Ontario Community Newspapers

Ontario Scrapbook Hansard, 29 Mar 1923, p. 2

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"-1"??? "7' -. 'it," up - _ - " , ' _ - i... - . It?" "A: - Iglhiitti'5 RV"? iMP. TWI. "15l$iiti 1.": 'lR1%i'Rt,tdlllr!5i,ir"'r?'CQEgal 'ttlic':,',',",.". 'rll5,Y,! I " __ a .1 L9; as. _s'i"'tis,3al,5?l5ci'1T" "' 'a"cc.. _ T -' 1 ,T' ,,_.' ...... F ._' . _ - N. "2:21"; [l " . l k , -..s.2L,Ll, V ' _ , " 'ir.) l, i ' . l No Pact was EEO. My. ' . ' . , (: Ontario .was in so. li ' A " " l t present for lack of Jl'l'ii,'iA,tlu,t, [ ' . _ ' .. l administrators. said Mr. Hay. What ', It"- ._. -, 3 was needed most was a Government with the ability to administer pres- _ PRO "ION t i ent laws rather than to create new ones. V ' _ ,. Liberalism was not unsym / ------- I ' t,TC'/ft We" it "musings: .. F ; L ".' e 9. ? the.party, but because" F. Wellington Hay Makes '. F.man.tvaq alarms: he had no right St ' . . I to expect he and his fellows should ralghtforward Declara- .. 9,13?ng (ht ageing] of this Prov- . ' . . _ as W Y e present Gov. tion of Loyalty to.0..T.A. "'i,i,'ii'i'tiii,it', was not a representative -, _ . t Regarding rumors of a' . HAS NOTHING TO CONCEAL coalition M... the measles I ': . . u f :the U-Fgou Mr. Harset these'at _ 9 . """-T""""T"""'" _ _ I,',',",','), when" he said that if those in (Staff Correspondence of The Globe.)' .sympathy with the present trato.-' Hamilton, March 2C,--Refreshintr "in": Combination really wanted because of its absence of ambiguity as able _ fjevHtyttertt, they should ' :COme over and cast their lot with or left and tight hand promises, a Ontario Liberals, for the latter: candid declaration of policy respect; would survive long after the former . Dig the Ontario Temperance Act two had passed on. 1 was uttered to a representative audi- Startling Jump in Debt. ence ot Liberals in the moral Con- _ Thomas Marshall. M.P.P of Lin- naught tonight by Tr. Wellington Jcoln county, critipiaed the lack of Hay, Ontario Leader of the party, idlttlat,ere trhown by the various who said the will of the people in a net Ministers of the Govern- relation to the entorttttrtttsttt of the 'J,','tnati., 'There never Was a time in measure should be strictly observed. in 'df. t9 s history, he said, when men So far as the Ontario Liberal '0, artrer calibre and broader vision party was concerned, there would be rum needed. He Said the interest no moditteation, no weird experi- on the Provincial debt was now $6,.. ments, no further vote on the dues.- ' 500.000. whereas in 1904, under a tion until another demand for a gum"! administration, the entire change comes from the people. and (PTvineial debt watt only 85,000,000 that demand has not come yet. in 'rrtles, even than the interest on the the opinion of Mr. Hay. He 'won- deb{ is now. . dered if Mr. G. Howard Ferguson ' Mr. Hay made his tlrat omeial ap- . would be as frank. {gamm'f' -,,t Hamilton tonight, and l Wt S A Straightforward Declaration. 121.5331: "'Rrlf'/i'it',na, 'E-tetseilgggt 0x10? Near the conclusion of a. lengthy the chair. John Newiands tku?. address, the keynote of which was President, introduced Mr. Max-gimp that more capable business men and Russell Collinis led the communit- fewer politicians should have the singing. Liberals were present froy administration of Ontario's destinies. many points in the district m Mr. Hay touched on the Ontario ----------L-ULCaCC.r, l Temperance Act. ._- _l "I might as well declare myself now," he said. "There is nothing. to . conceal about Liberalism's attitude _ -. on this question-a question. I feel. . on which there ought to be plain public speaking. The bringing in! of the O.T.A. was due to the co-l operation of Ontario Liberals with} a the Hearst Government. We do not'; _ deny that. We have no reason to; do so. It was enforced as a War! measure. with the proviso that the, I soldiers should vote on it when they; returned trom overseas. Subsequent! votes have shown with whatacclalm the people ofthis Province have en- , dorsed that measure, _ . . "So far as we. the Liberals ot On- tario. stand, I say the will of the peo- ple in relation to the er1toreerptpti of the O.T.A. should be strictly! obeyed. When there is a demandl for a ohantte---tutd we do not think ' there is that demand as yet-a new I vote will be on a question de.. fined on broad lines. so that the matter shall be fully determined one way or the other. Whatever the verdict of the people may be, that " verdict shall be respected if the Liberals are the dominating party in . this Province." '

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