The Ontario Scrapbook Hansard

Ontario Scrapbook Hansard, 28 Jan 1921, p. 2

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on in Kemptville on | ' . 'nmmentin®# vnon &n T ht and Premier Drury's confer-- . | nearine In tha Farmers' Sn "f.,:';: f 'ence with Premier Meighen -- and tember 29. 1919, Mr. NDewart® Arew Premier Norris of Manitoba at Ot-- k the inference that the "hrr;a.fl."h. e tawa on Monday over Lake of the ant" mavement mi=ht imnlv the use Woods levels. ::::'!"f.hofl:';mnloved by soms manu. ( cturers osa examn'le tha \ _ Civil Service Criticism. or@ fSun nronosed to aAnnt ,M:*;; Mr. Dewart expressed strong ap-- whose nolHev aond meathnds T/haral. '\_ _ proval of the Premier's intention to 'am was Aefinitaly onnnasead. Tha _ bring about the formation of a Com-- aditnorial in anestinn Aealt. in noart '\_ mittee on Labor Legislation. Coming .w"h thae necess'tv nf tha adant!nn more directly to the burden of his | hy formers ranera!v of some nali~r address, the Liberal Leader made a | whaerahvy fand nrodnotion mirh+ ha slashing attack on the manner in |\ rormilated to market Aaman4s _ With which the Civil Service was being anv naliog ench a«s that ontlined for administered. One--man power had ®*armers hy thetr nrean. Mr. Dewart been adopted, he declared, and this ctated. the Tiheral party had nno had brought about ";videspread g?s- ec--mns+hy, h 8 nd, in many instances, &-- t'x?ests. aonly too visible throughout Inquiries About the Recall. the ranks of the Civil Service." The Proceeding to the plank in the Civil -- Service . Commissioner, the Farmers' platform favoring recall, | speaker stated, was a man utterly Mr,. Dewart cited the case of Cama,ixi devoid of business training and ex-- Mowbray, a member of the U.F.O. perience, yet he was placed in sole who could not secure nomination in and absolute charge of highly--skilled Fast Kent unless prepared to accept and experienced servants of the pub-- | the principle of the recall. "Was | lic. Ho ventured to say further that | this pledge demanded of the present wers any such power placed in the Minister of Agriculture when a geat | hands of any one man in any factory was prepared for him in East Kent?" . or institution an instant strike would asked the Liberal Chieftain. . ""Was result. The Premier had not imple-- this pledge demanded of the Attor--. mented his promise of last session by ney--General when an adjustment was | giving information to the leaders of made so that he might accept the the other parties in the House of va-- seat in East Wellington? Was this cancies and changes in regard | to pledge demanded of the Premier which all parties were to have the when he coveted the vineyards of right to make recommendations. Halton ? He would continue to press for *'*When this triumvirate, without legislation which would establish & P having been elected by the suffrages real commission, on which each of * of the people at a general election, the four parties in the House would were selected to govern the Province be represented, on which the Civil they were returned without the Service Association would have its x:vl;:dg;:;hat wel;:élevmanded of those own. repre F c lals 1i i 0 appealed upon the Farm-- P remier nff:;?';;f g?'figiyn?;;h the ers' platform at the general election." Digs Up Old S 68. Libe!-a.lsA _lyfi'l'uk;l' thomGround. p T nalyzing the vote at th is (n"t'g Lf};ffal Leader's comments up-- vincial election, the spe::kl:rzt "'52- rixers'emo::gi]d?::_mg out'" of the Far-- manded to know why a candidate for spective in €;1 were largely --retro-- the U.F.O,. had been nominated_ in ererpls *Pro. «ua.éfer- He --chose Lennox against a Liberal stand§ng y _Prem: Lnlx) a flressen delivered for the same principles, thus per-- and A "rerF ;'3!1!'