons in the most insulting manner, with a view, he was convinced, to deter him from the performance of his duty in that House by endeavouring to force him to seek some other tribunal not appointed by the House for the solution of the question he raised and thereby make him waive his privilege as a member of the House. This deterring system was not only attempted against himself, but also, he understood, against; wit. nesses whose testimony might be needed for the inquiry, and it seemed to him to be a direct and deliberate breach of the privileges of the House. He was pre- pared to uphold the truth of the statements which he had made in the House, but he had committed one error which he now desired to correct. He stated on moving for the Select Committee on the 29th of March that the daughter of a respectable person in this town was persuaded to enter a convent at Hammersmith before she was 16 years old. That was an error, for the convent referred to was at Finchley. He would not now go into the reasons which led to the confusion but he hoped the House would excuse his explaining that it was in deference to the privileges of the House that he refrained from taking any further steps in reference to the gross libel he had called attention to.

PROCLAMATION OF THE EMPEROR…

THE SEFTON LIBEL CASE.

IRISH EMIGRATION. ---

<©ar Jnnùnri Cartrspfln&jitt.

CAPTURED AND MURDERED BY BRIGANDS.

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"PINDER v. POTTER."

A QUESTION AS TO BUGS.

UlisttlliiRMiK Jmtfllifprt,