Énzi cüntrÂsted....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. i ask the senate the n,...

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M 1a X ÉNZI 2AND MACDONALD GOVERNMENTS CüNTRÂ S TED.

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Page 1: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

M1aXÉNZI2AND MACDONALD GOVERNMENTS CüNTRÂSTED.

Page 2: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

11tR. BROWN'S SP1]ECjÏ ..O N

THE FIiANCES. OF CA NADA .

UrtswA, 21st March, 187The order - of the day having been °oalled for' resnining the. debsteon lir. Maopherson'e notioV, " Tlie,t he will oall attention to the public"expenditirre of the Dominion, eu eoiallty that portion of it wh,irit is" lqrgely, withinthe control of the ' dmintrtre,tion; and will inquire of'the Government how it is propused to restore the equihhrium be-twéen ;inaome and expenditure .'" . , ~AQN. - GEORGE BROWN said :-I rite to make a fewobaerv'ation eon the subject that has been brought under our notice by the Aon,

l~enator opposite ( M,,, Maopherson), and whioh was under discussionwhen we âcljouimed last night . But, before praoeedirig to 'do so, Itrust the 8ena4 will;bear with me for a m oment while I say a• fewwords in regard to the loarn~ in whio this runtter hae bean re rited `V aeto us by the hok Senatior, and the peculiar ohareoter .of • the debatew'hich has arisen from it. The notice given by 'the h n . gentlemanwrts,c ►f~a .definite, question'to be pntto ,the,Secretgry of l~tate.' Now,as the rules of the ~enate do not debar, discussion on putting a guèii:tion to the qoverq,ment, of which -net"cer has been formally given, Itake no exception to clisQUSSiprt having~) en .raiaod now. , I think ourrnles shouldd be amended on this point, but this is not the time to con . ~•sider that. But what I do desire to call the special attention 'of the,Senate to is the Inoonvenient and unjust use that has been made ofthi»'laaity, of order pn,the ,ptesent otwaaion . Under cover, of , thisnotice of a,question that might have been i')ut and ane d' ,

w

wore in twominutes, the hon. gentleman rises to disoharge a furioue, phillippiu •against• the 'Administration ; rambles &er the entire field ; of partypolitice ; drags. in' every oonee3vablé or ïnoonoeivable matter, that hesupposes will serve his purpose of detraction ;'indulgés in eriore and'misetatémente, without end ; and fulminates wild charges of, yraete andextravagance that have been` again and again ehown`. to be utterlyQroundlass . Nay, the, hon . gentleman vsntû~e l to go still farthor

~ I . .

Page 3: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

' than this ,-ho ventured- to in,sirrunto, without n.1ma, place, or ►1at0being given, what he muA have known amounted to a charge ofrfri►udon the .prirt of the Ad ►uini ►stration-

Mr. ly1ACP11 F:Ka0,9 - In,wh at instance ►lid I ►ln .that ?Mr. Btcowrr--Tho bon. gentleman did it more than once . When

refArring to the dHfioiti►n tÎ► Q Receipts and E X1)end'► turo4 of 1877, hotried to cast abroad the insinuation that the Public Accounts Were nottruly rna► le np or the ► leEicit would have hoen, i;reater. . fie sa id thathe, haci been told by sunjebotiy or other that accounts ►vere purposuly ,,kept k►ack,'so as to force a balance and lesson the defieit o f the yi►ar.He deplore l the unreliability of. Ccnin ► itteos,uf the Ilouse of Qom-mono, and hinted at a Royal Comiuissic►n as the only modo of gottiiigat the faéts. And this outragenas insinuation lie accompanied wi,lhthe intimation that ho cunld not voucb fnr , the truth of the story hehad been t►ttering, and would not be hola responsible for it . In allmy , knowlddge of Parliatne,rntary discussion I - have never known so

Yrave a chat e priifc~rre►1 agai ►iet the Ciov©rncnont of the d+~y,' withoutaot or ptyiba iltty tq sustain it, and with sa mean a loophole of escape

from rosponaibility ,oocill.y attached to it. And the hon. gentleman inhis statement was as reckless of the interests of his.conntry aehe wasttnju st: tu the G4c►vernrn"t. I im confident I am within bounds when1 aay that a hundred chrir es of grearer or lees magnitude were ►lis-oli : irgecl or insinuated by the hon, gentleman against the Administra- ~tion--onirur two of them pr+►bably based on tacts to which d ifferencoof opinion might honestly exist, but the great nuise of them atterlybaseleeu. For exarople, only,.think of the hon gentleman bittérly as-railic4 the Administration 'becauge, -ai he alleged, every immigrantwhii arrived in 1876-6 cost the aonAtry .$2 65, when'iYx fuot it wasbut $8, 86; im that year, and $4 08 in 18711- ,

MR. MAopsaiaorr-My statement was strictly . correct, and I eh-all ,prove R . : .

Mtt. Baowy--The hon . gentleman may, strive to e4oapé 'by a -playupon wotrds--liy pleading that he only iuennt the itwnigrants arrivingat Q'uebeo-but this pjea cannot be entertair►ed. ' He well knew that8$,033 ilnmigrants arrived, at all points in the Dt ►ntiiiion in 1875-6 , andwhat excuse can he pretend for placing the whole cost of this largenumber on the 7,06:3- of 'them who arrived' via Quebeo,'and repredent-ing the average cost per capita thus ubtained as the average of thewhble number ? : . I haarcl distinot~y that the h~tn: gentleman said-~-weall .heard it-4nd I défy hiin to find one 1►ersun Who heard him, or oneperson who has reacl his ~Mxt►phlet, who clid not understand his ah ►irp;eto-be that every immigrant coming into the country in 1875-6 had taken,$26.65,frnm the public chest. Now, than, , I ask the Senaté, if it isreasonable, if it is juaU, if it is for the public ben6fït, that the ►neu ►bersof the Government for the, time being in this Iiouse, and indeed the,whole of i►s-fur we are all .interestcid . in ro ~Alling unjust'aoouâationeaguinet the t~.uverntnentof our c~ ►untru~d be expbotéd to rise at the' •.'moment and refuto on the spot such a preeious conglomeration as this

; at the risk of piling blUnder upon blunder and ponfusingthe public

Page 4: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

mind 1, We have been, dixioua9il3g this n ►atter'f ►►r a t ►uinber of d»ÿa-,'an► t with x► i I ►ti ► nulluesa n tiul(l' to ritngL. over, wu n~uy go on diacuaeingfor a wnnth withuut'~;uttin ;; nuar•ur ,e *0)111 tion ~ than wu are tu• ► 1 ►►y. ICain uncluratui ► il huw the ► liacuKaiun of two, or uvun three, '1 ►ointx of1 ►ulrl I !! lwJ,cy ►nay he ec n ► luctc ► i together l,rulit►~l,ly in this Cbau ► ber--

►ut I cuunot, I cuuft•sN ; cuiul ► rohcn ► 1 how a}wn ► irud points of dutailthat •have nover bufuru been diecuased horU, uithur openly or in Ccuû .4uittou, can I ►o i ►HUfully cc ;nsidqrwl together in ►►I ►uu debate acroés thefloor. The British parliamuntary éyatuiu wisely 1 ►ruvidusthat the con-trol ►►f the dut,tilu of money Bills---that the puiüur which niakus andu ►►nakua Dÿ'inisti:us -shall rest with the popular {,ranch of the Lel,is-1 ►►turu. • It dous not ►Nln ► it of two Chambers equi,dly powerful and l,us-sibly discordant with each other . Two separate boces cannot speakthe well understuod wislies of - the, people, ► u ► less they happen to be inIhKr ►uan . .Th~ power of the pu Ke-string e i s, thoce fore, mos.t w i se yIluaged' ~ith the representatives of the people . . We are not elected byp►~p~la1 vote ; we are apl ►► ,itite~l by the Crown on the nomination of theI,)o►ninir►n Government of the day. ; we are appointed for life ; we can.not be rernoved . d'xcept for' cuuse ; our numbers cannot be increasedexcept with our consent ;-rraotically we are direutly reeponsible . & ,rour mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senatethe n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing

' .' discussions as the preeea,t 9 The LOwer ~o.u,se his all the appliatxoorfar rigid f4xatrnin»tion into the details ()f 'znoney expenditures-butwe have not. Every shilling of Oublie expend itare inust be autho rir,edbefoir e► the nn►ney is paid •~-agi d for criticizing the Nstitnatell closely andwisely the Commons have ample fiticiliti®s that we do not potlaess. TheMinister of Finance site, in the Lc,wer House ; he is,praotice►ilj«vonvear-sant with eve 'lly transaotion of the .year ; he opens the Hud~o t ; hefratn4 and proposes all changes of tariff or, taxation ; he .dücloeerthe gnartoial policy of the Gtavernmorit ; and. he stands preparedto defend at any moment every feature of that Po1icy. Then ootnethe Cumtuittees of Ways and Meahs, and of Snl►ply, in r►lti.oh the•estimates of, the year an d all " proposals of t•even t~e changes are-vver-over.,hauled critically- and severely for, many d" in su,cwessiott, and quek- 'tions are put and ans ,wVred - on the - moment o n every duubtiyl pointwith a degree of fs*edom and plain speech that oouid hardlÿ bi wur• .passed . And then, w,;xin j at the opening of the following session'the Public Accounts Cc ►uàtl<tittre in hard at work oomparing,the suanwgranted with the surie spont, narr4wly criticizing every item,, ipsid,gathering full information on dvbry point for the ooniinp; . deb+ate onthe Supply Bill.' I ask the Senate if it is oonvenient that weshuula not u