}. J. J. Morrison, mitting a Conservative victory. "In riicles in' th" urnaby' and from the campaign of 1919," the speaker back & y e Farmers' Sun dating declared, "the Liberal party showed varied ut ear or further,. From the broadness of its policy and of its he had co erances of the Premier valued views by refraining from , the !atterme to ths conclusion that nominating candidates in thirty--nine lson, with was a "political chamse. constituencies and enabling the cha.rigin h;.i wonderful facdility for United Farmers to return as the the Comga s political hue to suit, party with the largest numerical Ar Dgwm that he keeps." | strength in the House. We tilled the made. V Part referred to an address| . ground, we sowed the seed, but we Falls. in rg:nier Drury at Fenelong have to admit that some of the har-- pressed thw ch the view was ex-- lane vest hands came in and took a larger s dat between the U. F. 0. share of the crop than those who !ited "ci; ead, defunct and discred-- had eown the grain. | be nexlth:;a! organization there can |\__'"And to--day," he continued, "I l hor endore f:;nfllfama.tion. unification | say there is room for the Farmers of Ethe snntia' on." _ He further quoted | | the Province of Ontario and for the [ Sent fial'r)nent of the then Presi--} fair--minded Labor men in the Pro-- uttered atet% of 'the U.F. 0. as' vince of Ontario in alllance with or to thé en oodstock in July, 1919 as a part of a party which was good 7 effect that no "Grit or 'Tory | enough for the Premier's father and shonld ever be on that [ for my father--for my honorable even if we have t Natt'orm.' 1, a for 1f 1 o keepn tham e to use bare knuckles| friend and for myself as ate at 1917. o Reep them off. | | It is a party which has enunciated a f:rm?"t }'1hn, Leader of the Farmors'| ' platform and policy which is demo-- 'th P has 'broadened out' s!nm' cratic and progressive. It is a party i en," Mr. Dewart continued "h' which is giving fair--minded support hs a far call from these declarations | to fair legislation--whether it comes n June and July of 1919 e i 0e from farmer or artisan--for the ad-- Premier' 19 to the 5 emier's utterances at Chatham. in vancement of urban c +rural interests, p:::er:tlaer lasé and at Milton in the| \for the professional man or for the | has beenms:":' ,Rm the 8. O. 8.| merchant or business man, for the} word now 1?"10" and the watch-- interest of honest and decent sport| come.*" s, 'Whosoevaer will may 'or to protect religious and moral wel--| [ 'The real pr y fare. It is a party that stands out" aDnar?enilx?;ess of "broadening against fraud--for the protection ot~I am. on the oce:s ad begun at Chath-- '\ |the public domain and for the re-- fer's nttflrano:':smn waen the Prem»| To is ts is corovince e J t);e had been misen accordin® to himselif, people of this Province are justly| Press, 'Ir'rq Jr?mti:d :gnt;':d'morn:r};e ien-titled." & ction e | ;'i';:ag::mf:},t ttr)ha}:aso man in public | Autocratic Exercise of Power. of being so Ofleno. :,},1;: T otea" _ usie s Claiming that it was not "broaden-- misunderstond. Acm,Q;,""ted or ing out'" to talk of throwing into the statement of the Premier to 1 C apl | "scrap--heap'" the Liberal party, or t0 | mers' Sun, he had sa'd,rto amar" f adopt a policy of '"sniping oi :ooking '| in part: at Chatham, around for the da.mfaged and bruised | '"*We muns windfalls dropped from party trees,| out and taket 1:fotnh"::""v 1 t or nige k soke ue * y omm ht# o minds. In doing so {""" e of like exploit "the legal fads and crotchets | the name of the part added, even | of a theorist whom the exigencies of | bably have to be su N o i'd _ pro. 'your position have clothed with a I were to surmgest abe!'!eded. and if little brief authority," 'the Leader of suggest the name ofn:;:'e T wuum' 'the Liberal group warned the Pre-- Progressive narty' e 'Peoples mier that the manifest intention of Further, Mr. Dewa the so--called broadening out was not ,Premier, sneaidnz trt feclared, the co--operation between those holding the nresent mnrifha Nnitton durine similar views and progressive ideas, | said that the Parmary count tad Lo -- but "the autocratic exercise of the | | should _ not rule the country" Th power of government by @wbsorption j _ should weloome t ; :'O""f""- but ; and by the elimination 'of opposi-' pathetle outsiders. _ Pollowink Tnix -- tion." When the time came, he con-- lenders of ;) ooo , 1 2)lOwine this.; cluded, his party would appeal to *»'hgl [ | notably Mesers. Mapoga movement. | people in confidence, '"having stood. aby, had openty di rrison and Rurn--| upon a platform that needs m; | Mr. Drury, |p , pare'osd4 with Han 'broadening out,' because men _ Of| aneaker h'notedbm' of which the every creed and class and evarykmv;! Aresses nr stat extracts from ad-- tion of the community will n:he ; gentlemen ements made by these that, whoever may have fallen by | * & R $ mwayside, we have not proved un--

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