WT'" F" V . 1 . ' ' w ,,' "L. L won't. i k: , T .... _ 2.").."' "." ."H' i". , - in "----- .--- a) c . not... 1%fiN V Illll" mum. kg to ' " 'e =" 'Rsllwa and Hunk" aigirlMl IN Ou- .. t thy "'m , = 01.41.08 _ , In. " , . e o e V J (22'. in additi'otnmtm' ..-_ .. _-rs of the-bill . ... It o tle Tro9refis already held y the board, fttut than not interfere with or take away the rights ot any municipal corporation under any! agreement botWeen the" corporation! and the company. and unless with the consent of the corporation shall be exercised subject to Such rights." The view had been expredsed that the Clause was too one-sided; and the Pre-! mier had decided to eliminate the portion quoted. Hon. Mr. MacKay approved the course taken. Another New Clause. . A new clause was then submitted by the Premier. It provided that in cities ot 100,000 population or over the Railway Board would have power to order a railway company to extend its. lines in the district covered hy the original agreement. Under this clause, when a railway company refused to extend its lines in portions of the city the board could order the extensions. Little time was lost in getting down to business. The first two bills, one respecting the lowered capitalization of the. Cobalt Lake Mining Company and the other an amendment to the pharmacy act. were passed through committee and given their final rend- ings in short order, but the next one jstruck a snag. The obstruction was .Mr. J. McEwiug of W'e.lllntrton West, (and the bill was the, Premier's meas- lure respecting the Government House Ipropert)'. Mr. McEwing moved an amendment to leave in clause 7 ot {the original bill. which calls upon the Government to account for all moneys received and paid out on ac- count of the Government House. The Government had already committed the House to an expenditure of $225.- 000 and yet had given no information _ with regard to what it promised to do in the matter. He thought it Was an opportune time to make some ex- planation. / "rteaoluttontst and Socialist." "l have been charged with being: a revolutionist and Socialist because 1 proposed to abolish the Government House." continued Mr. Mcltiuinq, "but in 1904 Mr. Marter, then leader of the Conservative party, moved that the Government House be abolished. and that motion received the hearty support of every member, or nearly every member, on the Opposition side of the House. In 190G, the present leader of the. House moved in this Leg- islature that the Government House be abolished." Mr. Alt-Ewing. after contrasting the marked change in the views of the Premier, called upon him :to take the House into his cottti,dence Irespecting his plans. The Premier re.- lfused to discuss the point. _ ! "There was a time," he said, "when [the Government Hous"e ought to have lbcen abolished and the Opposition Ithen was in favor of abolishing it. tbut that time has gone." He defended his bill, stating that it was merely igiving the Government the right to idispose of the property in a business- ;iike manner. Mr. McEwing's amend- ment was lost. and the bill received its third reading. Toronto Bill Passed. The city of Toronto bill passed through committee without an amend- ment being proposed or any discus- sion resulting. The bill as Iinally passed is somewhat different from the measure that went before the Private Bills Committee. The clause respecting the tubes embodies the de- cision of the sub-committee fixing. the responsibility for damages in the con- struction of the system.