" - i t rat and as a 1'5"" ainbeild. qlllnnsed- ‘by sruin m6"- . “I. n‘:- ‘ ‘pa ‘nsn._ _, _ l . H, , I 0ll. w- -i."‘l" i r- 1 . l_\.- .' . s, / ".. (Continued) . . I_ 601m ml- he told us that such circumstances would justify n. do- Wnm°~ Th‘!!! Year he says‘ as to 11W industries‘ "I will have noth- ing to do with them, but I will “llilmle to support those which ‘"9 ‘W981i!’ iilfliilfl" country." , Nolwfthe "lion. member for Shel- ‘bilmiiiflllil Queen's med to make outtbst because he effected in. if; - ' - .: ‘y. l ‘QM i" i? ill it ‘h--- xx-x xQAT-nv- xxxxxxxx.axx-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx , AASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS . v "Wtlhhommscm-wcssrsss-cau- " - .. l" ....":."..'_'....":*-..":..':.::. "Mr!- P." --'- - qu-‘lv-“ncnnyoaamhnngucnr-uml ‘ lIpouecnnfllsa-Ih AAAAA‘ vvvvYV "ll In remittances so eovol hflt " ' “i. everloo Aivartfsenanh II * ind-- ' some microscopic way; to use the "hnmm" °1 thfiiidn; member for in"! D001‘ Pliiriisd to the very salme ' lmbiedt. the tlirlnwhnt he found in force in 1807 when he-calme into power, snd tlius ‘riiiiucod the aver- E one tariff onlyJrorn 29.9 to 29.2, lor ..7 of oils pbr cant, "meter-the. ‘m8!’ he suvo. “the-changes were a great‘ relleftb the ohsumers of iron; “ fi q Q ME." .. 11mm wmzlifi IIAKI ‘helluva-r HOMI - m M 060 said weekly for yo," lllsre timowritilll. lhowosrds 0691M. _ " , w. 9'1"“ 1341.300!!! you with gorh- gonzo-um allow can! V. "M. ._ .. Ooiborne street mom iii___ "Kl-"Vlkltlifltrirso Allure ‘If-l ‘I i511 salesman , Millie ambition is beyond his , Wflllllltion fniaht find 0911mm! Omiiiilrnlant with gathgvsesgniiiflme doubly . q _ _ ., elem" character sollno iamtafidd .51"! holly: of strong porlonaiity who gloom lbnreoiaie a life son til a fast growing concern ' Wills be pest-u Where industry ed mo. hr above hex-ago so,“ "IE9: married men preferred Abllly to M J. c. McLean, Bali fir; boys f tn vl t 'r Blllliméfsflie, étoggtglllar “t5. ti: girls of the C. G. i. T. and a num- ber vfvlsltors. met ln tho Y. n1. c. >A-_ “Nil i0 bill lfareweil to ong of their n-umbsr. Mr. Jack Walsh of the Canadian lBank of Ccmnlerce, Willi has been transfered to Vernon River- Rev. l0- s. Mitchell occu- pied the chair. and. after s. few "Dolliht remarks. called on. Mr. Goodwill Mlcifsdyelfi the Pretol- of the Square. to read the address wh J1 was as follows: To" fir. J, C. Walsh, _ liar Jsckz-ait is with mingled iselhiki of pride and sorrow that Wei your follow members of the Victor ‘Duxis, _ 4 uare, have met here 1001851. on s eve of your depar- ture etc-a new field of’ labor, to say “an revoir," pride because of your promotion. sorrow in the fact that with your going we alleles- ifigfirbm iour midst one whom we have learned 0o admire and re- Qilbiit; - lSlhoo our organisation as s Tux- ill “Square you have been one of our mostoctive members, ever anxi- cus and-willing to nsslst in what- ever activities. we were carrying .1‘ l ‘i ‘takehoohalleoll "latfilttd" do"? ihnullfiiilly " Trunk Rail i-l vol-a o‘ ‘ “ ‘ " ' ‘w ‘ rll.” Grand " way. o - _ » ' = ' I . if ~,‘-,,'-,, ‘1,,-,,,-,¢;;, f.:‘:l.;*::rs."3"'"*:.:;f°;n:r:- 9.1.111". -PIPPX§~._.DIéEX-_- . A _t l ' i» ei- directors clccwéivrrc‘ J. NIr-V ~ c l. -‘ lbw»- ‘ ~ ~" " . ‘ "- " "°*"" ' ifitéh. M ._ aegmlgugonfixlxgintm. THURSDAY: A WoMAkhWlTfi hswl, t - _ _ AT then SAlDz/(MADAME, AND WHEN wsolo, i _sg\lo-. ANP: .-;_4;_l_o=-v_ o .,',_,,tg,-_=go;lem ill-om‘... “no: J, M3" PUPPYlN HER ‘mo; sm“ uexlr me m. WHEN-WE coma To THE sweater "HERE. ls BAY8lDE Avenue." ‘ftcojii, PETS! a! 71g; " i $145.”, "“,,°»".