,

here , rival I+`ininrtcc' Ministers and, Finance Com•'mittées to w l the action of the papular brut►ch ',on such fihat- ,tera 1 I ask 'i it is not wandèring beyond our. ?province ?-if, it

' will add either to the ' ,usefulness or the dignity of this House it If

iIam rightlv inforned; this reokl®as raid into the teriitoty of our

~eighl oura is the frret'thingkif tlie kind thât has hiappeped for mduiyyears ; and I respectfully subm it for the eonxideratiç p of the Senatewhether it ought not•to he the last .; With these re~arkB .I retqrri tothe bill pf or ► tnl ►Eaint .of the - hun, gentleman op}iii„ite. The hon .gentleman is full of co inplaih ls' and lamentations . .-He dont like thepreseut Miuiatry ;}ie has no faith in Cumm~itteee of the Clontmuns ;

Page 5: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

, he has no faith in the Publie AccoOte ;` he has no faith in apybodyor atiything. The whc► le" wôrld ip, a~ee with hi ►u. Why, ho 'aetually,started hir+ speech thp ~► ther evening with• ►t wail of lamentation thathis speeches and pnmphlet.s had not been answered by anyone- hadnot .been touched. Now, thc ► ugl ► I was not fnrtunrcte enough to bepresent last session whiun the lion . gentleman began his attack, I readthe speeches of n ►y lion, friend the Secretary of titate (Mr . Scott) andthose of other able members of this Hc,use in reply to the han . gentlo-

humble way, I was prepar►-d to any a word when the bon . gentleman

man, ►ynd I cc~nfeNS it, appU+u-eil to me that nothing could t ►e 'moreeffective or ci ► nvincin ; ; tl ► ttn those replies., As to his patupl►lets, I dothink that if the 1 ►rilliant' and witherink speeches of Mr. Cartwrightand Mr Mackenzie in the West (lia not satisfy him, the . lion. gentle-man must indeed be bard to p'lease ; but had any vestige of hin ► beenleft after pasging through their hands it must certainly have disap- .Eearetà under the scathing comments of the ftross . In my own

made his first motion, ►n the early part of this session ;' but when it came on, the bon. gentleman so moi8ed, his tane, he was so inilcl of

speech, so 4areful in iual~ii►g charges, su laudatory of the Premier andthe - ,Fit►ance Minister and everybody else- the whole poison of thething had ;so atmpletely c►oued .out of it-that thsre was very little leftto reply to, But spite of all this, here in the bon, gentleman againwith all his fallacies and his r►ft-rd ~rénted charge4 fresh, as'ever ; True,there in a changé. Last session the bon. gentleman .came to us ift thegerb of .the, righteous man g~ ieved to the heart it the wickednesb ofthe world, around him ; noa► he comes to us as th# avoWed partisn,ai ,satistteu witn>nothing,'distorting eve thing; and calling down fire to

year 1 soandaloue ! disgraceful l He , ,care4 not who does it, or 6ow - it

consume the men w ho guvern' the 14n4, And I am free to oonfeAir thatthe lion, gerttleman has spec'ial cause for thiei extreme inaignation in1878 that he' did not pnseoe ►s i~r~ 1877. . Not ônly-h&ye the retrenàh-mente of 1875-6 been steadily c ►tn :.tinued in 18M,7 and large .re► iuatian4a~ earenditare eS~t~d, bi~t th~ : revenue begine Or take an, upwardtui~; and the national balanoè-sheNt ie ~nua~i lese itnsatisfaotory tha nunder all the oiroun~stanceq wss fairly to h~ve : beim antiôlpated. It is -eo 'hat"d to h~ ►ve sll t+ne.'.s' p~rol►heoïes and ptognosticatiops ruthlessl~►kn±~ake~ on the hnad. Wha ,can wander that tRe han: gentleman isema, querulaue, anc~ wild ir~ hïs stateinents Z . He #t ►kes in one handa list of the expenditures of 1875-8, and in the other a list of thube of1876-7' ; . and he reads i1oud the several items in each and comparesihem togeth~r. Does' h® cotne tô an item in which 'the disburseinents 'of the lsltter year exceed by à few dollars those of the former year,he e~cclaims, Uh; such wiokédness ! Ruin and desolation. 1 Has he to'coniess a paving af any $50,O(>D on the next itetp, at once he beoi ►ndes~hilosopbioal, 11 Ah ! reductions are not , always sound economy."' Fenny wiAe and pound foolish." , He " dcRn't value such a reduction .

at~~nuch"--but '.'if he did, who in entitled to the credit ôf it'9 Why,w ho but the bon : Senutor himself-'" I, said the sparrori, with mÿlittle arrow, . I killed Cook Rûbin - ! " Is a saving of, half a million dis-closed on a single item, he in horrifïed:' What, half a millioii in -one

is.dctne, such a reduction is utter)y unjustifiable I In short, nothingwill please he Hop. Senator, and I sha11 not try to` please him ; but}f the 8epata will give me its attpntion• for a brief space, I-"lc

Page 6: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

it will not he very .clifYlcult to show the utter gruundlensneEa of th ehon. gontloinan'H got-up ca$o ' agA inst the proAent Goverimient . Onegreat fallacy-shall I call it a fallao or i wicked n~isreprosontation Z--un~lorliea all the financial calc~~lati one and iiccusa ticIfis (A-,the hot~ .gentleman . Ilia entire fabric roats on the pretence that Si John A .111acdunald's Guvern m ent was rei4 potteiblo for the oxpend ituro of thecountry only up to 30th Juno, 187,3 , and that the pre$ent ( ,uvornmon tare rvhpunAibl e from that ( late. But what are tho facts ? Why thatSir John Macdonald's 06verrnent was in office until Novetnber, 1F173,-that in April, 1873, his ,C,uverninent pru~auseil and carried the SupplyBill for the c~ntire financial year commencing lHt July, 1873, and on ( i-ing on :311th June, 1 44----that the Mackenzie Government took officelate in that year, an d had no choice but to carry out the program meframed by their predecessors ' and adopteil by Yarliament ; and that .before the olecticros were over and Farlianient eoulcC , be called ugain, -the financial year was near its close . The pretence that, the presentGovernment is responsible for the expenditure of 1873-4 is so pre t,os-terous and mentlaaious that it iii amazing any bane person could befound to set it u0 for a moment. Why, thon, ts the hon . gentleman s odaring as to do this, and to cling to it, apd re-eseertit, in .deHftnoe o foomûron sense 9 Why, simply beoqiuse the Legislative and Executiveaction in 1873-4 caused a complete revolution in the financial affairs ofthe Dominion . The Macdonald Government in that yeat~ capped theclimax of its r~oklese .adniinistrâtiun, and the country has ever,sïao®been weighed down by the pressure of the enormou~ i-esponeibilitiee itleft as a legasy to its sueaessorr. The Macdonald l~overnment ' .a►'asformed in 18tf7 and controlled the public finances until 30th June;1 814 ; lot us see theri hoir the annual public ,exl endituras increased in'their hands. They were:-- • ••~ . . - . . ~ .

ln ' -1 867 - 8 . . . : . . . . . . . . . ., . . . . . . . . .,1613,48f1,092In 1868•9 . . . .:. . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . 14,038,Û84 -in 186a-7Q . . . . .' . :' . :. . . . :.. . . . . . . . . . . 14,30,506Ili 187 0•7>* , . . . 16,623,081.11i 1871•2 ., : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17~lJ86,4t38In ; L872•;; . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . .

.

.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19,174,647 and

Ia~ 1878 .4~ . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . 23,316,318, •

It will thus be sien, that iyi the four yeara from 1867-8 to 18704 theapnual ex.penditûre rose trvo u4illione of dollâre ; that in the ' suo-ceeding two years it roser three millions and a half more ; but that inthe next sucooecling yoar-thut of 1873-4, which the hon . Senator (Mr.AS$opherson) so indecently seeks to fasten on the present (ilovernmetit .-the annual'expenditure ment up at one jump the enôrjuoue,gdditi-onai sum of '1113,768, :3U0, And to show clearly how this vast incceasearoee, and how'éntirely the late Government- were responsible for it, Ihave taken from the Public Accounts, comparative lists"of each itemof expenditure in,the years 187~-3 and 1873-4 respectively, and will ~noyv read them ;--r - . , -

Page 7: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

.1 872•3 1a73 4 i. • nor. Decr.In.tPrest . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5,209,205 5,724,436 515,231 : . , . . . .CbarKos of management of (lcbt . . . . ' 171,fl81 238 003 Gï► 0?2 ; . . ;• . . . .5inkin ~ Furul . . . . .. ' '~ ,., . . . . . , 407,821; 51 ;3,9z0 1 od,o9-11)iecount oxchanged . . . . : . . . . . . . 5,763' 26,680 21 617tinbaidiee tô• 1 ' 8 3 1,3;)8oyincea . . 2,921,399 3, T<~, 7 ;i 7 ' . . . .~ , . . . . . .. ~ï.,Civil l,ovornment . . . . . . . . . . . . 750,874 8 83,6 8,5 132,811 " . .Administration of Justico . . . 398,966 459,037 60,07 1Police . . . . . . . . 49,813 56

. . . . . ... . . . . . . .,,3K7 (i,8i4l'onitentiarics . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

.~• • ' 270,661 i3n, ► 5il lL890

. .

