- March 3 ported to have thrown the North-- The request went unheeded, and k ern Ontario member out of his Mr. Baird, in his characteristically & office. mild--voiced manner, suggested that Mr. Heenan jumped up again. the Prime Minister might be aware "'This man is a repudiator," of campaign funds that had gone to | shouted Mr. Heenan, glaring across his support in the 1934 election | at Mr. Henry. from "certain people." | There were cries of "Order, '"HMHow about yours?" several Lib-- | Order," and several Conservatives 'erals cried. | showed signs of wanting to get into | "Do you deny," Mr. Baird asked the fight themselves. the Prime Minister, "that you got | "The honorable member _ for any such funds?" Kenora is out of order and must take his seat," repeated Speaker| Denies Knowledge. Hipel. . y ' "I have no knowledge of it Premier Hepburn turned in his whatever," said Mr. Hepburn. "My t e o chair and apparently Whlilwerud honorablfe friend well knows that a i i o something to his Cabinet colleague, leader of a party keeps away from Premier Agrees to Adloum but nothing stopped him. | things like that." . ment After Colleague's "Mr. Speaker, if you have to call| '"What caused the break between the honorable member to order oncn' the Treasurer of your party (Sena-- $ Outburst more, we may have to get the| |tor Frank O'Connor) and you?" de-- smm . _ o on mm mc 4 Sergeant of the House to res!rainl' {r;jand_f*(:1 Mr.le;!rd.u *"I zhglkdth.g : | him," declared Mr. Henry. | e rich uncle finally got tired o HOUSE IN AN UPROAR With Premier Hepburn and Hon.| shelling out his cash, and quit." Paul Leduec openly endeavoring to, j "It".s just your evil mind thinking s |restrain him, Mr. Heenan shouted ;; !.hat. clicked the Prime Minister. "I Am Thoroughly Disgust-- _/ once at Mr. Henry, "Oh, we've got _ |"If my honorable friend has any it t | lots of money." = lchargos to make, let him make them ed. ls Hepburn § Only jpg* iC XFgz ap*» M |and submit them to the Public Ac-- And we've spent it," he added, | C * NS Comment while the Opposition applauded. 'Cf't't'.m" (;:qm;(mxt::e which .lts tml)l:v | "And we got the vortes, too," he sIUIng. arke them or qm,, alk-- w non in e en ienss C 1 ¢ ing these nasty insinuations. further declared, while Mr. Hepburn B o 2 M R o sarlt s 3 C o hore Ainanrl , Oh, we'll make them," Mr. Baird n one of the wildest scenes wit-- glowered in his direction. . b "and 1 find t f % . later, he embarked on| |came_back, "and we'll find out for ; nessed in the Legislature in many A moment later, o T ' one fhing why Lewis Duncan was f years, Hon. Poeter Heenan, Minis-- further criticism of Mr. Henry, pard $23,000 for his work for Hy-- k a _ Yt skes Sikks charging that he and Howard Fer-- dro." ter of Lands Forests, was pub-- on D him hnad "always hated ro. y i ; licly rebuked by Premier Hepburn _ ; £!son before him ys | Early in his remarks Mr. Baird | last night after his veteran Cabinet _ | Kenora. Exk _ ez h | served notice that he was about colleague had engaged in an un-- ' "Why do you pick on Kenora?" | to touch off the school tax fire-- precedented battle with Hon. George \he demanded. c * | works, when he charged that the S. Henry, Opposition Leader. _ _"Why did you pick on Kenora to| _ Prime Minister was "so tied up this -- ME g;,,.ak,\,.' in view of the con-- _ | spond $7,000,000 on it alone?" Mr., way and that" that he "couldn't duct of my colleague, I am willing Henry countered. y | _ move forward or backward" on the to accept a motion for adjourn-- _Mr. Heenan _ stepped out into the | issue,. And the result had been, he ment of this debate," said Premier _ |Aisle again. Speaker Hipe! said:| _ said, that no mention of the legis-- Hepburn, his face set. "Will the honorable member for! [ jation had been carried in the i ip Kenora sit down." Mr. Heenan per--| Throne Address. "Thoroughly Disgusted. sisted in firing questions at Mr. "Oh, that's a thing of the past," Once adjournment had been ef-- Henry. "Will the member for Ken-- put in Attorney--General Roebuck. fected, the Prime Minister, white-- ora sit down," clicked Speaker Hipel "That's the fond wish of the Gov-- faced and shaking with emotion, again, and Hon. Mr. Leduc rea(_'hedl ernment," gibed Hon. Mr. Henry. strode out of the chamber, glanc-- out a hand in Mr. Heenan's dlrec-l "I know," Mr. Baird said, "that the Ing neither to right nor left. tion. Government doesn't like to discuss "Have you anything further to "Can't T1 ask him (Mr. Henry) a | this very well because it's going to say?" the press asked. question ?" | lbo the main issue in the aext elec-- "I am thoroughly disgusted, "Yes, you may," said the Speaker, tion." that's all," he said shortly. "and if the honorable member sees i The Government, by its course, "Do you propose any action?" fit to reply you must give him time he said, had stirred up racial strife "I will say nothing more at the ;to reply before you ask him an-- '!among people who'd been content