“N,',‘,f,‘;',’,'“,'§,,,,“,'§,,,,,_|‘ mlaTyzottsv-mk. AS WErCAMEflb YOU MENTION’ I'LL INFORM YOU wneneurou sue =r=rab" wlistiz "room h , , lil-flllailycompleoed install-Joseph, - “AASK ME: a THE PUPPY T‘? THE WWDQW“ MWHWR WAS ' u...“ lrzrcln-"ol." nzzlmlclzliilrirzslwls» . o r = scion. Ave...»- l - n c v __---Qo&———— d‘. . _.._ r11 _:..~ 1-; ,,'r_‘..¢--_7__ 1 _ ,7-*=-__-H7]'_;-=./__: ——*-/» ur/"fl/l AT‘ on "m" “ whereas manure '. flask. farlnors d eventually by samoalspnn IIHVQII 0H iilh ill May so; if . a‘ farmer of f0 Yslfl‘ "‘ s ill ‘this ulna-lot. will unis inquiry 00mm"- complains - '- . l" liirosntonaoaroff. __ . ‘ma; “use for . . o; wheat, not onollsh i0 \ 9" Mimdavsflliins’. liiiny cal-a, m-a-m-mq-anl.‘ , 1 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxhxx-xxxaxxmxmxxxxx‘ vvvvv v v vvvvvvvvvvVVYvv VVV v1 building, i opposite Prowso‘ * oor, Riley Queen 8L, Brothers. _ suits and overcosnsjrmn our branches throughout at our store only. English Sootoil Woollen 00mph”, Richmond Street. '0L‘01'H| CLOTH, dresses and suits? We half regular price, in goods 54 '56 inches wide. This is lish d: Scotch Woollen "l5! Ridlmond B t. "mast l" 5 owl‘; rrsilisidgutgsr step chosd ",fc‘e'c will its r i YOU GVGPY ‘B C0685. ‘ . yourself. so success in life. , o. s. Mitchell, Mentor. hecavnll MoFhdyeii, we Albert McKay, Bcrlptor. Max Llnklettar, comptor. companied Wa-i exp sod his approcistloil Aft was present. all retlr ii toflthe floor for group lilltll, roam was served. ‘The me in; ‘by a slngsong end prayer. HIBOELHANIQOUS mu. uucALLto ‘roll sum Gan wiifbe "sent at $14.00‘ each. Edi trousers "SB/Odd vests $1.50. in mo“ easel-l this vflile is loos‘ nban one-third their actual val- ue. Merchants buy these goods for ro-saie to their customers.‘ Wise men will buy two or three suits and an overcoalt. Ilor sale 158 your women relkscmn- no . , motor- ills In seed qualms: for anch- thousands "of yards that vrilialvl: folvmerly were subject to duty and sold as low as $2.15 per yard." thnt flow we free, .1! - oellent opportunity to get inst‘;- i° "m" isib in-boiner qualities than nsqlvilnd you, you can always refer gfi7algauékg§ Vfllinafi-img. m barbed wire. binder twine and M". B ~ "n ma‘ o.“ ‘t m" ‘ma. Eng crewm separators, as Company, 9,11? fem H33? see" where any duties on we d6 that one swrles of life have been must climb the ladder of sllucbss Th; flggt is; ‘b! SIBP. and, that in “your ' n profession or banking, aucll 556D! “Ward must be. in every “"9- "lfliikfld by a move; we for- of that? The next are: get our loss in your gain and wisn‘ Flm-lms stogk, a5 In going nto s new community you will of course meet new people BDiFOBB-I and make new friends. and per-- ha!!! ml)’ be instrumental in start- ing a new Square. But whether that be possible or not we fcei assured of this, that in the realm of athletics-you will play a lending Dari. and by youp example do much» to encourage clean sport in any community in -which, through your various. transfers, you may find ilucouclusion‘ we would-ask you, to accept this. small gift as o. toksu of our deep appreciation forlyour _ l-vlees among us. and d! our high esteem. With best wishes for ever,- »S"lgn‘ed on behalf of the Square.‘ 00f, ‘Diff-Gd;- J. (Lillouiltalo, Dbly. Prefer. I Alter the address which was ac- b‘y it Dressings Roll. all th Joined in singing ‘tldor He's s. Jolly -" Goo Follow," following which Mr. . in e ifcw well chosen words short speeches by the cbairuisn and Mr. R. C. sidsnl-us, "this ‘Field Secretary of the Y, M. C, A» win ‘d? it'- wns then brought to a close ‘ rtavztt: canola/m 0R0. "r. ilAlLwAv.