Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Sep 1926, p. 7

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SEE UGLOW'S. SPECIAL DOLLAR FOUNTAIN PEN ! | [RU UGLOW &CO- When Cool ea Weather Comes _ The home and living roots will be the gathering place when cool weather comes. Is there anything you need to 1 make it more comfy and cosy, more attractive for the whole family during the autumn and winter months ? Juiz room with Gate-leg or Chesterfield 'Table or "hair A i our large stock, well arranged on our floors, "JAMES REID LEADING UNDERTAKER "PHONE 147 YOR 1 INVALID COACH. AT Foun SERVICEs DAY OR NIGHT. rr -------- a BiG LIBERAL RLY . INMEMORIAL HALL . sg pets ae Cy away from her regular . work and with friends enjoyed a pleasurs cruise. The speaker scored Doucet tions directed Hon, Eries: Lapointe and he said that Mr.. Mei- shen had mot scted fairly toward a brother Parliamentarian whed he had sat 'on the platform and Bad heard these things said but did me: protést, Apostles of Purity. Mr. Gordon then started to deal with some of the members of Mr. Meighen's cabinet and some of his supporters in the last House. = "Mr. Meighen got into powers' he sald, "and formed his shadow Cabi- net... He as his Minister of Public Works a Mr. Ryckman who at one time was in partnership with Pat Scully, a professional race track gambler. Differences arose and Scully susd Ryckman is couft. Seully declared that Ryckman had welshed and réfused to pay his debts. The case was tried before Mr. Justico Lennox, a former Tory politician. He listened to the evidence of the two men and declarell that having heard what Both had to say, he pre- ferred to believe the word of the race track gambler rather than that of Ryckman. Mr. Ryckman's word was disbelievéd by the Judge and this Is the man whom Mr. Meighen has taken into the Cabinet." Then for Minster of Railways he birthday. He was an énemy to pub- He ownership and had given agsur- ance time and again of his intention to wrench the Intercolonial trom the C.N.R. system. In the Commons he 'presented the spectacle of a poor old man who had néver made a speech | ma never could make one. When he got up in the House, he held a paper from which he read, so ¢lose to his nose that all that could be heard was an Indistinct mumble, He was one of the patriots who sailed his. ships 'under the Swedish flag and not under the Canadian flag, in order to evade the naviga. tion laws of this country. He ade mitted in the Commons that ship, chartered By his company sailed une der the flag of Sweden, "The next man I want to Intre- Suet You to is 'Potato Jomes,' sald 'speaker. "Mr. Jones was 3 rod member of the New Bruns: wick Legislature. He became in- volved in 4 standal arising from the "| purchase of seed potatoes by the Legitlature, ' He was found guilty of conspiracy and graft and a resolu- tion of the Legislature called on him to resign diseredited. Now he 1s Minister of Labor." His appearancs :| in the Cabinet, said Mr. Gordon, was i} |an insult fo the Nofking men and head ba had no 'right to put & man of the type of Mr. Jones 10 appoint the Cameiliation Boards. How could he re con fidefice in the men and women that he would aot justly Memes be- Ftwebn employer and employed? How could he assume the futietions of a Judge in these matters? The next was R. B. Hanson of New Brunswick, & man who forged & judgment and was not allowed to practice law as a result. He was Meighen's right-hand man in New Brunswick. Minister of Finances, who sald at ons time that Mp. Meighen was the gramaphone of the Canadian ern Railway, and Mr. Me thought so much. of Mr. * Beaotte opinion of Mm that he made him Minister of Finance, * sina. | Used House of Commons Stationery. Mr, Gordon also referréd to De- Witt ¢ and Garland and men- tioned H. H. Stevens, the man who: instigated thé customs charges, as the same mah who had used Fr House of Commons stationery to > igs a thom the United States to peo- in Canada ivising them. to in- in the Canada-United States Of ¥: & venture in LE people lost $600, od ype of a. Of SsilaTs-af: the. sounity's ue. for his pasty 'and untrue insinua-|- had chosen W. A. Black. Mr. Black would be eighty years of age next Then there was n B. Bennett, = Fog Thain {in judgment Mr. [1 Mr. Stevens' was the i _| man to be entrusted with collscting ret precios longing, de on? of hoqot 32 3. gilded Nov. 24th, 1910, that "I loyally fought the promoters of the War Navy, and British Crown and Empire." _ declaration. In 1922, when a war with Turkey seemed possible, for a cause few understood, Mr Musi, SE the Promicrshin, in hi the worst blow ever struck in a Dominion by.a public man sgainat the solidarity Tribu i {Conse ative)co on this speech di er Sommening on this speech i Princip es. He extrac- Cons ive Pat Party one of. the it, and h kar to or "of the as. The Winni said: "He in money SE nrthandise fom the rdiions of th. Co Is it wonder that Conservatives over admit chat "Meighen cannot war Is it any the coumery 5 the Con- servative Soagt 10 ¢ast have censured Mr, Meighan editorially ? Is it ible that the of Canada can hope for stable es he, peopl sacrifice his all for the doselled trinkets of personal prestige or power ? Canadians of all parties want to know where Mr. Meighen stands in respect to his utterances at Hamilton in. Meighen has been challenged for a refused to answer. 192 Time and again Mx 3 Mr. . Meighen said in Toronto, "When Britain's message came, Canada should have said 'Ready, Aye, Ready!' " But, prior to the Election in Bagot in 1925. Mr. Mei be oiuion in Bagot in J01 Ms M Meghen electors of he, Hamilton : "Befo our decision into execution to the extent of dispatching troops to another Country we believe that it would be better to have the consent of the uch consent to be obtained by means of a General Election." After a short sojourn in the United States De eu returned to Bagot lb he reaffirmed this ~ anti-Imperial Canada still wants to know. Where does Meighen stand ? g at re we put Meigheén can't Win! a vii Give King 1d Major: VOTE FOR JIM HALLIDAY _ ¥ £ At Brasil it would take on cotfes for the United States and after unload. ing 'the coftee would take on a cargo of cotton and tropical fruits for Cane ada and so drrive at a Canadian] port to again away a load of Canadian parts to take away unless they oh: in a load o ports, Mp. Marshall said. had beén Mr. Marshall said there wasn't a phofographer tn Oar. dds equal te the job. used a pleturs of himself on the Tab: | farm eral literatures which had been taken exports. Ships would not come ints in ihe United States, all the Consers vative ee {from spontaneous combustion, he | the 'League in. which said, AS Bul agaiget imports | was a shat there waren ; [ES price page ph ukae or the The People's Candidate en th the United States. motion {0 ¢ut te duty on farm im-| pau: that probably plements Dut in 1923 replying to 4 Question as to whether it he were in power he would replace 'the duty on implements which the Liberals had removed, He aud that he would, My. Marshall declared earring toa Sam phiet ssued by It Mr. King | pow newspapers would explode fag. win ibis dd Ber and 2 St ™ 40d many : oh

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