Star And Evening Advertiser (Newspaper) - February 10, 1789, London, Middlesex T H E S T A HOUSE OF CHANCELLOR came down to the i1 bout half after when prayers being petitions were and moti uade lor rehearing of in Appeals Couit of in all of were of the appear ril at the bar with the account of the expenditure cf I FRANKFORT alfo gave in an account of the fums appropriated towards liquidating the National GS preferred a petition from WAR REN HASTINGS which his hip mov ed to have The petition contained an enumeration of the he by the length the Trial al ready and svas likely to as the Honourable Houfe of Commons had exhibited twenty charges him 5 and although twelve months had fince the but two of charges had been gone through it that in that time of who were his judges had paid the debt of nature that it already coft him near thirty and therefore he was left his pro perty be before he had ed his and he left even of for other he prayed their would proceed without any further if end it without any further LarJ regretted tlut more notice had not been as it would be verv improper in his opinion to come to any upon it in fo thin a He believed there net of their from the peculiarity of the have an idea it would be to according to the laft which flood for tomorrow that be ing the this petition might be taken fairly to the day appointed to proceed he would therefore that the petition be ordered to lie on the and the order for be The etiquette of the making it that fome day be hi mentioned Monday at the time it to be i hv intended that be the d iv en the trial His idea being the fmc determined to HOUSE OF i n it f t pj i 1 end i C ni As the a wr a minute v pufs the into nrr the A new was to bt for tlir of a member to in Parliament for the of ii the room of Tho Pitt took the Tnu for the of vacant by death of the latt Sir A was received th ers fcr liquidating the the p i expenditure ot tVj to fur that ROLL TV Roi L then begged the Houfe would r previous to the order of the day be to a words in liis Hi then deliberately took from his the and that of the parliamentary which fit the of on liis hid that where rhe end motive mull be ot uch a could n t be a men cf fc i thi vas a of th been heard iii for ii iVii and he have Led them he He declared that he had to reveal the motive of of he did not provide all and his amendment to that He that anach to particular ci i on Ue a of the moil general Tie for his the for the of and pro t the which had brin and that his primary motive to du tlie which been cn He then to the and bu wirff w fis tto and which he muft as they were Gat Y rofe in the and was proceed ing to reply when The interrupted this He he have heard the honour able gentleman Rolle to his but from his having held a printed paper in his and from his animadverting to the he imagined that his was to conclude with a formal He now to remind the Houfe of the point of It was extremely he for gentlemen to revert in any proceeding to any thing which had oc curred in a former debate it was more dif orderly to call on gentlemen to not for anything which had fallen from them but for the of their as they might afterwards in a public He that in this the micht that under the cir he relied on the candour of the Houfe to admit his Alderman NEWNHAM urged the right of Grey to reply and that if one gentleman was thus admitted to the to whom he had alluded had certainly a right to a ROLLE and attempted two or three times to but was as often overruled by th Speak The was finally fet by the Chan cellor of the Exchequer moving the order of the BROOKE WATSON having taken the put the on that which that the Regent hall not have to grant or alie nate any part of the ellate of Ma This wai agreed PERSONAL PROPERTY OF THE rofe and that though great and n pains had been ta ken to prevent the Regent from alienating any part of his it was left unprotected by the in to He thought this procedure as and called upon Pitt to account for fuch rc PITT that the Houfe had no knowledge of that neither had It he than random If the King was in pof of any he muft of it was in th of and if he could not any Heps were to be ANST R UTHE R was of opinion that the be and that the fame ten der confide rations which induced the Honourable Gentleman to the alto induce hn to guard the cf his i He thought it ought to be in the and would take an opportunity of moving a chufe to that After next had been which the Lord High or the of tlie from time direct to mich monies of the Civil proceeded to his to his force of but by the announce r T r r t to of a the s PITT having moved tint the Committee the Houte was I hr from the Lonls was their would pro ed en the trial of Warren on The Houfe having again into a BUKKE and he had heard a petition been from Warren that he had been at thirty pounds in of the trial and praying that their Lord may hailen their proceedings Burke laid nothing could afford mere to his than to on that trial but the importance of the which the attention of was too great to give way to any private or individual Here a took place on the between Mr the Attorney Lord and A the debate for the part took a of the introduced bv for the economical of enabling to tiie debt upon hi for preventing the fame from in by the curtailment of certain of for the of hewing that the of tie founded on it to the principles of the we think it to report the I inl it to th of the to beware how it this were advanced to prove its but even if this was not the were in the extremely which be bc could with propriety of irh was the of The words and had been confounded rnd 11 planed in one they meant one in another they hid a quite but by being familiarized as being the it might lead the Houfe to adopt eh on reflection they would be concerned to have adopted of the of the Noble Lords and therefore be On Powys having made his the were ordered to withdraw Ayes Noes fe8 Majority PRIVY The was then empowering the keeper of the privy to receive the amount of fuch as have been by the authority of his and alfo luch chanties as the Queen might judge that his would have and directing the remainder mould be inverted in the public in trull for his in tlie cafe of his Sir WILL JAM AME bore ny to the charity of the Prince in giving 200 to the poor of Edinburgh during the late inclement DUNDAS did not mean to detract from the Princes merit in fo but it was no more than father and grandfather had done before they having annually fent to that on the gradual of the Privy from in the late Kings to in the a fum which was independent of every other expence the King could beat of this the Queen was to have for what charities