-slr Joseph Flawe- lie, Hal-L, of Toronto wsselectad as. l cisainnan of the reconstituted ali- " csmrllen b00111 of oil-acumen of the - A llisnapenlent " ' of the combine this countryilecausewnat we did was tiiidz‘ we liivybliefti ohVthe ne- cessaries of life, the‘ things that the people hsd have, and by colngiypst, alth “gh we did not reducefille genera level very much there was a rudrked relief to the consumers of Canada." Well, 1 hsvea he reduced te .ff on. is h ‘sheet from the campaign liter- ature of the Liberal party in 1904, and- I want. to ,anslyse for a. mo- ment _tl‘le results of these stren- uoun eifor-‘ts of the hon. member for Shelibunno- and Queen's to rs- duce the writ! on the necessaries iof life and thereiby afford great Treilef, as he pu‘ts it, to the Cana- disn people. This pamphlet says: ' Here is s list of ariiicles 80 '8: i that 00 members listen of life . " ‘Now, will hon . “necessaries the member for Red Deer docs, (but outside of. those three let any hon. rgo‘ through this list ‘and the neces- cut down. "i ‘IIJBIIIIIG Degras .oieosteorinc—' v Has any hen. member ever heard follower- corns. tubers rhizones, auracnria, Indian Corn. Seed beans fromBritsin, Rape secdj-sowing, Mushroom spawn, Artificial limbs. Aspbsltunl (refined), Religious tracts, lClay crucibles, Cyanogen. And smother one, if any hon. member can pronounce it: Q-u-e- b-r-a-c-lh " An hon. MEMBER: Sandpaper. Mr. MEIGHENf Then follows: Extract of nll‘t galls; Fashion ~l wellf. through the ‘entire i-ist, and outside of the three ‘that I have naihed Lstfmit i found one st I think lli this age of decay '0? h 1| ihuadlllllld might rnlrly described ‘as a ne- llitllsgtofiilhlsxovlnvpioig. hon.‘ ‘Xi-i- llt; cessary of life, “and that wase false teeth. I ' " But the hon. member for Shel- burne and Queen's said that he had reducediheduty on a certain kind oif cloth that- the“ common people wore-.-whic'h'he found taxed in every way you could think of. This-cloth was subject to s duty of so much a piece, of so much s dozen, and then on that a percent- age ‘ad vslorein. sud he claimed thstille had remedied all that had _cu,t down the duty _-to s. nloderltte dgulifl 20, 25 or 30 per cent. I weln""tblrougil the-whole list to find who in the lworld he referred to, becsfse I hsd never heard of the fact ilelfore, and the only thing thetéi can find in this list publish- ed b the ‘Liberal por-ty. that would ans r his description is cotton shirts, New, "whet is the history of ids t. stment of cotton shirts? Theip-uly cotton shirts he touched werg; those costing more than $3. Tney-niy ‘duty was $1. a dozen and 25 pplgcent ad valorem.‘ Thai, the {lphallnplet says, made a total pthfl per cont ad vslorem, compu- ted ou the basis of the 1896 im- ports‘. Now then, Iwlili the delight- ed andfreileved consumers be ready M" announcement of the reduction that he actually made? He reduced_thec duty from 37 to 55 per cent. What is the use of talking’! The hon. member lfound a protective tariff in effect, and he kept it in effect-he scarcely changed it s! all. Any change he made one could scarcely see with a mic-nas- cope. When he went out of pow- or the tsllilf averaged 20:7 per cont, and was in all essentials, ex- cept the three I have irnontioned~ and, as I say, there have been more important reductions since then than there were -in the-whole fifteen years he, was in ‘power- dust so he found it. The tariff. tbaf he left: at‘ that flgurein the fiscal ycslr that has. just passed avelrages precisely 21.2 per ‘cent. Now, he says: "The tariff is a. tsx and yoll should make if. just as light las you can." That what he says in the tax psra- graph of the slmendmentp Well, if it is a tax you can make it Wight in proportion to your needs I sup- pose: that is the only thing that will enable you to do -so. What were his needs when he reduced. the tariff from 29.9 -to 29.2? They were $37,000,000 or $40,000,000 a year. I-Ilsheeds when" he went out of office and was nlalditlg the tslriff 26f! per cent on" dutiable goods were $100,000,000. The terlff, remember, is s tax, and today this country needs, as every hon. gentleman knows, $435,000,- 000. and we ‘are maintaining ‘the ‘their: st 21.2 per cent. _'Yet_the hon. gentle mun. challenges us‘ in this House". and says "the main ment of the day is that the tariff is too -blgh.".. u: that is noit» this, this amendment, but if that is ‘not- his charge will he let us kflow who-t it is?_ if hon. gentlemen want something reduced, why does not their amendment say sof Ill lav-innit. l chslrge I have against. the‘ Ciovcrli- ‘ charge what is m True. he has . ' taken goodcare ndf. to say it in- . .5. {P §.'.v_, i loll .u ll. noon lei u... the Ptiipieoi Mii-lfméiiriilillltillr-ilifiiis "Such onanvgelf-did sny one notice thlt the word “reduction" was "not there? It was ‘tiierefislst form, but so great was the strength of hon. gentlemen around him that they succeeded it getting therzord- "changes" substituted for , the word "reduction." I continue tho reading of the paragraph. Such changes should be ‘mad in the customs dutiesas may be eXlicdted to lreduce the high cost of living. “M-ay be expected to." The hon. member for Sbeiburne and Queen's says in -his country that the cost of living can be reduced by raising the tariff. dndecd ‘he indicated as much in this House when he sppke of what he bad done for the coal end steel of Nova Scotia. lDld-he noit say then that his policyqhsft- gfidpced: the price of the productfg _ Mr. RINFRET: whet about that clause? ' Mr. MIiiIGH-EN: - This clause’! Will the hon. gentlemen say whe- ther it means “reductiou" or “lu- crease?" The hon. gentleman does not answer. Mr. RINFRET: The Prime Min- ister salys that the-word "reduo lion" isnot in the wmendment, but he has rend it twice. The word is there twice. ' Mir. IVIElGH-EN: It is only there once, so far as I have been dbls to sce. They regret that no re- ductions have been made but they do not say they" will not. do any- thing to bring s. reduction about. Where is the other reference to a reduction? Does my hon. friend refer to that part of the clause which says "may be expected, to reduce the cost of livlng"? Well. that is Just where the joker comes in. The hon. member took care that he would be slble to go to his constituency and preach the very Qsflné doctlilnems fiialt ‘on which he ‘was elected-the doctrine of pro- tection. - ' Mir. RlilNFilETz- I-Iow does the right hon. gentleman know? His Government has no candida“! there. Mr. iVIEIG-I-IEN: Why, there is no election llhcre, but there is an elec- tion in the county of Ynrk-Sunbllry and the holl_ gentleman has llc candidate there. Mr. RINFRET: I made I10 statement about York-Sunbllry, and l do not expect my right hon. friend to lllalke ally statement about St. James when he‘ does not know anything about it. _ Mr. MEIGHEN: Unfortunately, i do know something about. my hon. friend. I know the tslliiii platform upon which he contested his sealt. I have read his speech- es. ‘ Mr, RINFRET: know’! Mrl MEIGHEN: l have read the speeches end l have read some of‘ his newspaper articles. RINFRET: Did ruby hon. Mr. MEIGHEN: On the tariff, pisifform his-speeches were very good, betcalusc they advocated pre- cisely the tariff platform of this w» How do you a word, why duos it not state, ex- grsmme to which they are pied-- igéfl‘? v , l fil proceed with this amendment. Berg is the third clause: That such .