The Ontario Scrapbook Hansard

Ontario Scrapbook Hansard, 9 Apr 1920, p. 2

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r members as the debate on the Speech B < HU from the Throne. However, they are 9 ' making their remarks short. T BlLL ' Get Men Who Will Work. i ' Z. Mageau (Sturgeon Falis) sa ' the kind of men to open up the North L were men who were not afraid of ' work, nor afraid to wear moccasins + ' and go barefooted when they couldn't | __,.«** , I get them. It was born into men to |* es l be pioneers. The trouble a.b«zut gofé aevdb id cr in n Ni ies i At and other conditions was not ne & ks Kapuskasing. The same _ had Ferguson Makes Fut"e been true in his riding, in Tim-- ; T iskaming. _ But they would even-- tempt AgalnSt New tem-- tually triumph. ;{e prop(t)sgdtothg; } , they let those who wante | lea.\srre. He would sell the farms tog . perance LegIS'atmn the highest bidder al\f:terhadlgertrlslng).; e nreuess mm R. M. Warren (Nort enfrew ) | ' would carry on the colony despite . s k AY he mistakez made. He did not think | W".L COME UP To D ic would work properly without hard-- ! earerrate ie Geessrerantemrants is »ned pioneers. s * The North couldn't be settled with | Speaker W|" Rule Pr'vate men from the cities, said Sam Clarlg:. I s !t would be better to pay every set--| 'er in the Northland $300 than to | Member May Brlng save losses like Kapuskasing hadl 'ost. It was a mistake to '"mislead It In | settlers and then leave them there." | \Move the poor ones and hplp the re-- Semmammmneentrnepaemenatrrints mainder, was his suggestion. Government -- supporters showed. Slust Find Remedy. sizns of uneasiness yesterday in the! R Major Tolmie said that, while un--| Legislature when Hon. G. Howard | innnes with n fi?hen{;e );'adb bteor;! ® Ferguson Conservative Loader.i lanned with nothing but the best of | g x * NA t ance rr)notives. the whole thing had be-i hurled a h.o.nb ilt the f'm!:)e"t ih | come a "disgrace and dishonor to our | program of the Government, bu e | country." FPor the fair namet of thei tbomb proved a "dud." Maintaining| | Province it was negcessary to see| un nnvatet at hatre been what could be done to strengthen| the persistent efforts th o ap meas-' | out the tangle. | maJle to force any temperanc | _ The speaker's most Se"'""i' criti-- | ures which may come down to be ; oniertas initmUne!l Aghinst DePuL? { brought in as Government measures. | Minister Grigg, who had been re--| toge yeviom a | ported as stating that he desired no the C onser\atnoqtI,ea'(.l:;r(wt(.ig;:rlél:;-': French--Canadian settlers at Kapus--| tna't' the bill to stop snort. ' 3 § ; | ing'" could not be brought in by a kasing. Hon. Mr. Ferguson, how--| ing a hist been in-- ever, drew the Major's attention to private memb'er. Itqhad .Ju.'3 t'? ViC: the fact that the official, in his ex--| tlrofju)ved by F. G. Sandy (Sout} & amination before the Commission,| oria). _ s had not been asked whether the; Mr. Ferguson argued that th}e1 t;xpl} statement credited to him by news--| imposed duties, and could not, t pre s hs > 2 | fore, be brought in by & private papers had been made or not. * J : ui Oy the Major T. L. Kennedy of Peel, who} member. -- He bougpt a ru mgh y Ne was formerly connected with thc| Speaker, who promised that settlement, defended the Assistant| would look into t}u:- matt'er'. and an-- Superintendent of the colony from | nounce his decision to-(-lay. )flearé- charges of eévading military service. | while, the bill was allowed to stand, The official in question, he said, had | It is understood that the bill is re-- several times offered himself for ser--| garded as quite proper, and will be vice, but had been rejected. There proceeded with to--day in the usual were soldier--settlers there, he said.f way. ; who desired to remain, and he plead-- | , The Conservative Leader admitted . ed for five years' free seed for these| tFat he had not seen the bill, but if pioneers of a country in which he} it was as reported in the newspapers had great faith. | he was afraid that the member from Lieut.--Col. Cooper said that on1y| South Victoria could not introduce a goldier, understanding soldier | it. If it was not as 'report.ed, of psychology, could officiate as Super-! course, that was an entirely different Intendent at Kapuskasing. The Gov--| matter. ) o * ernment, he said. must get the fami--| "It imposes no duties," said the lies who were dissatisfied with condi-i Attorney--General. f tions into civil life that would be atins *X * | congenial to them. | Native Wines Untouched. I Mayor M. M. MacBride, Brantford, '"We do not know. We have not thought Ontario could not improve | seen the bill," interjected an Op-' matters by washing too much dirty | position member. | linen. The papers, he thought, had No further opinion was ventured | been inclined _to take one--sided by the Government at the time.' views. Labor had taken returned sol--| * Members had been somewhat taken diers into the workshops and given aback. Everything seemed to be go-- them vocational training at good tng smoothly with the program on trades, and he thought the farmers,| the (Government side. No one ex-- * and even the Law Society might have , pected the move on the Opposition | emulated Labor's example. The Gov-- side. However, doubt cleared up af--| . ernment had a duty to the men who! ter _ adjournment, when members' wanteddto i.fiettaway from rIl\'apuslu:ts(;? learned that the bill was not subject | ing, and a duty to men who wanted | arnmm <an on mm nenempmemnnntnnniinimniimain ns oo m + ~~ 0 --com ol togremain. 4. | to the objection of the Conservative G. G. Halcrow (East Hamilton) ; Leader, ; moved the adjournment of the de--| The new bill does not touch na-- bate. . | tive wines. Section & says: '"'Nothing nc mm mmmmmamemmee ie | in this act shall affect or apply to 1 the sale, carriage, transportation or delivery of native wines, so far as the same may be lawful under Section 14 _of the Ontario Temperance Act." + What the act makes unlawfui is' the transportation or carriags . of liquor within Ontario for sale or| } * consumption within Ontario; the| transportation or carriage of Hquor! from any brewery, distillery, ware.| house, dwelling house, stock house. | dock, railway station or other premj.'l 620 .00 fhy other place or premises| > or to any persons in Ontario, and | the delivery of liquor to any pPerson | in Ontarilo for sale or consumption | Wl'trhhin the Province. ons e new act does not prev | sale ana transportation olf) leingt- ttt;:' I.export from Ontarto, nor the sale g' ' bui2r 5on ourposes lawful under the empera a saries. perance' Act in diSPen.' |

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