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  • June 1, 1796
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The Freemasons' Magazine, June 1, 1796: Page 50

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    Article HOUSE OF COMMONS. ← Page 4 of 4
Page 50

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

House Of Commons.

A message was brought from the Lords , signifying that they had agreed to a Bill for dissolving the Million Bank , and dividing the stock among the Members of that Association , and to certain other Bills . Mr . Jekyll rose to put a question to the Minister . Being near the end of our Parliamentary existence , if it was not impertinent in him , he would wish to ask the Minister a question relative to certain accounts which had reached this country , viz . that the King of Sardinia had been so reduced as to sue for peace from the French Republicand to shew them the sincerity of his intentionshad put

, . , them in possession of two of his strongest fortresses . Under these circumstances , he wished to know whether it was the intention of Ministers to remit him the 2 oo , oooI . as a subsidy ? This he did not state invidiously , but , on the contrary , lamented the situation this unfortunate Prince had been reduced from his being drawn in as a party to act in this miserable contest . He therefore asked Ministers , whether they meant to transmit it in the shape of a subsidy ? if sent in the shape of relief , that would be another affair . " Mr . Pitt could nothe saidexactly what miht be the situation of affairs

, , say g in Italy , but he believed that the fortune of war might have placed that Monarch in so critical a situation as to render him no longer a party in it ; but that news was of so recent a date as to induce him to question the authenticity of it . ' Mr . Jekyll then said , that he hoped the Right Hon . Gentleman did not mean to send him the subsidy until this news should be confirmed . On the third reading of the Bill for laying a Tax on the Collateral Succession to real Estates , a conversation took place between Mr . Grey , Mr . Francis , and the Ministerafter which three divisions took

, place ; the first was on the question that this Bill be read a third time , when the numbers stood , for the third reading 4 8 , against it 4 6 . Mr . Sheridan now moved an amendment , that it be read a third , time that day three months : against the amendment 54 , for it 53 . The question was then put that the Bill be read a third time on the morrow , for the third reading 54 , against it 54 . The Speaker then threw in his casting voice on the side of the Minister . Mr . Pitt saidthat he would agree to the Amendment on the morrowand

aban-, , don the Bill , as it seemed to be unpalatable to the House , and that he would substitute other taxes in its stead . Adjourned , Friday 13 . The Hat Duty , Dairy Windows , Dog Tax , and several other Bills , read a third time and passed . The Real Estate Bill , postponed ' for three months , and of course given up . The Wet Dock Bill postponed and lost , but with permission to renew in the next Session of Parliament .

General Macleod offered a motion relative to the removal of soldiers in barracks at the time of elections—the motion thought unnecessary , and withdrawn . On the Report of the Quakers Bill , Sir William Scott offered a clause to be added to the Report . He was a friend to the present Bill , but thought it should be made only a measure of experiment , in order that the effect of it might be tried before it should be declared perpetual . He therefore proposed a Clause , providing , that this Bill shall continue for five years , and from thence until the then next Session of Parliament .

Wednesday 18 . —Lord Stopford reported his Majesty's acquiescence in the bounties proposed by the House to be paid in lieu of fees , & c . The Speaker reported his having attended in the Lords to the Royal Assent being given by Commission to several Bills . Sir W . Dolben lamented that the laws were set at defiance in the conveyance of slaves , 100 of whom beyond the limited number were conveyed in many ships . Mr . Wilberforce spoke of the sufferings of that wretched people . Thursday 19—Read a third timeand passedSir JJohnstone'Estateand

. , , . s , Mrs . Basting's Naturalization Bills . The Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod required the Commons to attend his Majesty in the Lords ' . The Speaker on his return read his Majesty ' s speech , which terminated the .sulk and last Session of tbe seventeenth Parliament