-chsnges should be i ' made in the customs duties as may be __Q¥llecte‘d-- press "and reflect the tariff pro- ‘ government. All that is the malt- Iei-vwlth the hon. gentleman is ilaiiltissnship; if he could get A v-n ss . V “HQ . _ s . n R/"lf/il/l £1‘ Jr/lt l/ll fi/l/ flhifflifidl F!‘ KY‘ A m! BY l7.".l lll-._ l" 1min} lit 2J1‘. m. 1.... year; it was in the Libel-m plat- , -, 110w ‘does the I “Q1 1 from that be would be ‘all night. ' Mr.‘ ‘RINFRWP: Unlike the ‘Prime Minister. Ml-KMEIGHEN: i-If he would stand np for those who frankly say thdy- are with nun in tariff mat- ters,- but he and thoseWvIro‘ think hlnfgo before their constituents and any: Why, we -do not pro- pose to reduce s single item o! the tariff; we can reduce the cost of living byseeling to it that we make more thingsTill this country; by seeing toit fhsit we get a scale of production which will enable" ins- nltfacturcrs to reduce the‘ cost; by iseelngkto it that by competition developed through a protective tariff itriuf about evredtlctiibli ‘of prices to the consumer oi Call- ada. yThat w-ill be - my hon. friend's posltiolr in‘ the county of St. James. fMr. RJNFRET: I ask again, Prinne Minister -kno'W‘f‘"‘“ “' ' " ‘ Mr_' MEIGHEN: ii. is a pretty safe conjecture because that ‘is what-the amendment enables him to do.‘ What my hon. friend is going to do I have no means of knowing except by what‘ he dial before: I- presume he will adopt the saline’ bsriff "platform the next- time tiiht he‘ sdoptedbn the form- er occasion” d knowthat his journals sli through the province of Quebec~lncludiug hrls own jour- nal, the one to which he sends most astounding reports from this House-are continually assuring the nlhnu-fsctu-rers and lthe work- lngman of that province not to fealr anything should the Liberal party get into power. They sny: “We are protectionism the slalne as you "are; do not be afraid’ of us Liberals if we get into power." That is what the Quebec journals are saying, and saying repeatedly. Did the hon. gelitlemau ever see those sentiments in 1H8 press. Mr. RIlNFRlET: ‘Do not,‘ connect me with La Preese. Mr. MIG-HEN: Well. Le Cans- da, we will try that one. Did the hon. gentleman oversee‘ in his journal any article denouncing the principle of prdtcoiiion? I-ias he ever published any such sr- ticle? l rend that paper occasion- ‘nlly, and I have never seen any- thing of the kind. "I do not know myself of a single Llbersl joumei in the province of Quebec, either IPrench-Carladia nor English"- Canadlan, which takes any such attitude. And what sibout the hon. member for North Waterloo (Mr. Euler)? He is a gentleman of strong views; there are not. mun-y coilweibs in" his bFain; he talks pretty clearly. He made a speech the other day betore Ithe Reform club of Montreal, and I have s copy of thslrspeech before me. Will he go back tohls coun- ty ‘and say that be voted.- against protection? Will he go back and say tbatile is against the principle of protection? is he firing to vote that wsy in this House? Which disuseof this amendment is he going to support? ‘Here is what he said‘ in Montreal: ' I would say that he is a bold man- “Bold man," remelnbsn. -.wh'o declares that one who be- lieves that Canada shculd- have a moderslte tariff for revenue, or pro- tection of industries and employ- ment,- was not a good Liberal. Does it "not look as if the hon. member for Waterloo cohld be a [Liberal and st the some time s ' null his protectiohlstf l " not; " ~ _ geti hi“. Ethan.