Ld8i inlatii ►n E314 487 784~ ' 1 f;4:51 ;clogc8urve . . . . . . . . . . . ,04(3 l(7 Y •' 64,631 97,824 38,183ArtM, A1;riculture and. 8tatistics . . 1(►,(i4t0 19,091 8401Caneue. . . . ' ' 57,7(;t3. 39 4711 '

inspection of stap le/ . . . . ". . . . . . ., : .,:.• •• •• •

Emigration and quarantine . . . . . . . . . . . . 287,3t ;t3 . 31A,f7l ." .' • 18,09E3` •31Marine liospitnla . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48,1;,O 66,462 .1f? ;,3

12204 . . . . . . . . .. . . .,, .,,Pension e . . . . : . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49,204 56,458 , 7,2498upraptiuatiQn . . . . . .

:..

. . . . . . ..

53,026 64,442 11,416 . . . . . d

~Vo ►1,248,(i(33 977,376 . 271,287Public kd : . . . . .

. . . . .. . . 1,597,0*14° 1,826,001 228,387Ocean and River Slteam Service . 4,5G,190 467,701 48,489. . .

Lighthouses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . : .. .

. . 480,376 537,U57 00,652 Fisheries. . . : : . j, . . . . ; . . . . . . . .• . . . 97,878 76,247 . . . . . . . . 21, 6 3 18teamer lnnpeotion . . . . : . : . . . . . . . . . . . 13,266, 10,292 ... . . . . . . . 2,974Im urance Inspection . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . .: . . ' . . . ., . . . . .M eoalloneou ' ' 'g, . . . . 63, 849 102,160 38,311 . . . . . . . . .Indian G1a~ante . . . . w . . 63,777 146,668' 02;291 . . . . .. . . . .poxninio~,,, Landr . .. : . . . . ~. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2374676 288,163 . 48,4~87

Dominion Forces, Man 'ttoba . . . . . . . . . 147, 888 ~' 209,169 81, 801 . . .Mounted . .Foliqe, N. Ww . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199,159 199,159 . ' . • .N.,W Urgahttioaa . . . : . I2 , ,üoundary sqrveYi . . . . . . . . . . . ., ; . ., 89,293 79,293 , : . . ~ . .Boundary Survey, O n t a r i o . . . . .

Military Btoreai:. 2,4g0 " 2,~~0 •, . .

i~ustormM refunds ~l«. . .meryèars . . . . °• 144,906 144110m' . . . r ;

gett~ars . . . 69 330 89 33q~ I~,eliofj .dlalïltob~t . . . . . . . . . . t~ r ► . . . , . , .

.. . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . .~~t ,.dfis. : . ~ . . :

.• , . .. , . . . . . . . 667,766 658 ,290 90,588 .Exâiee `y! . .

~,`

t . . . 173,705 206,93 0 $ 23(1. . . . . . . .

WeighJ~ ,y~ .. ~► .. ,. .~Y •1.4M'~.p. 1

. • , Y • 'Y• . I~ . .

Adulteration of food , ' ' ' . . "• ' :'• • .Cttlli» Timber . : . . ., . . . . . . , ; . . , •

.O~oe . . . . ' 69,692 . _ .82,886 1$,894 , :. ' •Post . . ., . . 1,067,866 •'1,887,270 , 3̀ 19,40 4 ,~ . . .-Public Works . .'Q . , . ; . . 1,49li,18d 2,889,879 893,494 •Minor, Revenuet . . . '. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . 22,263 11,371 ]0892. . ~_ --- _..,._. ..

.al9,174,6¢7 23,316,316' 4,141,669, 373,369Z call the-attention of the Qenate to th,ree facts that` are established .by this comparison :=First, that out of the 39 '+--- th"t coruititnt~the entire expenditure of the year, 1873 .4, 33 of thelp were largely in-

oreased by the ltwte Gloverntinent beyond the sumq paid, for the ,mmeservice the previoué yenr ; seaond, that the increases on 4rhesn thirtTy-ihree items came t o $4,141;219, and'thédeareaees on the reniaining six •~ièmt of rzpenditure to •W73,369, showitlg the not inwwase of elpert-"diture-in that one year to have been ILI 78300 and thirdth h, ,; , at t egreat mass of the uFCreâses were of such a character, that they couldpot hsve been reduoed bq thé inçotqtug Aduaiuietration . And as illus. -

Page 8: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

trative of the titylo c4 some of theeo 1at'qe incteas©s lot m 11 t hattention of the Houao the enormous creations of Inew offices an (I ad-ditions ione to exiating salaries that were made by Sir -John A . 1lacdonald's'sôvorn ►ncnt in that year-just before théy were ejected from office,

and while alretuiy in the throcx of digaulution . I hul~l in tuy hand the

offices ulone, with salaries attaçhed to theni of $ :322,993 per anntun ;

1 otticiltil r4turtl, cu ►ci 1 fincl thq.t under theeé Hcan~lalous cirou ►uata► iccs nofe'wer than 4i29 new al ► ltointtnienta Were niade in the llc~l~mrtnïenta l

avui that additiouH, were made in the aan ►e nnanner to tire salaries of1, :3f31 eml ► Ic ► yce» in the Rame Departments, nniounting to $152, .360 porannunt . Tho ar ►ual-, burcien involvcd " in theee . 2, 0 10 trrtnaactionsri ► uoutited to the onurmuus surn of $t7G,2,`39 per annu ►n, cir the annualinterest on more than,ton millions of dollars ! Hcre is the officialretttrn : ~- ~ ~ ~ ~ ,

i2opartinent. Appoint. lncreasea. Total .IIlen t8 .

Ciovern r•Gtenoral's Office No. Antt. No. Amt. No. A ►nt.

larivv ouncil . .-_---- : : ~ Nil . .1) 350 3 350

°c3eori;tary nf State . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .

. © 41390 ~9 v 4

v 1"650 , 18 . . 6,340Publie Works . 1.'.. . . . . . . . . . .. 28 21,046 171 1I1,074 19f1 40,620. . . . . . . . . . . . .,r . . . . . . .. . . . 7tS 77,800 1,1 1 .760 86 7i1,660Intéswjor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . M '14,070 26 ► b,010 .44 '19' M -to

l~uetoms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .111 b.

Militi~t, 8 , 076, 636 67,186 .7i7 126,982. . "., . . . . . 6 '~,6t►o~. 18 ' 2,r377 24 8,2771 tând ' R e v e n u e . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . . "8s 80,61~: • 96 16,$b0 180 47,085F~nattGe . , . . . .• . . . . . . . . .

17 15,400 14 2, 00 .41 18,060ReCeiVer:déneral ' •~ " f• }f -, en., . .

ABrloulfiure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . 41 8b,b26 1!S l0'178' 1ï6 87, a~Î$Marine and l~isheris~ . . . . . . . . . ► °,a. . ]694 21,900. 49 9,926 208, 80,925Post U81oe, : . . : . . . . . . :, . . . . . . . . .? . . . . . . 77 - 86.020 811 A,220, .' 888 ' b8,240, ,.Tatals . . . . . . : :, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., . ~; : 629 322,948 1881 162,8b0 2010 475,298. . ,.,

lEwer ~ qne of ~haue. new spp.oiritments t►ndino~r+paeeelo sahary were

the work of the 11f~oclonslci Administration--but as or x totli~

figures show how thé 11 1-1, inore$sed in their~ ~anc~s~ :

' the 009M of these aots on their suuQeisot~il th hW

gentl~nw

~naucicwiouely'reprervntetber~ as reApa ►neible for a1l

e on.8nanoial tren~satiohu : .afte~r the .l8t cif ~uly, 1873, inste,pd of .the trué date, let Jitly! 1874.And as wrth the annualpublio expençltturejy so also as to the public debt-has the hon . gentleman'resortsd to the sâme disingenuousoontrivance..When the Macdonald ' Ministry asstrmed office in' 1867, the ~ publialialiilities - of the Dominion, amounted to $93,046,081, less assete$17,$17,410--nr a net Pubiic' .Debt of '$75 728 641 . . The following

C3rôeo Debt. a Aesets. , Nett Debt,July,'1887A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .=98,04$,061 $17,817,410' $75,728,641July, 1868 . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96,896,666 21,189,ô31 i6,7ô7,186July, 1869 . . . : . . . . . : . . . . : . . . .. .112,861,998 ^ 3E#,602,679 75,859 -319July, 1870 . : . . ., . . : . . . . . : : : . .116,U98,706 88,78$,964 . 70,209;74$July, 1871 . .' . : . . . : . : . . . . . . .118,492,682' 87,786,166 77,706,517Julq, 187;t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . : .122,400,179 ~- 40,018,107 82,187,072 ;July, 1878 . . ; . . . : . .,, ., . . . .180,778,098 80,929,888 99,848,462Jnly, 1Y74, . . ; . . . . . . . . . . . . : .141,188,661 ` . . 82►888,6fi6 . ' 10i,82/,98ô .

