The Ontario Scrapbook Hansard

Ontario Scrapbook Hansard, 6 Mar 1873, p. 2

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' " .. . T "is. " eitrsct . . "learned ofthottrtpru7ahioiairititeio't, thatOrsn . ex dll te,, 'ttttte iitiMtitr "". "P ". J. . . tttttttr? on its member. he had allowed the metiento pass without due orderingof manure! ohm" char-i ' giving it his mostaolomn protest. ' and the Itttttgf, the law and 2: . Hon. Mr scorr said that door the able ttttioetal '.tttl'e "thew-m that the. remarks of the hon. gentleman from South ','t,1g",t omaaiothotio "if!" land who Grenville he would not have muchtosay on 'll', rt "Ml" to that declaration. the question before the House. He thought "I: V ' PM d fdrness. and .iotitxs it unfortunate that it should have been i Mtl V. tnti.trrttu' tho. Chrlltlan Brothers brought up. Thin organization had lived for l - . most .eirriattueeoia.timt of PPony.rho man years without an Act of Parliament qrent their lite and their means in doing and be thought that to incorporate it would girod-rbttt, ultimately, white, they "MIMI hetodeal a cruel blow to a respectable mi. . 'Y' body, have, Numb-else; an eye I uority in the Province. The measure would j tringhsto the tttef world; in lo much . be a firebrand that would do a great amount I more as tb .mans goul w" more. thn- ' of damage. What Would he the result it the ', Btrlo than " .MY- " much more did they , majority in Lower Canada were to endorse a seek the "iration of the former. m would ' 1 measure so offensive to the minority in that prefer that a general Act should be framed, 7 , Province " this one would be to the minority under tte WWW ot qrhiah all ecclesiasti- l. in Ontario? Why there would be an outer, oal y"ooiatitnt ahottld havo equal libertv_to » l against it not only from the Protestants of be 'nW'M, It T.ottltrtttr better. to Jil,',',' _ . I that Province, but from every part of the the Oritsgs "My the Incorporation t ey l ( ,1 British Empire. Was: there an hon. gentle" "him. ml to would tell their Opponents , I man who had a seat in the Parliament of that m ft. doing they would be doing more I ' , united Canada but would hear testimony to to netral.iet the. effect of the "Inmate? i the desire on all occasions of the majority in than by w.i.thhoying the charter petitioned ' , f; i r' Lower Canada to do justice to the minority? I for. Be himself w" prepared to vote tor .' l No one could show that the measure the "nendment to tly .amen.d.ment, "d he I ~ T was necessary for the carrying out of 1 should support the Bill when it came down I ' any ood work. m "had hoped that, 1M1. tho, committee tol-ed mm". l l , t' C, though we might hold different religions and méomsthst he "naught he would tsy l '.4 f , opinions, we were at least all embued with tpt doing what V" fair. In "ng thls , , i' no), . INF" of charity that we could live View of the matter he was sure that it would , ; t ether as a happy and a peaceful people. tot be understood that the slightest asper- l V. I "hr. PRINCE said that in his county the MOD "Mild be cast upon the Roman Catholic _ .. , , people of both religions were always most .chy.oh--th.tt Church which hadChristian. . ' I amicable in their relations towards each ind humanity all over the world, and soft- ' other, and therefore he could not fully tut. med down the seventies of our natarein , deretand why persons should bear animosity every rc'hcn of tttea m thought he _ l il against one another because simply they did would ac my": that hutch a great wrong it Z . "' not go to the same Church. He did not I! he acted othurmw._ The hon. gentleman a .' altogether agree with the remarks which had concluded by humor; that the Catholic ', u",- ' fallen from the honourable member for Church had nothing to fer by the incorpo- l, South Grenville m did not think that put asked for. With' all its glorious I V il . that gentleman had succeeded in showing traditions of nearly two thousand l ' that the Orange Society .was a politics years hanging about it, thus was nothing body, but he had made it mini. for it to fear,. but it would go on from l t test that it was a religious institution. triumphs to triumphs; and, asa great hia. , " Its object, however, did. not seem to be tonan had said, that Church would tlcuish at l peace and goodpyi1itotyll men, but rather still when a traveller from New Ze.sind t, l i the opposite. Beoertalnly thought that the would be sketching the ruins of St. Paul's q l, reason tor the tg2t up of the Orange As ', Cathedral in London. (Applause.) ' j myeaUtion M w my. and tut the" Mr. BETBUNEssid that hebelicvcdthat' 1 l was now no occasion torita existcn: i. It tet 1 if Roman Catholics laid it down as a p..:- . 