‘ barb it "‘M| IIIOIQ I a clause in the allneurhiisfit to lit his "case-there is one-to lit cue. ' If. EULDR: The Fflmellillil- , tor has the floor now. ' "' "f. MEIGHENZ But I Ill! my hon. friend in explain his vote. I" vot-Itiffor and which he is voting lliilliiyliiifli he supports g-‘tlre not support it. Liston-townie. prottictionist doctrine‘ ail flmpolrlldl ed by thehon. ineufler loo: - . , . One" “ ivobsoh people had to think of today‘ was the labour question. Cdnadisn flvorlrmeil had become used to a good stand- ard of living. and he bpiieved- n That is," thehon. mcnrber for" North Waterloo. —-that this standard should be kept up, though, perhaps, in some instances they had ‘gone too far. "Rdferrihg, I suppose, to the wdsddlrtmcu. To keep up these standards for the working people it was essen- tial tllatthere should not be lrulfair oanspeti-uion with countries where the" standard of living was lower. Much better it, would be if the standard of living in these coun- tldes were raised to the standard of that of Canada. Mr. Eulre in- stonced the manufacture of hut- toils, of which article Kitchener molds the Mai Osuedfhw product. I have not the iossvdoubt that when "the hon. member goes bsck to Kitchenor- his platform will be muchthe same asltilat of the hon. mfsniber-for West Pettesbor- ough (Mr. Gordon); lit will be a case of "Kitchener first." And what slbout the hon. mem- ber for West Potelfborough him- self who was elected u ll a dec- laration that he stood "for the protection of industries and. for the protection of lalbour?" whet‘ about the hon. gentleman's de- lluncisilioll of tme as an. interloper and shameless intrruder because i dared "to say thM. the tariff lied snything at all to do with " that election. By the way, what did the" hon. member for Red Deer mean when he statedc-tbat we ought to dram s lesson from the election in. retnnlmougb? Why. the only candidate tllere- who calme anywhere near to standing on his plaltfolnn-ilhe only one who supportéfh“ pbiicy’ ‘resembling his in the relnotest degree was n man who got approxlimately one-quarter of the votes. The successful candidate was" elected on a pro- tectionist platform; the leader of idle Opposition went there in order to ‘see t-lln-t his candidate migbtbe returned on a platform of protec- tion. Why, he said, this Parlia- lnenthas no right to touch the tariff, and even if I were Prime Minister I would not after one word, one schedule or one item of the‘ tariff until we had another ap- peal to the people. Bat he since submitted an amendment in this House-and in support of ft he got thlrvote of the hon_ member for West; Pdtofiborongh-itlse oh- Ject of which was to change the tariff. duties on from cue hundred to tlwo hundred articles at this session of the House. What will be the position of the hon. mem- ber for West Pfiterborougb if he votes for this amendment‘! is he, who was elected because he declar- bd he was a protectionist; is he who was elected because he ‘pinn- "su his faith tuprotectioti -:s he going to. 3o back to his consti- lueuts and ss/y: I have voted for the protection of industry bss- ed ‘upcrlrthe natural resource". of the country; I voted for ultra- "grnph-S of the amendment. I The House will remember that jibe third last psrpagraph refers ‘o such changes "as may be expected -to reduce the