Page 9: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

i It.will ho seen frotn thene figures that i'the f t, , ~, q, ~ rs $ve yeArs of theMacdonâla, jl•tinistry s .oxistenoe, the nett Deht inorqtAeri $l,(x)0,000 ;but that ip th©r sixbh year it rose $4,500,009 beyond what it had overLôori huforo ;,thut in the sovetnth year it rose pp lesa thap $17,700,000lioyond thu high point of the . previous year ; and'that in 1873-4--forwhi& the hcm, gentleman pretends to hold the presont •Minietrÿ re••àponsjblb--it `rçise $8,fiq0,0(x) etill higher * thati the âwollen tigure9 af

ment, the now Ministry fonnd awaiting. thrin whe r

I872-3. -" Iiehuld," exolairirH the hon. gemtleinan,•`" what the publicdciht and the annual exl,onditure were in July, 1$73, when the Mac-dcinald (i'4rvertunont rusignuli- and"nowt. see what the pNsent men havobr4iught-tl, jeun to, in July, 1476! "-thereby jvlaoirig tui th©-ahoul~lore ofthe* proàent Ministry ~F3,GI11 ► ,INN) of increawbd debt ;arici $:3,7138 ,300 ofannual expen4 liture for wkriuh they were in no m~rnner rus~►oneilrle.But t3ro }roh . g~rr~tl©rpun had a still strongor reasun than even theae 1'have rtauw(l fur rnunipufatiniz the rue<ird . llero i,4 a_. .. . .. .. .. . ,

Çanals • . . ; : .! . . . . ., : . .

in addition to• tlaese enorrnons u'n d ortakings, thunow ; ~linistry

On 1Nt'July, 1ti74, it was ~° ; . . ., 108 ,324,989

lnterc(yl0nürl tlioilwuy . :. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . Ip

tR,R00,VUV

l'auillu I{ailwn. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . IO,UW,QUO

N. S. and N. 13. Itailways ~ . ~ . . ' . . . 30,000,000 '

. : . . .l . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . .

. 2,liQOp,VUMinir wurks . :. . .•,

. 4,500,000lmprovûraunts, h"atvron,su .'Y , . . z !51)O,000Advuucus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '• , i ',, ,. . . .

1,000,000. . . . . . . . . . . . .• . . . . . . ., . .l

~ ' • . . . ' M ~ ,, . .

N $96. 000,0 00

fbutii f i $35,(N)0,(ï(Nj of Public 1lulaerrturus maturing irnuuudiateÏy, furwhich no prirvision whatever had baon rnad ~ I,y the" pro~iucuesurs ,, , And yet, with' the 1 ►erfeot knowl~dKo thut ~ thueo vaHt expuriditurouwere f~ ► rce~l' on, the~ utjvr (i~wornnront by ,is irwn frionda ; that theyouuldx not escape fr~im exeuuting a lurKo portion of the works bè}(uri ;, .itnd• that t,ho pulrlio cl oht and 'annual expr ►nilituro must âonAecluontl ybe qruttly iircroase~i thorphy ; the hùn . gontlom? u ► v~nkuroy to el ►oakof that inottiuiso as a huinqus crime r►n tho part of tho l~reHUrt ( luvorn-rrtont nu , l don- rncue , thérh f~ ►r it . 1`t;ny tt ►an, that the whole of thehon.• gont.lomun's oaloulationa aml accusations rust on 'grounrlle~s : )ro-tonlir,rs ; and that hiA'entire structure falls to piuons when placo( ona juat basie. ~

Hi►vinK ü)nn untal ►lished tho trire position of afiuire at thq tirn othe rrnsey ►t M inistry took ottice, 1 now proqeert . .to. show the resultsnf t~ruir a,Lninietratiun in the three years of their feigrn for whichwe have returns. And first as to the Public llebt,-' On 1st July last

the nett delrtwas : . : . ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., . . . . . . . . . . . . ., $133,204 ,899

Total inerouse . . . . . . . . . ► \ lo. ., . . .0 $ 24,883,73 â. . • . * . . • .Naw, ~he question at once arises, now this groat inoreasé"ooôurred fWell~ ,' Ihold~in my hand AD official ratur», that solves that quwrt;on

Page 10: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

very diatinctly . - It-shows that in those vory thre© oara-,tilo're was ox-l,oll ►lod un publie wqrke for which vute .+ h ►ui been tciken. bu the llfedon-

~«ld ((ovnrollinentin the eati-mc,(tea of 1K73 - the alltp of $$4, 361 ,920, orwithin half n Million of, dollars of the ontip anlount . Hero are, theitenlA . .

. 0IN l'O CAPITAL .

St. Lawrence ('i nale . : . . . : . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .>1;2,133,7Q1Welland Canal . . . . . . . . . . . . :: : : . . . . : . . . . . : : . I : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . 4,816,560Ottawa WorkA . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,207, 646liuio Verto Canal . . . . ' ,

. . . .' . . . .

.5 7 8

, tt n . . .. . .1 .

.l'uLlio liuil► liRl;x Ot ►~v . .. . . . . . . . .'. . . . -. . .. 7 16, 15 6Nova ~+cutin and N. R. Itailways . . . : . . . . . . . . . ' 1,204,263Iuterc ►►1„nial liailway . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . 5,248,509PAcific 1(uilwav. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ .' . . ., . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . : : . . . Qa839ri8l'rince H.dwai`d 1 . lia ilway . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . 288, 6 3 2

IMI'Itl1{'kMNhT t)V RIVEUR.,

"t.' .Tohn, N . It : . . : . .. , . 13 8QQRed River, Mnnit ►► l,a,

; . . . ..' . . . . .

. . . . ... . . . . . . . . . .. . .

. -. ,200St. Lawrence, chail ► x uR ► i anchora . . . 49,008Fraser River, B. C . . . ,

. . . ~. . . . . . . . . . . . . 7,360

Itiaholieu Iiivar . . . . . . . . , . 29234C- I . .)~----.• •

. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . ,

, . . . . . : . 292,07(t.~ . %

PunLt~` t1it11.},iNUt# . ;. , .

London Immigration Rtation . . . . . . . : . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,989Hamilton l'uet-Offiaa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Toronto l`uatownr Houee . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . : . . . . .Ï . .

.: : .

.• 138, 90

do ' SuvillKe Ban-k . . ..

. V11do Inla,rll 1{ovc,nuo office . . .. •, 17,880do Exnmining Warehouba . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223V3$do' ~N'oat oflioe, - n f13,~

Quebec d ►~ . . . . . . ..

: . . . ..3 . . . .

. ., . . 5,339. . . . . . . . . . .Ottawa l'oet oHioa. ~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . ., ~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ 160,218(iruneo lél*e, Quar►►ntirie Statiuh .

.. .

. .. : . . . . : . . . . . : . . : .' . . . : . , . . . : . . . . . : ., . . ' lR,U19 ~

'l'hroe Itivor t:uptont Houee . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ,

.. .

. 7,981Montreal l'aet•oilico .' . . . . . . . . . . 212,40Ht. John, N, B ., l'~pt•oilico: ,.. 109,8841~'iatau Custom N~élMe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : : . n . . . . . . . . : . . . . 24,780Manitoba . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . : . : . . ! 72,654

(io Penitt~ntiary . . .~ : . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . .I; .1

. : . . . . . ., . . . . 136,140• British Columbia publia Huil (linge . . ., . . . . . . . ., . . . : 166,063

h

NARHaIiRN AND PTRRH ,

CalHngwoi,d . . . . . . . . . . ., . . .. . . .

. 267 .Me~►f► ,rd : :

8,09$602 '

Inyerhaton,. . .

. . . . . .K~naardine .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . â,y I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18,867

(lalieriah~,~, . . . .. ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2,

0,000.

Port Stat► ley .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . .

' Cobour ~ : .. . . . . . I . . . . . . . , #, 168

pr. ~. . III . I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~, 47,916

erqu l le . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . ... . . . .. . , . . . . . 10, 2"

Page 11: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

IfA1;t;ot1 ) 1.9 AND 1-11 r+It8-Co>lli ►tutli.

Kingston . $10,647'or~~nto, ' . . . ., , . . . . '+ . . .. , 20,919

I `Owt~tr 8oun~l . . . . . . .. . .

. fl,290

for Pitblio Works left to thorn as i1 luKaoy by thoir Ilreiloaeesure . ; and i t

ll~tyr~la .` . . . : .. . . .

: .,','" . . . . . . . . . : . . . . .lhantry 1s1 j}nd . . . . . . .

• , 41,816

li~ndaau . : ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1g8,i1R 1

8hNnnonvillo . . .. . . z ; . . ., . . . : . . . . 80,965

Sn uenay l,~liulé ~lt . l'nul . . , . . 6,065itat}~uret' N .It, 1 5, 0R 5

lti4hibuuto: • 313762 411

~tp wr ~. . . s~. 12 24

9 P~ohn ~

. 141 560otitacxliuô . . . .. ,

,Nillelxaro' . . .: • ,. . . 1,194 "

MaoraiH's Uove . . . :. . . . . . . . . .. 1,b00

Trtacadiq . . . . . . . : . . :. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . b~~04

7,564MaLivc

M~ar(Hwl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ 26,831. . . :. . . .

,

Yarmouth . . . . . . .. . ...

