l >3 Wibiigierion uo ues m uy > --onrcmmreguneieentet mm in m l Mr. Sinclair Explains Why He . Did Not Reply to Col. 1' Price i The termination yesterday in the | Legislature of the debate on the amend-- ment to the Address in Reply, which left Liberal members without any more say in the matter, brought from Wil« | Ham E. N. Sinclair, Opposition Leader, | the statement last night that "in his | 14 years in the Legislature he has never f;een the vote taken on amendment to 'the motion unless an amendment to the 'iamendmencs was first voted upon." ' "As I know it, the practice has al-- | ways been to move an amendment to . \ the amendment," he declared. "The | \members vesterday were just shut off _ \from speaking further on the subject." . Mr. Sinclair declared further that he was consequently denied the opportunity of replying to the intimation made earlier by Attornsy--General Price that the Opposition Leader had based his Waterloo address on information which he had obtained from the Federal De-- partment of Justice. E#*IDEMIC THREATENED BY WORMS IN SHEEP Hon. J. S. Martin Tells Legis-- lature Committee of Seri-- ousness of Disease Before the Agricuiture Committee of{ the Legislature yesterday Hon. John S. Martin, Minister of Agriculture, re-- | vealed that Dr. G. Stevenson of the Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph had discovered that a certain condi-- tion in pigs and sheep which has made them unfit for marketing was attribu-- | table to worms. | This discovery, said Mr. Martin, was '"an entirely new one," and most im-' | portant from the standpoint of the farmer. ® ! | Tests are now being made to deter-- lmine a cure and treatment for the | trouble. "It is," said Mr. Martin, "'fsirly general across the Province, and if not checked might go right on 'through the farmyard and affect thel | other animals--poultry, too."