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-06-01, Page 50” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01061796/page/50/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS , &c. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, AND CABINET OF UNIVERSAL LITERATURE. Article 4
HONOUR AND GENEROSITY. Article 7
HAPPINESS: A FRAGMENT. Article 8
A PARABLE Article 12
EXTRACTS FROM THE MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF EDWARD GIBBON, ESQ. Article 13
SKETCHES OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE NORTH-AMERICAN INDIANS. Article 17
THE SECRECY IMPOSED ON THE MYSTERIES OF MASONRY, Article 22
SUNDAY SCHOOLS. Article 25
ORIGIN OF THE CUSTOM Article 26
EXCERPT A ET COLLECTANEA. Article 27
A RECENT REMARKABLE CIRCUMSTANCE, Article 29
SKETCHES OF CELEBRATED CHARACTERS. Article 30
CURIOUS FACTS. Article 34
BUONAPARTE, THE FRENCH COMMANDER IN ITALY. Article 35
HISTORY OF THE COINAGE OF MONEY IN ENGLAND; Article 36
DESCRIPTION OF THE ABBEY OF EINFINDLEN, Article 37
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 38
LITERATURE. Article 45
BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 46
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 47
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 51
POETRY. Article 54
ODE ON HIS MAJESTY'S BIRTH-DAY. Article 55
A PROPHECY ON THE FUTURE GLORY OF AMERICA. Article 56
TO SLEEP. Article 57
SONNET TO A LADY IN A QUAKER'S DRESS . Article 57
PROLOGUE TO THE TRAGEDY OE ALMEYDA. Article 58
EPILOGUE TO ALMEYDA, Article 59
ODE, Article 60
EPITAPH, Article 61
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 61
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
HOME NEWS. Article 63
NEW TITLES. Article 68
Untitled Article 69
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 75
INDEX TO THE SIXTH VOLUME. Article 76
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

House Of Commons.

A message was brought from the Lords , signifying that they had agreed to a Bill for dissolving the Million Bank , and dividing the stock among the Members of that Association , and to certain other Bills . Mr . Jekyll rose to put a question to the Minister . Being near the end of our Parliamentary existence , if it was not impertinent in him , he would wish to ask the Minister a question relative to certain accounts which had reached this country , viz . that the King of Sardinia had been so reduced as to sue for peace from the French Republicand to shew them the sincerity of his intentionshad put

, . , them in possession of two of his strongest fortresses . Under these circumstances , he wished to know whether it was the intention of Ministers to remit him the 2 oo , oooI . as a subsidy ? This he did not state invidiously , but , on the contrary , lamented the situation this unfortunate Prince had been reduced from his being drawn in as a party to act in this miserable contest . He therefore asked Ministers , whether they meant to transmit it in the shape of a subsidy ? if sent in the shape of relief , that would be another affair . " Mr . Pitt could nothe saidexactly what miht be the situation of affairs

, , say g in Italy , but he believed that the fortune of war might have placed that Monarch in so critical a situation as to render him no longer a party in it ; but that news was of so recent a date as to induce him to question the authenticity of it . ' Mr . Jekyll then said , that he hoped the Right Hon . Gentleman did not mean to send him the subsidy until this news should be confirmed . On the third reading of the Bill for laying a Tax on the Collateral Succession to real Estates , a conversation took place between Mr . Grey , Mr . Francis , and the Ministerafter which three divisions took

, place ; the first was on the question that this Bill be read a third time , when the numbers stood , for the third reading 4 8 , against it 4 6 . Mr . Sheridan now moved an amendment , that it be read a third , time that day three months : against the amendment 54 , for it 53 . The question was then put that the Bill be read a third time on the morrow , for the third reading 54 , against it 54 . The Speaker then threw in his casting voice on the side of the Minister . Mr . Pitt saidthat he would agree to the Amendment on the morrowand

aban-, , don the Bill , as it seemed to be unpalatable to the House , and that he would substitute other taxes in its stead . Adjourned , Friday 13 . The Hat Duty , Dairy Windows , Dog Tax , and several other Bills , read a third time and passed . The Real Estate Bill , postponed ' for three months , and of course given up . The Wet Dock Bill postponed and lost , but with permission to renew in the next Session of Parliament .

General Macleod offered a motion relative to the removal of soldiers in barracks at the time of elections—the motion thought unnecessary , and withdrawn . On the Report of the Quakers Bill , Sir William Scott offered a clause to be added to the Report . He was a friend to the present Bill , but thought it should be made only a measure of experiment , in order that the effect of it might be tried before it should be declared perpetual . He therefore proposed a Clause , providing , that this Bill shall continue for five years , and from thence until the then next Session of Parliament .

Wednesday 18 . —Lord Stopford reported his Majesty's acquiescence in the bounties proposed by the House to be paid in lieu of fees , & c . The Speaker reported his having attended in the Lords to the Royal Assent being given by Commission to several Bills . Sir W . Dolben lamented that the laws were set at defiance in the conveyance of slaves , 100 of whom beyond the limited number were conveyed in many ships . Mr . Wilberforce spoke of the sufferings of that wretched people . Thursday 19—Read a third timeand passedSir JJohnstone'Estateand

. , , . s , Mrs . Basting's Naturalization Bills . The Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod required the Commons to attend his Majesty in the Lords ' . The Speaker on his return read his Majesty ' s speech , which terminated the .sulk and last Session of tbe seventeenth Parliament

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