. . . . . . . . . . . . . ,. . . . . . . ., . . . . . . 12, Ifi(iOak Point . . . . . . . . . . . . ,

. . . . . . : . . .. ,. 1,000Iniah. , . , t . . . . . . . . . 20,042~ gon . . . . ., . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- . . . ~ : . . . : . . : . . . . . ~R,868 ,1

, . . . . . . . . . .: . .Cow Ba

orts Cloorge and William . : . . . . : : . . . . . .. . . . . .

. . . . . . .1 . . . . . . .r,,, : . : . . . . . . ~ 1,000

altnoRivf~r and I'lyrnrton ilarbour . • t . ~R200Big Pond . . . . . . ..,, . . . . . . . . . : . . .,

600-Maitland . . ., . . ; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Totsl : . '. , . . . . . . . .. . . . .. . . . . $.. ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . $24,361,92 1

~'ao thon, if the Public Debt wi►e largtsly ' inc~r•eaeed in tliethreecars .1 SUO

is not ettrel jV from the lilie of tht► frlamla and unluglsta of those ~rt~ileeàs-sprs that reproach for it bhoirltl oo(na: l~si much for the Public Debt tafna nuw. .lot us aoo htfw it has boon with thoi Annual Lxlwrulituireeeiuring the satsie throô yeara, ' Ihuld in talÿ hand n o.,ulpr►rativo state-rnont of the aovoral'itoluh of expondituro in time yuar 1R7.3-4, (t1w lae tyear of th6 lato Ministry) al :ii in the year 1870 -7~ . (tho lryrt year of thepreaent Ministry of whiolr We have Ii,otnrnA) and vury far frotn findingJust cauqo of denunciation of tho, muon now in ►~wur hi the facts it (lis ..clowes, 1 find only groûnd of roJoioing~"tilat U~ioy have huld the rains,with tight it hand, and were able to, restrict .tho expenditures withinsu runable a ooinpasr. In'spite of a oonntantly i~raasing popula.,tion the peniuf w rit ', ng p onoterories,the extension - of olvilir.ecig+~ vernn~ent into many rem+tit® districts, the admission' uf , ~rrinae1~1~r►Urd s Island into the Confederr►tion, immense publio worka~oon from the Atlantic to thq paoi6o, all entailing large additionalanntial burdene, . and many heavy incidental expenses beRides that .were not borne . by their predeoebsars, this Retur* shows that largerèduotionw were, ) ffeoted on' the ôrdina ry annual expepditures as oon-4ywted with thowe of their oppanenta in the ye~r they were drive~a iro mo~oe. He • thre u e etatexnent ;--- - .

Page 12: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

18"73,4 . 187G-7 I o' ' Deïa,Interost , . '. , $6;724,4313 - 6,797,227 1,072,79 1. . . . . . . . . . . . •Charges on debt . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238,00.4 , 172 4 .14 . . ; . . . . 54,469Sinlung fund : . . : . . . . . . . . .: . ., .' 673,926 828,373 314,463 . . . . . . . . . .Discount . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . : . . '2t1,G80 24,331 . ., . . . . . . . . . 2,349Subsidies . . . . : 3,7G2,767 3,666,8.~0 96,907-,Civil Cioveinm.ont .,' . . .'_ , . . . . : . 883,68.6 812,193 .

. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 71,492

Adin . of Justice . .E'ono

.• 469,437. Gtifi,rb7 1 06 ,66066,387 11,3(36 45,022'

PenitPntiaries .., 3A8,fi61 303,~08 92,383I,eKislation '., . . . . 784,048 6('16,006 '188

,042

l;eologival : . , . .Arts, Ag. and :3tRt, . . .Census .' . . . . .~ 'Emig . an(1 Qu it {' . . , . .', .Marine Hospitals ,,„ ; • ;l'onNiaus . . . ' . . . . N . • 50,078. '.ti .~uporannuatipns , . . . .` . , , . ., . . 64 442 - 104,826 40,384 : '" . .

. . . . . . . . . ., . . .Militia : . , . . . . . . . 977 :376 : Gr► 0,4tï1 -. •., .',, .. . . . 426926 ., .1 ubliu Works . . . . . . . I ,826 001 1,262,823 . . . . .., ., 563,17 8coan and River k3team Service 407,701 - 4t32336 64,634~iKht6ousos . . . . . ., : : : . . : . .,` ., . . . . . : . -537,07 471,278 65 ,779ishories .~ . . . . . . . : . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . ., '76,247 • 96,348 . - .20,101 . . .teamer Inspection • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 292 1.8 , ,078 2781

.

no . 1nÀpeotiou . . . ., . ., . . . . .. ; . .,. . , . , 7,512 7,512 ' . . :,IiAnellaneoua , . . . . . . . . . . . . : • Ï02,1G0 101S ,b07 A,847 . : . :, :, . .. . : . . . .. . . . . . : . •

ndian aranta . : . . . : . . . . . . . : . . . . . :. . . 146,008 301,596 166,528 . . . ., ~ . . . . . •)omiüiau Lande . :, .°: . . . . : . :. . . . . . ." . 283,163 90,621 ;. , . : . . .':, 192 648pminion Farces•Manitoba ,, ., ., 201j,1E9 29,989 . : :, . 179,200,. . . .bunt®d Palice, N: W.. . . . : . . . :. . . 109,169 ' 362, 779 . 1~li3,b00. W . t7rganisation . . . . . . . 12,262 . , ., ., . . 12,262~undary Bu4vey, U . Q. , . . . . : , . 79,2 93 : , „ , . . ., . . . . . . 79,293Y)o. Ontarip ,, . ,1 - 2 4.';0 2,430ilitary stores .,, . . . .r . ,,, . . 144,lN)R

.144,906-

'us . rehuds 09,330.

. . . . . . . . . .. . . .

69, 330iottl®re Relief, Mauitaha ►uetams w . . . . . , . . . ., , % ., ltr► ni,i9n° âôs ~i «1 ,~~irc

. ,

xoo . . . . . . ., 206, 9"0 211,167 6,778'eiKhts and Mearuros . . . ., ,; 111,0N6 111,08ô

nspeutioiA c►f Staplos . . . , . ;, . (i48 048 '1dultoration of fouti ., 4,l103 4,903 ; . ., . ., . .ulliu`Itimbor ~

.82,88t3 68,171 14,715tl

. . . . . .., ~'oa t~ o gloe' :, . :., ~ , . . 1,387,27U 1,708,311 Sl ,u 041

I l i o W orks, . . . :' . 2,389,079 2,3()1 .832 38,84 7inor Rwonnoe : ; . . ;:r : 11,37~ 20,181 8 , 810 . . . . . .

$2.3,316,316 $23,519,301 . . . . . . . . . ., .: . . ~ . ..It thus app©a'rs that the entire e:i ►onditnic+b of the Dominicrn a~

. ,.n the year .1876-7 : . . . : . . . : . . : . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . : . . . . : .':, : ; . . . . ., . =ô19,i101nd in 187$-4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., ., : . . . . . . . . 28 ,ala,ale, F Inoreaee in tùre►e years . . ,. , . . , . ' ,,, $2K 976ut this inaréane was merely ~ôminal . ' • , There was in faot a 1aM.A â~ction on the or,ntrallO►ble expenditare ôf 1876-7 in oampuris~ott with~ â! lü7u, Duri»g we interrening threé yem money had to ba _

97,814 . 9'"0,454 . . . . ., , 2,25619,00 1 65,707 46 ;ti76 • . .:19,470 7,546 ,, . . .

.31,924

-318,572.' '.351j951 ~ 3 5,379 . . . . . . . . .66 ,462 . 62,408 ., ' 4 064 .

Page 13: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

1 4' ". .