moment,." was his parting word. |other question." . \ for years to live side by side in The chamber door closed behind "All right," said Mr. Heenan, and {peace and contentment. him, leaving knots of excited Lib-- he fired a question about the road-- i *"There's no civil war is there?" eral legislators talking over the sit-- work undertakeq in his_ riding by asked Mr. Hepburn. "No," said Mr., uation. Mr. Heenan sat silent in the Henry Administration on the Baird, "but you and your Govern-- his seat, and then picked up his eve of_the 1934 election. ment are entirely responsible for papers from the desk and left the "I said 1 wasn't going to finswer l|what feeling has been created, and chamber. s any more questions and I'm not, yet you try to fasten the blame for| It was a midnight flare--up that said Mr. Henry. 111, on the Opposition." | :Oll"ld' llhi; gallel':es "t';mt' bonlyhfl "He can't answer them, that's ; The Liberal Party, he declared, ; anaful of spectators, but brought y e t y 'had been out of power for twenty-- mf;n;'bcx:":r:s:;ntszh:n:'op;:)\:;r t';}:ta\:fi:? roh';n;u,crt'-}lmb Dora «loesn't want lfiw years, and were ready to try cate 8 en 4 s e shle d 64 y 'n the veteran Minister and the com-- a Thp' Iong_ yvexattous _ Keparate i?:\)';t}-'mag;;d I(fafigzigult}ugne;scefie paratively calm Leader of the Op-- chools tax issue was precipitated | *h," $ clared, "they would osition into Legislature debate, in no un-- enough," he declared, ey I * certain fashion, late last night, ; get the vote. Well, they got that Heenan Shakes Fist. when the Conservative Opposition favor, and those funds, and they got Three times Speaker Hipel or-- moved an amendment to the Throne the vote." ; dered the Hepburn Cabinet Minister _ Address motion, "regretting that no But why, he asked, had the Prime to sit down as Mr. Heenan shouted _ assurance is given to the people Minister waited two years, Did about "this man Henry." The row of the Province of Ontario that he realize that he '('ould haxe started over road work in Northern Chapter 4 of the Statutes of 1936, been elected without "that vote"? Ontario, and when Mr. Henry, who | being an Act to amend the Assess-- Did he now rue the bargain he had | was speaking in the Throne Speech _ ment Act, will be repealed." made? debate, mentioned Kenora (Mr. | The amendment, sponsored BY "No," thundered Mr. Hepburn.: Heenan's constituency) the firee |Goldwyn Elgic, Woodbine, and Hon. "I've said before, and I say again: works started. W. D. Black, Frontenac--Addington, that there was no bargain of any} "Don't you talk that way about |was launched after the Hepburn kind." (. Kenora," shouted Mr. Heenan, shak-- |forces had endeavored to shut off 4 ing a fist in the direction of Mr. 'the debate, and W. A. Raird (Cons., Henry. He moved out of his seat High Park), had rushed into the into the aisle and gave every ap-- breach with an exlemporlanemlxis bu;_a C f pearance of being about to cross . biting attack on the whole policy of | ssae ragh * f \the floor and take up the ques> the Government with regard to the | Aviation--Mining Articles ' tion at close range with his op--» school tax question. °: :: | ponent. Hon. Paul Leduc, Miniss _ At midnight Opposition Leader By Ken W . Mac?'aquff i ter of Mines, put out a restraining | George S. Henry was still speaking-- --_Win M.L.A.'s Tribute | | hand, but the enraged Minister _ unable to get an adjournment of the 4 } | brushed it aside. It was Mr. Henry's _ debate from Premier Hepburn, who ' . ie | mention of an expenditure of $605,-- said that the House would sit right t Speaking in the debate if" ,l € j |000 on six miles of road between through until a vote was taken. | Legislature yesterday, William | Kenora and Keewatin that started Never at any time had the Liberal ', ib.. Victoria, said that © 5 4 ! Newman, Lib., » Mr. Heenan off on his tirade. Party made any commitment with | d\ more attention was "'The honorable member for respect to the school bill, Premier ' more an C the Kenora is out of order," ruled the Hepburn heatedly declared, when . being focussed these days _0" : calm voice of Speaker Hipe} accused by Mr. Baird of having mining industry of Ontario. In "Yes, and if I was in order I'd made a "bargain" to bring in this this connection, he paid tribute to cross the floor and see him," ex-- vexatious legislation if elected to ces avel < Wwrits" ! « the aviation--mining articles wr claimed Mr. Heenan. '"Talk about power in Ontario. | C of your own dirty work," he shouted "It has been a burning question.] , ten by Ken W. MacTaggar | across the t'floto':' Minis strictly on its meriti:I folx; years ':ng' ' The Globe and Mail, a member of ' "I'm no e ter without years," declared Mr. Hepburn. "An | ress gallery. Portfolio, you know," said Mr. i want my honorable friend to take } fpe Legislative p £ Henry, referring to the Heenan--Cox, | my word for it that there never was es incident in which the former is re--| |any bargain." is k e