1 ' ' Leenariuedvery clearly that dmbett JryUitd, that they saw no reason why the 0 L i where the irstitntion first sprung up, it had A renunciation should not be incorporated» f _ l to t'"ttet for its perpetuation; and it that would be fewer Orangenien than at prolihnt. l ' a»; the onto them; how much more so was If he thought that the measure would have i . i = e Latt I?!" lu all fairaras arid in" the oilect of stirring up ill feeling between i b. wt. the Society in the same ground " Protestant. and Roman Catholics he Would l r ' the Ct 1.. tin. Moths! which latter Boole y up pose it, but believing that it would have i was charlhblc in It! objects; whereas t in quite the contrary effect he was prepared to ', l I thaptys body had nommh objwh in view, " voto for the amendment pf the hon. member i I. 1 had been shown by the extracts from the for South Leeds. The Orange organization l , , hook read by the member tor South Gren- could now hold property by trustees ; ' ville. Agatha title " loyal," he dd not I and could bring actions in Courts of Law; i. , know tbat the Oranges We "ttitted ox. ' i and the ys.ly dosh?) the . mcmbcrs of that . . . ' clnaivdy to it, " honourable gentlemen I l body hadin desiring this measure passed l would remember that the Prince of Wde. I i was, that they might have power to hold the l: bulb." prevented from landin in King" I land on which their lodges stood, and to It ten in 1860 by members of the Sim" which ; kinda" H a. corporate body. the banners i '. new sought for an Act of Incorporation. 5 t r)' "med In their. processions. lie d.id r l Ben. E. B. WOOD said that it had al. i not see that to pass this Bill would be an m. . way; seemed to him that an exotic traus- l svlt to Rotmm.u'ttholica,.sth? knew that the , g ( plantation of the societies of the old world l yrytte' '.ryypi.r.ahion existed already. Be a . Watt not desirable. but he could not onlo" believed that if the [dense rcsused to grant the Bill - before the a"... knowing, " an Act of Incorporation the eifcct would he . he did, thntthe Orange body had "3008 ite to swell the ranks of the Orange institu- t members ntlema 'rho w." " pure, as tron. Boldinb'.ihett. views. and believing [ moral, "highly patriotic, as any man in the that the principle involved in the question _ country. one m " might be called . was the esmo.that had been fought for at political society, In another it was aquasi- the Reformation, he would vote for the . religious society. It had occurred to him amendment of the member for South Leeds. I gut since the repeal of the Act against Mr. CAMERON said hetrusted the would i s range processions; since the public had be not iind any of that bitterness or 'lh'Sli'l'l , come more familiar with Qrugemen individ- which the hon. Minister of Crown Lands and , Iuf,,',etfght tlt "a"; "000.3110 pub- _ the member for South Grenville seemed to n u 1:0th . 'ore,,',".',,'..",',?,', . up their doings fear, arising in the country in consequence l growing 'di, have i7iiilG ee 'llu"t'N't'l, tug' 'init',",',',',','),',',':',', tt Tfn?, into she _ institutions, the House could not well refuse them; in though" should' tll 'ttrhf,it _ ', toincorporate them. The public now know thi . h - i ', the improvement which had tak la n" "y "R"' t e tnMMgrt) eltmia.tyt.no ' , in the character of - th "UI oe to insult aw" them or their ,'dltlf; l, ' i. , it knew that the lodgoes :33 A" tf " he w" personally Coqtoern he i ' S engaged in the dissemination of benevolence 'lfll via; '/git ttjl"g'uTt'o"r"g"l thatf it' , I , Imongthe unfortunate of the order just in ge . y no as 'orttnAttto n i .I the same way that Oddfellows and other dilating; dt bet: not "alllmnber of tt i _, secret institutions were doing. It was alsr to its 'Ci h d al b59021 Y favour-a u . l known that the members of the order were _ h ' w." tee that .10 would l _ .' not all of one political party but "m p". ops be better for the country if the or- ( cu i, of them Ctmioreatir while man many ganization had never been introduced into tr. , strong Reforms" 'At, bod did cigar it By..tyslitsy.ed that in times pent a good :a' , fere withthe FTiigo_G Ql',',','i'dl allde ." deal of ill-feeling had existed tween the V r, , m . 'mm 8mm. 'i'u'l,atl"i'a'lltt Embers of the Orange body and the Roman Ja cam." my other Church. butsedulousl . thol.im, tmt ho waa happy to In that that It ed their' rights. The , " h ill feeling had now almost entirely passed *6 was! - session obtaining Awots of lace ' l away, and Orangemen and Roman Catholics gl ration for tsooiet of brothe Mama _ could meet together on.. friendly terms. A l (lil . homes, and all tthf2tltr'atteoit Bill for the inoorpomtiou of the Western A j whose main object was propaganda) (an 2 1eoeloes)Pd been passed by the Private i he did not obj cctto that) andtheocn n Bills Committee and was before the Home of att whoart they could in!!!" to "numb for a second reading. and it would seem ah mu Catholic Church. While this . bein . and that an 'ath"t', in the west should i done, not" ought il'lil'2lltd"l g tt igpgt,tht,r,1 ,'eht2ti,!',elg, one in ..CN" . PM. . " est s a re us inoorporatiotr to the WM and asked for similar l'erhaps.however. the hon. minister of Crown

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