: borrowed to pay for thé vnat oblig~tinns nnciertakôrl by the lato GfnvorTirnont, and interest on the money•an 1►orr►►wod nccrnerl in the year1876-7 to'the amnunt of $1,072,70 1 in excep a of wh,it had to be paidfor interest in 187:3-4. In 1876-7" too, the ainn of $ i28had to bepaid into the sinking furi,ti for. the oxtincti orn of the public del►t,, whilein 1$73-4 the sum 1 ►ayablo into that full([ was but $573;t)20, creating a.oompulsorÿ inoronse of the exponditure of 1876-7 over that of 1t373-4 -of $314,463, ; Thén, again, in .1876-7 the sunr of $ 30 1,596 had to beaid towards the extinction of Indinn : t4tl«a in the Itinrth-v, ,©st, or91ôti,G2A in oxéess of the charge for that aurvico in 1.873-4 . ''hose andother similar charges, which,had to .1 ► o' pi t irl ; whicL conl ► 1 not be outdnwn . ;'which w ere not the not of the 1 ►ri3atmt ,lfiniatry, ;crôatod' Rôharge of over $2,y1)0 ,f ►Of) in 1 87 ( i-7 that d id not oxist in 1 87:3-4 . . Tho :►ireeunt Ministry rotronche~i aq•sovdr~ily in 1876-7 on the charges within~heir control, that notwithstanding thepe grent add itionà to the px ron-dituroa be)~onrl their ' cuntr~~► l, the total é}targes Of thé ÿear woré kop t: within $262,985' of what they stood nt, in 1873-4 . 1 repoat then Yrxyornvictrnn that the people of Canada have'aincuro cause of thankful- .., .ness,that tnen are at thaarohia in those rlitliéult titnâè, who have courag eand strep stth to )rold it with su firm a gras ti, li~rt Mr. Mi ► c:1 ►hürsnnis not sa tiaGe tl with this reduction of nuar•ly two millions of ► iullt►ra . ,kie ~rowlq etill---anrl he atteurpta to make s ►►mo speçir~l ., Iiuinta.,• qf objection which, with the leave of the I~Iuusô, I nu ►v proposeto examine seriatim . . The frrst-,uhjootinn he tnakud I}tave already~' . notioecl inoidet~tally, * nainely, that the Public Accounts of 1876--77 were not correctly made ur---~that he lias strong suspicion thataoôounte were kept haok, in nrder'tu force a more fHVUUrablo balancethan. the .truth . would warrant . Ww, I ropeat that it was utterly un-~rutifla ble on the part of the lion. gentleman to send abroad irlch aninsinuation unloss 'he was prepared to frlrmnlatô hia chargcï so that it •;oanld be met, promptly and rluoisivq l y ; a l ►d 1' call upon the hon :gentleman to rise now and state' olor►rly , what fils charge is, what arethe fiiots, who are the crinilnals, and move fur a Çorurxrittee of Inrluirsyinto thetruth E►f his insinuations, ( houd oriel of " I luar, hear-!' )I)oes the hon. gentleman utitlorstr►nd thrt gravity of hia charge ? Duosho f,etiruat® he etleut on the 'crerlit of tUûcountry of a~l ►ubliu stàtourewtby /a uiemhQ~uf this Chaniber that - time tPublio Accounts have bee nlsi(iori 7 Will it bo . knuwn altrowl, ns. is woll known in every corneru an that, thp mon . who isnrlrpose tlte►, 1►roaent ( ;ovt~rnqy®nt miro' iytt ly inoapt►ble of euch'a ~leod, and tll~► t the thinx,' ou,nie froni .who it may, is a foul ànd Kmundlesd slanrlur ? I' r;. M Aprt~ r8snx -I told the I~nuse• what, I 1 rd hâarrl and hoardr?ept~~►ter to fre~luently that -I had strong reaèun'~o boli evé it. .- I saidit waw nu in the power of a Committee sitting in Ottawa to got at the(aate, so e~mstioally and so poreietontl,y was thn thing dope ,

U~t. Ba wrt-Wel) , then, I repeat that for an hnn, gentleman of thee><perienoe a d position of the lion . member to inake such a stat®nienthere_with%ut einpl prepared tu l rove it, is ontirely unweirran•table .Ms. Mlvp wasox--It I. thO Narth-wert aobuiint,a i rater to . -

Biso --I do not on"' what .Aooounti thé hon , gentlemun vre- .ter» to; ; Let ' tell us whoae -aoaounts they were, and who it was '-tau►t syitema kept tli,em b~, ~fci * what ho ir prepared to pruv*, ~ i . l . . . •

Page 14: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

befero' a Cecnmittoo. I anal to hpn, m©mbure on both sidee of th &House if it w i ts right to throw b roadcrtst an imputation of this naturewith ► iut heinf Able to h ►tbatantiata it. . . Formÿself .I du~not believe one .worrl of it. The hon : gentleman objeôts to the expenditure for Muunted]'oliee in the North -wust., When he rlid su it was said across the floorYour 1'riunds did it ." "Ohyes," . replied the- hrni . Senator, ".they

budget of cunrl ► luints . Next cx ► uroH the item of weights and m©"urue,,

admit that as originally fropa ► l ,it was harsh and unn►►pular ; but it hashuein gretatly . irt ij►ruve► 3 for the butter ' by the AnYond-n ►ont Act of the

ber of t~A notion whun th o

►iu►sad the Act, bit . they cli~l not put it in force." He is mistaken ;~ hold in' iuy . hand it copy of the Order in G►uncil gign'od by Sir John'A. Mao► lonal ► l, and it 'auts out overy detail of tl ;o lE'orçô, the numberof tnon, salariCe, and su forth,,1 ► reoisuly as now in ol>orntion, ;bltt :, Mn C rtiauHUN- ' Wru► the. liruèlurnatiun isaueri by the late6nvorrunoirt ?

• Mrt. B ftoWN----Tho Order in Cuuncil witA 1 ►r►nsal by thont . • f'Mtt .Skx.►Tm---Tho M ounteil Police Furçei :was bruiigli.t into existenceby an Act 1 ►assod in 1R73 .Dix. :M ArPtiEA HÇ► N-My ata,tomont wris with regard . to thè woighteand nieasuras .' I said the Mcmntu►1 police had bout, organized lthelittu, (36vernrnent . . . ; . 'AIR . t3etuWN -- :11► , then thiM ►► 1 ►juctiun i n wholly withdrawn from the'

$1 l1,U13S, and at this the hi" ► n: gentlo,nan hulds up his bands ir~ it~dig-~ua Ei~ ►n. He was rürnin ► ierl .that his own frienrls wore the atithore ofthat rnoan'ure -- iuul lré n ► in ► ittu ►1 thttit theyj ►►tased the Act ;btit claimedthat they did not . put' it into t ► 1 ►ori►tio~t . ' But this is a niistaka.--:•fo rt.hoy not only were the airthord ~ ►f' the inrasure, but the ' l)epartmentluui beguri their preparations for putting it in force before they loft .office. The hon. _gentleman says it wae a bad Act--and I am free to

llrerent Administration, an►1 l an ► told that the objeotiuns toit are nogruutly ï tnoïli8o ► 1.' . 'l'ho rtdvantrtge of seouring a uniforn, wystot~ofweights and unnrtisureg over the Dominion, and of ilintinishing if not -1 ►ruvuntin}3 frlari► 1 P►y fi ► lso l ► nlt►ncev1 can har4ily ; I think i. be over-ratéci-~and if this rait bo . suouru ► 1 by the ex i ►tülit itru of a moderato sum itwill ' .l ►e. an inostit u tl► lu ndvaritu o• I 'I W lion .K , gentleman a ►mhle► inshowr ► vor, that so lnrKc, {v ' i,i t ur as $11 l,i ► A t'i should have béon slwnt; ai (I} ►o says tht► Into (auvut•ruant ni►vur pxl ►uott►~i it to c►►st' over.l~il),O(N) ay~ar, Wull; it rli ► i not cost rnuro than thnt 'in I876 =7 'A The hon• gon .tlernon ,oruitturl to state Chat titu stuu nnured included the entire cust ofg,►s iuisliuctiun ns well iut uf wuig lits and mur►lrtrta ; and t} t over ~b0,-110U of feus wure ruvuivu ► 1 la .yt year. .

Mr. MArt>n kttïNaN-I 'stater) tl►at :Mr• I3ttOrvN--Well, that left the entiro uiiet uf the ptedsurei ~usE :what was antiuipaioci bÿ ite aittht~rs, The 11111 . muntlezni wu a tnpe I3.11 ► AeAed . His friends were completelyï~lirotn n both Hoitsps then . ~i~ he ubjeui to its passage 1Mr. MACPN I~A13 6N-r l did not,Mr, $ftowx .-WN~ then 'di-ie the . hori, ~entlemàn oo~nplain so6eroely spw►et thut' whioh he himself and his own frïendi did 1, Is itbea►uee their rtucoeaeore did hot at oha oa.t 4 orubo .rd witl~eul trial. or ~ ►ttempt to annend it~ nupqrFwytioiiti 1 , .

Page 15: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

Mr. MAOi'$EIiSON--Tho question is, What Govsrnniont pilt it intq ,

some weight lnight have attached to liie indignation. But •whon h e

operation ? . ; .. V

. ,. . , • .

Mr: Rnowx-~ âprrehonci it 'was Mr; 13runel°whn .~► n,t~ it irito opera-tion: The hon, gentlelnan's noxt objection is to the item of $4,90.1 for'the prevention of adulteration of food . He Says ho cannot eou the useof it ;' but 1 fanoy that no one who takes tho trouble of .road ing therel~►rt of the Comluieei►►n .will agr4 with him. The pitblio benetit thathNs already rise ►i frolu it is very groat . Some of the exposures madeby tho oxaminationA of the Conl ►nisaionors have been muet ealutary .The rrext objeetion; the hon . Senator nnakoe is with reg}ïnd to the PublicWorks l)opartnnent ; and what ( 1oos No say its to that ? Why, he inobliged to admit a larqe•reclnetion, but iw,sayA, " its far as he can bee,'after lo ►►kilig through it, the wholo, of thy,re ► lucticm is in nlanilal lal ►or .The salaries are not in the least altered ; the ru ► luetiun is all dn wiigûH . "And hclw else coul d it he ?'l' lie hhn: ' Sonator knows well that incarrying on great national woriks a rog illar staff of skillo► i men must bealways retaine~i,, and that when thc~ laek of work or la~ck of revenuecompels reductions the offoot inuat fall first i ►n the eul) ûruun ►erarios ,it is oluty to fill an order for lal ►ourere, but you cannot enaiiy got ul ► alletlioient staff hf.akillod oversdorh and fbreluon . . I)oi ► s•th© hon. içentle -innn attofiüpt to ju ► iiit out any ni6lnbor of the staff who coa~ ► 1 or onglt ttu havo been dispensed with ? . Ni ► thilig 'of the kixtd. • Had ho doue s«

brings a mate,vugue railing iuoh as this, it 1(►oks )uore,like an i►nxiuuqdesire to hunt uli an electioneering cry than a~lything olwè~ . . The 1 ►► rn,gontlpnian thon pessotl on to thc+,itunl of:Cont~itvgonoied--and I wondor.ed what 'ho would say about it •; for 1•ha►:i ullaly$ed this item for x,jicy.eare paet-throe; Ÿ,f thenl under tho reign of ~he late Ministry andthree under the preAent -and' l fnlmd,that in tho ~ld reign thé atnount `ran rapidlyup every year, 'and in 'the' present re~gn it ran as rapidlydown. Her® "he figure

s Torylteign . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1871 ,2 $ l ti~,y2n a~~ ', . . . . ~' . . . 1t3724 189,17

4 873-4 222,803irtortf~ Iteig~~ , , .. ; ., ; . . .

