The Ontario Scrapbook Hansard

Ontario Scrapbook Hansard, 9 Mar 1928, p. 2

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TAX ON PUBLIC VEHICLES SALVATION OFFICERS NOTHING BOILING MAHONEY PROTESTS TO E GIVEN POWER MAKES m FISHING ";, w ON NATIVE WINE UNDER MIME ACT East Sidi-,"",'"-"";.'",.-,"","-,),,,, mm Lc"","",'",","",","",)",-,"; fn ttiuo Bill Proposes That Those Higher Than Lieutenant May 0ffioiate Government bills providing tor the central registration of liens on all mo. tor cars in the Province; tor increasing the investment powers of Ontario in- surance companies; for the investment by trust and loan companies in all Provincial securities; for an amendment to the Marriage Act so that any "r. ration Army otiieer above the rank of Lieutenant may conduct the marriage ceremony. and for the payment to the deserted wife or family of all or part of compensation due to the husband, were included in the legislation brought down iruthe. Lfyris1tytyrrye_titerday. Regarding his bill for the registration of motor car liens. Hon. George s. Henry explained that heretofore liens have been filed in the County Clerk's Office. It is now proposed to have the County Clerks forward their registra- tions to a central office in the High- ways Department. The Compensation Act. Attorney-General Price's bill provid- ing for amendments to the Workmen's Compensation Act refers especially to cases where the family is in want and liable to become a public charge and cases where an order has been made under the Deserted Wives and Chil- dren's Act or Judgment has been given for alimony. In such cases, the hill provides that the board may divert such compensation of the workman in whole or in part for the benefit ot the wife and children. Hon. John S. Martin contributed two bills. One provided his amend- 'ments to the Weed Control Act. pre- Ciiiii.iii,i: forecast. and the other, an lamendment to the Protection of Cattle Act, giving counties the power to ex- {clude any but pure-bred cattle from 'their counties The investment powers ot Ontario . d /l stock and cash mutual insurance com- Mag Y let panics is widened to cover the identical " field of authorized investments for Do- minion incorporated companies by Legault of Sturgeon Falls Sug- amendments to the Companies Act re. , specting insurance companies, intro- gcsis Government Send Each duced by Col. Price. . The Attorney-General also presented Settler a Couple of Hives legislation amending the Controvert- ed Elections Act, for the 'Jg"t'teg,'f, _ _______..___ making sure that the expenses 0 e Judges and Clerks of an Election Clerk FIRE WEED FLOWER were payable by the Crown. , s ESS Toll on Public Vehicles. BASIS OF BU IN Hon. George S. Henry explained that section of the Public Vehicles Act re- Bees could rank along with minerals. 'erring to the toll on operators ot pub- oulpwood and water power as great lie vehicles in cities had been inter- natural resources of Northern Ontario, preted as forcing the cities to levy this according to Theodore Legault (Liberal, toll. He offered an amendment mak- Sturgeon Falls). The foundation of this ing the act more flexible so that the new great resource. he told the members cities could pass a by-law fixing the of the Legislature yesterday, lies in the rate of the toll for such operators. "tireweed flower. only waiting to be Hon, John s. Martin contributed kissed for its honey." 7 A A East Elgin Member Says Government 'Shouid Tackle Problem LIVERS WOULD MAKE OIL E. Blake Miller. Liberal member for East Elgin, told the Legislature, in the dragging hours of the' debate last night, a fish story which had mort of the mtltpuersrprescnt "at the alert." Mr. Miller's story was of the ling--- the fresh-water cod, which. he claimed, is competing to such an extent with the Whitefish and the herring in Lake Erie and Lake Ontario that it behooves the Government to take immediate steps to formulate some scheme to combat the problem presented by the ravages ot this cannibal fish. The colder water of Lake Ontario was more suited to the growth and spread ot this fish than Lake Erie's, and as a consequence most of the pres- ent-day complaint about the fish was coming from the former lake fishermen. He stressed the point that a high-grade oil is obtainable from the livers ..r these fish, and he wondered if sufficient rc- scrves ot oil could not be piled tor-- as trom the salt-water cod in New- tountiland---to make worth while the efforts of the fishermen who nowadays are catching nothing but ling, and are compelled to throw them away as worthless. Mr. Miller also asked the Gowmmont to give some study to the idea of ex- tractlng the "yellow" coloring from the fish. This accomplished. would mean. he said. that the fish would Income a good table food and worth considerable money. . . o Bees E il g N thl d um tn) In or an M Vi ' . . Fl ay 16ch Millions tn oneu "A little flower may seem insignia- cant to the members in the House," said Mr. Legault. "but it has a virtue. It is the greatest honey-px'oducing flower in the world. And this little flower grows in great profusion all through the ',?iepr.',t,'1't and rugged country of the Nort ." "Elie-idea is to have the Government send each of the settlers a couple of hives of bees, costing abo_ut $19. " . -%inlfthiry'ii develép a lucrative busi- ness that would .run into millions of dollars." he thought. iA';\1. tna," , T'\r\ Appeal of Niagara district wine manufacturers and grape growers for (abolition ot the 50 cents per gallon Provincial tax on native wines was echoed in the Legislature yesterday. Urges Government to Give More Consideration to Question Thomas J. Mahoney (Conservative, South Wentworth) told the House that in 1925. when the tax was levied, there had been no objection from the grow- ers. At that time, he said, imported wines and "beer at cost" were not com- peting with the native products. To- day it was a different story. He urged the Government to give a little more consideration to the situation in which the manufacturers and the growers now found themselves. The Government ot Ontario, he con- tended. was making a profit of 125 per can} on, it? sale of native wines. "I submit," said he, "that if protita are necessary to this extent it would be much better to get them from im- ported wines and imported liquors rather than from our native-grown products."

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