cost of living." Then the second last paragraph says: ‘Phat, while keeping this aim clearly in nlind- _ Just keeping it “in luicdfi‘, protectionist‘! Will the hem-gentle- fnsn Vote-for this amendment wont him to explain which clause ' he will have iii ilsind. which he is " amendment-if, he does: _I Jt-ill‘ _ have some confidence that he i for 1 or» vim: it'll. null" mi M! Uxlstfntg conditions 11f trade. "u . Does the hon. member for ildo- f Deer. (Mr. marklflssythnrln-sfeij I-jflilisi-ing a mrllf)’ 761i should ilhfi regard to existing conditions Qef, trade‘! Does the hon. , for Marquette (Mr. Crerar) ion) that? I-Ie says that he is goiih to vote for that; the hon. nlemiidr- for nee Deer is going to ‘vote Mi‘ it; but they voted already (hi! session c for something thatuthey} said they did not believe in snail, and I suppose they can do flip . again-anything to "get In tile Milli‘ hdat with hon. gentlemen, opp};- site". _ V f: :2- Regsrd lmlust be had towristini conditions oftrade and iehaigdl made in such manner as will in?!“ v the icast possible alstnshpnce. " cr- 5 business. ' * ""7. "t That is a new translstioh ofrthl phrase that was used with all)!!!‘ lrble regularity by the leading o! the Opposition (Mr. MackeiilfifoY-n King) in many speeches that’ “ill ‘ has beerudelivering. He, ‘said? “Do not worry: when I amend thi" tariff, I will have regard~to tilt" needs of industry." l-Ialflug-MIIIQ worked that‘ phase, which waif’; clear declaration for rpotoctiifii they change it, and they fiY-i-hfi ' they will “hnve regard to oxis conditions of trade" and see t I ' there is "no disturbance df “it; ness." All that they will dfi-‘ifi connection with these ‘whangoaff’ that may be made. "expecting tq reduce the cost of living," ,wlll to keep them "ill mind." ' "Iihatll what the resolution says. "" There is no douibt where‘ the Goverlrmeni..st‘and.. Therein H0 measure of doubt through country. The hon. member for Red Deer, the hon. member "fort <1 Marquette, everyone so for asfl . _ know, who has spoken, clearly aim’ 3 ted that. the country eoulrrnotiffil. i- to understand whcrs_'the Govern- luent stood on tariff matters. [snot where the hon. member Maisonnellve (Mr. Lemieux) it stands, in the speech which V delivered and which colillialfluy many a sentence for ‘wlbich he h“ no warrant in the world. He s_ i . "This Government stands for high v protection." I wish he were ii i the chamber, so that I mfghfiifi him upon what. authority he his“ » '" that statement. -Can he fiud- all! sentence or utterance of mine to‘, - justify him? Can he find any" act ' _, of this Government or sny schbi " . dule of" the tariff to justify bluffs it, unless he admits that he hflfll- '£ self is n high protectionist tool’ _j Upon what authority when does h! » make that. assertion’! Be make! it upon no authority at all. Government stands for tile that is in existence today, and iii h‘ any adjustment. that will be made - wewili admit the principle of pm- ‘ tection alld"wc will apply itybut‘ only to the extent that we have cppllso it during our tenth of olrlcs here, namely, to the extent tial to ensure production -in 1M1 country and to enable producoffto compete with similar busiuessosih, dther countries. Have ljlcfbvfi done more than that? I sshitgtlll‘? - What warrant have lion. Ientydllil’ opposite. time after iimbpwitlihdt“ a reference, without a single l tation fro-m anything, without ovefi pointing the finger uuonvitem 3f the tariff, tuvleefitfitolit A’ m sorting. through the p1" upon platlforfvns‘ in ,. i andc~.—the House recognizes that in ‘any