: ~ 1~H74• â 'L()K7(17of . . . . . . , . . .t. . . . . : . . 187 11 •0 171,54 8' . . . . . .. 1 8 7 0 •7 . 161,970

Well, what said the hc ►n. gentleman as tt ► this ltun~ I H0 sai ► i thatthere; Was hure a"+rntifying'rorluutiun"-~-•"but " he yu ► l ►wi thcr~ woro .nopontponomont ►r in this capû"---th ►►t in, that liayrnc ► Its had not boon tl systo- ",Iuntiçally loft out ,,and thu: ►►caounte,thorul ►y coùkoi~ ! And tiliA th ► n ►ghthe huil . gentleman cannot nanu+ a si ► iglo'inatanco in which any accounthuwi±ver snisll, was over postponed by the preecnt ,(lç ►vernment, \

M ~. MAer'H'a jtsoN--Nr ► t likely ! .Mx . . BanwN-" Not.likoly" 1•--why, thon, do von porin"{tyoareel~ to

makn insinuations that you ciu1nrlt sustain, and that yt ►u w►nnot .bo-lieve yuurself ? .Then ~~.►luos .tho Adn ► inistrationi of Just•icw-and hcre\the hon. gentleman tires up fiercely at the, innrease of $108;660 on that .

but the hon, gentleman knows perfectly well it arose, first, from the ,ei.tablishrnent of the new Court of Appeal in Ontatio, over which the, ,•

Page 16: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

Dominion Covornnient,hnd under the AoÉ of Confoderation :no contml ; .and ncc~m~li fr~m~ tho est .►►I ► l,ishin©nt of the :iuproiu}i C(rurt of the o-

must 1 ►o kol.►4 in- mind that we have had for douiu tirudpast vdry

such tinieà in its most ►1ari,lig'att,ituries. Tho dnotAuous'skrinkage in .

have lial l ruuCh to F114 Of late about Canada being made a i~hw htermarket for, forejKrr Kcrcxl~a` ; but- what wc ►~tld they mot have irm,ic~had

revenue a> ~Tontreal wdrit down, at -T ►,ronto it wont up . I cartnot

.nrini~ ►ir, wlrich was t►ntioil ► , ►tod at the Union, which was tirgm it lywarrtod to l{ivo tuiiforinity to the jurisln~ùileilco , of the wlri ► lo Dominionnml had lieu► i tuo lun~- ► leforrod . We all rocollccthow often the Jnto (i~,vorn3norrtprr ► utiKwt this'trio►►xure to the country, and as ►► ftûn , }►ost-1 ► r~ui ► i it f r►►rh ehe~ir w►►nt - ofAfi rnuro Hs to iloal with it. }3y evorX (;}ov=ernmo ► rt, by every pr►► i~ui ) unf, politioiitn, * ►trul by ovc►ry . , lorulitrg juristA lie`i ►bm ► lute necosaity for a Supryr s ie Don4 iu j c,u Court has beontHiwrttod,and I nui i ►nraxo d, tl ► t►t the hrn ► . gentleman voitures tocon ( lotnn it . Theh►m. '9ontlriniur'n :noxt eomplaint ' is as to the incr©udod exponiae of theCi 1 st-nls 1)ul ► artment . - Il nnwurrtn 1,0' 063 , :30 5) inoytul ►arisurl with I873 -4; aürl that any iucroasu' should have l ► oan hooesRUry is irnd oabt-ocllÿ to be royrette► l : .]3ut it'niust lro romenibored that Prince Edward ,laliuid in the threo years' ints3rval has joir ©d the Uniont and thdt he r(~uet►nirti establishment luulto 1 ►0 ad ► ied to the iurttuaI cost Of tho. D►ipart-~,ruént. ( ; ruat `chnngoà, too, have ocQUrrè►►1 on the Upper '~,akee~ andtht•i ► uglruirt the North-wost and the - Yuoitio coast, rendérin yu+©afrilc► t3iciur~t u~rrun gourontr♦ for 1 ► rcitoctin ~ç thu Customs revenue. ~hon, t(w} ,

sovom tin ► es, and that during such 1 ►ûriu► is '~rtrerno vigilance isclc- 'inunrlt'A from the Customs Dol►artyient,' sutugf;liirg, éhowitrg itsulf at

the values of giwrls ; too, iuuet~ravn ►lerxmrle► 1 conHtsn t watchfulness atovory port to ~arevunt the. un c~r-valuatiun of iiûport~eiotrs-~and thatcuul 11Ad 60 ( uue witthuut oxtrr► . expenee. . Hon . gentlemen opposite

thome " slat~htor-gooas~; tieon-perniitt;ed to ba britught ,into'thé ouirntr~r . °•without the olosost inspection by efficient otficere 1 ; . 'Mr. N &ct'tiattaoN-What of the Montraal ' Custnm H~,uae ~ . .Wïlltho hc►n, gentleman say nothing about" the decline of revenue And the '

inoroase of„ezpotiditur.o therG ? • . . ~Mr. f3tZOwN-Ianr gla►itho-ün. $ontlorrrau ~remin~is nie 01 that .~,Whut orle. ►lnco losos r►nothur lilnc© gains ; and 1 notice that thoagh the

~ ► ret.ond to, ju~1~u ué to the exact strength of staff noceAsary to beruuint~►irio► 1 at 111i,irtroril-- 1but liroliably thb customs authi ►rities' arrtioi-INtto an eurly re►cuvûry frr.îrnt the novere eiuiuuüruinl dopret+siun that hasunhalrl ► ily oxisted at that pniut-and with that a oorrespunding ro~~►very►► f t`uston ►s rà+venuû.' It mis of the btontru ►► l (~tràt►auis ouee, I'th'[nk, .th~►t thu hotir . guntlernair vént l tr tx l to mimait as aIl einkèf corruption ." 'lie sAia Vint tilt, (7ustours llojurrtrnorrt of the United ~tatés was rottynto tho curu, but it wait not worse than we hall horo . - ' ' 1 •

Mr. M.tprrssrtebr--I spokc ► f the Now York and Boston Customlioûsos . Th'epe ary the only Custom Ifciuâee in the United States Iknowarfything ~lrout .,. Mn. Itttowrt--But be that as it may, it was utterly~unwarratrtableof the on . gontloinan to akply such worvls as he did to the blontrem :Custom liouse as now administered, or to any utheer public departrnentof Canada . It was as totally unwrarranted as the i l' 9 Lns nrua rott u t e hon,~èutleuuaz4 ia rvard tv kegpwg bs►qk +i►çvouota to 4ect the *n.n*

Page 17: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

balance, whiah hé lmuet have known was a,direct inapeaohment'of th eAntegrity of the Auditur Qonoral ,

Mn. CAMPnF L[,--I think it wne' not with'rettpect to kerl)ing- backof accounts by the Cioverrunont ; it was with rofuronco to acconnn ta il l .the Ncirth-wet+t--- côrtuin p urvey<< ►rs who hacl el ►cnt largo Munis of nwiluy,and of whom tho hcm. Senator had hçard they had kopt back tht;ir 'accounts. It' is not the accounts the Auditor had anything t~~ 'du' ,with . `

. 1VXK . BROWN-The him. gentleman must not attotrJl►t to put thatcc ► lour on the charge now. - It is too luto •

MR. MAUPUFRtiUN•--l stated it at the time ; I did 'not drûatu ofanything .eleo .

,Ktt. I3ttowN--Thu hun, guntlwuan ttpt ► ku of North•woat necrntntR,'after . I had rupeatetüÿ itrgba him to oxhlain~but his charge wasdirect and unmistakable, and rel ►u 4tod uwro than emce .

Mtt. OA1NPHifI .r,--T6 charge wt13~ not with refur~►nce to ccioking th ePublic Acoei~nta ; it waR'with•ru~ru}}}nnn,,,,u to thu truûsacti o fts of certait tottioers in the North -wost .

Mx. I3aowN-I perfuctly unrjuretoo( l the hon. gontleïnnn latterlyto rufer to accounts in the North -HUKt ; but his urig•ititi charge, and thpone he ir{sinnateti 'ini ►re, than onco, was that accountb were kel ►t backat the end of the year to rurlucd the dutluit which honuut• book-keepingwould have shown. ~ ~ .

Mn. 11f AuPit ExiioN- I did' nut intontl to rutluct, un the Auditor-• ; ~~General .