the King would to but the who might be to know as well as any was not to be allowed one milling and yet he would venture to that without any ill compliment to her the charitable dif of the Prince Hood as high as that of any other whatever the care he had taken of a very who was to be very nearly related to his uncle by half blood whom he had relieved from indigence and by a munificent and welltimed belides a hundred which it would be tedious to How was it then to compare his bounty with that of the Kings We that the wi dows two mites were more acceptable in the fight of than all the wealthy offerings of the whole world to the How much more laudable do his two hundreds when it is known that the whole of his by which he is to not only the dignity of Prince of but the dignity and of the as is only ten pounds more than the Kings meer pocket DUNDAS to did any Gen object to continuing the for who were upon the Kings or would they prevent the Queen from fup r i plying charities he might pce her Royal Spoufe would have Sir WILLIAM that it was proper two urns mould be ib did it that the remainder of lie idle He therefore that the faid remainder be paid into the hands of of the aspro in the Some on this be tween Dunda Alder man Sir James and A then took place upon Sir The num bers Ayes Noes j 6 Majority the amendment 55 Some were alfo made on the latter part of the the revenues of the County Palatine of which by this were to be and of in the fame manner as the amount of the Privy BURKE that this was another robbery committed on the Civil I a which was worthy to ride en croup with the one preceding as the had been forced on its its dappled companion might be permitted quietly to follow The after a few chiefly from Sor was ordered to part of the THE CONTROUL OF THE The were then veiling in Her VI a jelly the direction and controul of the houfe and that her appointment or re lhall be equivalent to any heretofore made by the King ui On a took more dif the warmth uith which it was car ried than by any novelty which it Sir PETER and SLOPER their at the amount of the patronage which was and at the fame the vague arui undefined manner in which the had thought proper to word the before the Pnx that the officers of the Houfe to whom the might be known from the papers on the by the the duration of the was alluded the reply at any time when might ic waV certainly open to Lord in a excellent and which on an nothing but the of the hour could prevent us from report ing in entered fully and forcibly on the impropriety of dividing from the the of the thereby depriv ing the former of its natural and fup in of the chafe NORTON and WILBRAHAM in KEENE argued very that fome of the powers of the and from the flare Mj authority which were to be in the Regent 7 PITT denied that the Parliamentary in was at all in contemplation with who had founded the of the But whatever was attached to the he would belong to the TOW appointments to be made for the wate of the Lord NORTH denied the cf any fucH new The officers of in m his bl appointed to attend on the asthe dWV oi the and of of the Kin wa only to be maintained by the dignity of his MARSH AM that he could not but feel a at ihe of the whd by his to that whatever powers he retained to were exempt from the of but that whatever granted to the of WAXES might be He his wonder at the of the in contemplating the t was known that the number Peers holding places m the with under obligations to the Right Hon Gentleman amounted to near He won dered equally at the patience of the who had feen for five the expiration of a of a and which was warmly all the officers the rank of ofthe Cham her be continued in their at tendance on his but that all the Officers of State transfer their attendance for the the rank of che Regent SHERIDAN joined in this Hehad he too much of a republican tone in what had en from fome that they were now about to make a not c I hs power had fuffered much That pageantry had been which on the popular had a greater than power He was there fore the more forry to in the the trappings torn from the to be as hangings to the bed of When Gentlemen on the other fide of the feelings of the Sovereign on his they m very fuch an as the he muft doubly as a father and as a monarch MON in favour of the but without any farther argument confidence of hr Lord Fi E L D i KG the Sir ILL i AM that in his opi the attendance of officers be with the out of his power but the appointment to reft with him in caie of a entered the general The he ha beS from It was only the hand of I which had hurled him from his Throne and plunged into a which the dominions mult regard With The Marquis of GRAHAM called to order and that this was language not to be that if parts of a text of were and the whole not taken even holy writ might be made to He did not mean that the King was fo dethroned that his right to the crown was but he meant that he by the Hand of Hea rendered incapable of du ties which belong to the It ill became m the public humbled them felves before the to procure the reco very of the Kings to hold a language in the fo little to a of It was not who had his of his dignity and the pomp and pageantry of courtly attendance would ill become a bed of To them upon a Kine m the of his would be to mock him and degrade of his It would be like putting a crown of thorns upon his a theatric in his hand and him the Ihe Right Gentleman grounded his BiU upon this that it would be wrong to take from his any part of his But then he forgot that if it was given to the Queen it was taken from the King and then the only could to whom ought it to be given to the mother or to the fon To the was not to his and was not to be for the ufe fhe might make of the power given to her or to the who was to be his and in name to govern iis and watch over the of the and the of the If the King could be he thought the bell way of he as he faid in his melTage to tne Houfe when in the early part of his he recommended to his Parliament the of a Regency that which was pecu liarly his in the for MAINTAINING THE S PL ANt LUSTRE OF THC CROWN In that the was not from the executive nor was any one of the Crown but the whole of the Roval power was in the Regent and his Why was not a Council given to the Regent in this with the plenitude of the Royal power the Princes of the Bood mull have been Members of it and they have given their whole weight to the to enable him to maintain the prerogatives of in which they were all fo inte In that Regency there appeared the names of Stx PRINCES OP THE BLOOD and an the Regency palled by George the Prince who next in after the