M~t. Bk,owrr-- Whatevar you tnetult, you oertuinly i~ ruNect on allounneoted with making up t~ie ' Publio 'Acuounts, and, you are, bound

_, now to say what,aacaunts have been kel,tAaok. The hon. gentltitnan .-haa no right to make sweeping accusations against the Government andevade the distinct speoiCit .ation of what his charge, is. But enc~ugh ofthis for, the present . Lut us pain on to tho ' hon. gentlçiuan'i i indict -.nlent of the l'±:ntigrntion Ilepartnl ent• . And horo he has not only. fallenint4.) the most palpable errors, but the anlculations and conclusions hohas sent abruud in his pamphlets as well as in his KpoeollpN . are uttorlywrong and tniHehievcuu+. For nxtimple ; ho A6lepts three yoars as liiabaeiN--1872-3, 1874-5, and 1 h7Ci-li--Tand he status the entire uxl>~ilii i =turc in these years tu ttave: UeuTr,aa tullowr ► ; ,

tell of the Quari►ntine deductions, the re pe►yments , by the Pruvinoes

In 1872-3: :. . : . .

..'.

... .

....Ï

.:::•.

.

..:

:.

.:.:

....S~a~7,s~3rt

302,770In 1 875 • 6 . . . . : . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . : : . . . . . . : . . 385 ,84 6

Now, why did the Ilorl. gentleman state the cr>st in 1872-3 to have been$277,368; when the public ruturtiè show the actual eunl to have buen . , .$287,3681-and why did lie omit altugethur tho year 1873-4r whenthey were $:3tS,Ci72 1 - His friends were in office tttesô yearn--su'relythat oould not afford an explanation of it 1 And why did the heu . Ken-'ttNman omit to tell that those were bnt the groin disbursements of the .Department-that in every one of these years there were large sumsreceived back that ought to have been deducted 9 Why~did he omit to

pud the repayments on the lo@landio apd MenuoWtQ wdvapctes I And

Page 18: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

why did he ,ignare, entirely ; the emigrants arriving by Suspension I3ridgo,, Portland, and Pum► na, and fit Halifax and St. Jphn-and

co► r11y nKeuü ►ô ' that t►o emigrants cau►o' to Ciuuula oxcopt, those by~U01)00 ,

St . Lawrence. . , ,

the St . Lawrence ? 14'hy d id he statu that the immigrants of 1 974-5

when th ►i i►tlieial returns show that 25 ,03 arrived in the ll,uuin.i ►►n, of

D}it . linowrt -;-YCsrtho }ion . gentleman drol ►ped that incid©ntal}y at~ the end of his ttirf; ►ttuunt-lmt w l ► ÿ ► ii ►1 lie conc0al the, filet that wliile '

he aeRUiuod the i ►mni#rtiti► )n ►►f •18,72-3 to have been :j0,901, his frienc}s,who were thon in ►► t}ico, rut l ► rnu► i it i►sli0,t)Fi0, of, which 26,990 uiajj ►e by

were but 1E3,038 , when the official rot ► irn ►►f thu"llupartwont shows A7-:382 to have arrived, ►►f which 12 ,043 came by "the 5t . Lawrence? Whatright had he to statu . that the immigrants of 187 54 t wore only 10,00 1 ,

whi Ch 7,0 came by the S t . L ►t'wrw ► cu '1 ' The hou . gentleman mayI ►u ►► sibly knuw ►nnru about the auittur than anyone 480-but why did►d umit„tu tell that his figures wûre in entire upiws ►tion to the utHciKl

record, and that they assunied it whulusalu falsification of . the un ► ilçrn-ti ►m returns by the ►► tfiicurs of the (7 0vurj ► n ►unt'1 And could any thiuH►►w ro rol ►rehuns i l ► lu be i ►nnKiuu ► i than for the hun . gentlu ►niu►, having

_t,j ► u k suttlu,l his figures for h'tM ► ~ii wlf, to igno'ri► all du► luctiuns and pru-coud ° to average the whole gru~s ' cust of immigration on his ownasaun ►ud nu ►nbors ; ' nw ►1 son►1 that~nbrwul over the land as the eost .percapitu of each immigrant 't The rusulx' of this n}anipûlatiuu by thehun, gentleman will be 'eeon 1►ythe fi,lluwing -cuntrastA of the hpn .guntloman's stateü ►unts ►u d the Official Iiu turns of the Ao}►axtu ►unt.And first as to thu annual 'iiutt âxpenditurô for emigration :~--

~llr. Atucph;craon. dfficicif A'cturn.i872•~ . . '. :' . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . : . . . .. . .Vx77,art; ., . . . . . . . :, . . : . . ., . :. . . . . . . . . . . 2 lnt3,a171874•5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ;3u2,770 . . ., . . . . , . . . . : . . . . . ., . . . . : ., . . 241,0001 .t37i5 .(f . ., . : . . . . . :3815,847 . . . . . 228,0771876-7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . r. . . . . . . . . .

; . . .. . . ., . . . . . 110,ï370

Mn. . MAr6rt ► EKSnx-•I statocl that I réfcrr6l to thi3 emigrants by tbe' »

- And iii, jv ►t$ t,i *tho cost lier cltpito ;--

Air. Ah►cpl►crma ~ . • . Official Return1s72•3, . . . . . ., $ 7 71i

, 1874•6 . . . . . ., . . . , 18 00 . . . . ~. . : . . ~~~ no

. . . . . ~. . . . . . , . . . ,

1H7rS•li . .., '.' ~ 882

1E378•y . . ., . . . ~,

. . . . ; ..'lt3 o(s

. . , . . . . .~ . . ; . . . .'. . . . . . . . . . . . ., $ t~C

•, .. , . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 08

gentleman is ruadixig fru ►n -the figures hon ►!wi tu hiw by~the lion . .Mit- Mn ► ~i~r► h ►triun -11y statuiuunt was strictly correct . The lion . -

~inistur'liAcc

c)f~AQriculturu `yusturd,►y, w~► iuh are ontiroly ul ► l►ode<1 to theubo unnts . My state inunte are in strict a ►nfurn ► ity w !th the

Public Acioutiis . The hon. Diinister of Agriculture said yesteay mytigures were incorrect ; that my figures includw►l qt~arantine; Thatwwi,inoorreot. I1e said I dia not ►le► ludt refunds from the Provinces ;'

.that alsu is inoorrnot, Z`hey are in the Public' Aeouu~►tr. ` : JMK• Pst.i.UTtira-But not in your sti►tement.

Dtçr. Bsow.r•-The 1tun, gentlenqan,inourred a serinus rc~poinyib!}it~y. . , ,

Page 19: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

of . Dupartutent ►►l TuluKruphin .Iie r~ai.l from the Publie Ae~ccittts~.the statpntent that the' cust u~ this service,in,1t37•3-«t (the 'last of theMacdonald 0uvecaujunt) was but V30,925, while in the first yeari►f th

e present (3overnmentit was $;3t3,t107\ - And how excited the hunc>unJAMgentleman (iiil t►ocotue .abbut it, to be mitre ! We11, this did appear to

about which the hun, gotitlunthn r+ ► is9d aturriblu hulht .l ►aluo ---the item • -

in settd ing - such inaccurate statements abroad, and rnaking chargesagainst the (lovorniliunt utterly itic`t n sistunt with the factd. The firstthit ►g wo.shall have ~uti ► ii ►g to us abrusk the Atlantic . will 14 a nows- ;hal ►ur annuuncuutout that we 1 ►ay'$26 6-7) for every à mil;riknt ' we gotfrom the Mother C ►nuttry.' The t;oxt subjuct of att7tok is the militiauxpon ► liturt;, which shows it ru( luc ttutt uf 1E 426 , 926 from thù year 18713-74, The hon, gentleman says it it quito impossible that sttch ►i.ri►► luc-tic ►n can be right . ', T'hu change its I'un~l ►+rntan ► 1 it, is siitthl y this :that huruto foru 40 ,000 wilitin w oiro A rillo►1 uvury your ; but by thiscurti ►il►nuut it•i$1 ►ruliuse►1, whilu the 1 ►ruaunt fin ancii► l stringency uxists,that the'40 ,000 militiamen shall be ( lividud into two bodies, and one-half drillud ywarly in nlternatu ► n dur . We all, I'utu suru,,uarnqstly► iusire that the militia force of the I)t ►InitliuW 'Khtlll IlU tn ►tintuinud infull ufliciuitcÿ ; but in au ( :lEM4~ t► s ►us the 1 ►rusont hew Oint this Win-pMhary modification of the practice bu 1114 +iu juHx sitbject of indignantcuwl ►► iiiüt, uel,iwiullyfrutu thu , tuuuths of such ardent 000110111 ists asth

eh►►n. ~guntluntuu u } ►poiaitu 1 'I`he ' nuxt item in the hou . swit ►pt~,r'

s bill i,f ci►n ► ► luint was the ruducti ont ►►f $ 1 92,642 uu Manitoba land sur-vuys, " 1hat re~lucti<►n ;" the huit . gentleman uxclaitus, '~` is there intllt? - Ybu have ro t luae4i, .ihu survuys ' by that atnuunt -- is, thateconomy l You will stup .thuut next year altr,kuthur -will that, lot),be a swing ? And if any otlu is entitled to cru d it, tu' whuut should itgi, but to thosv that drove the (luvernutdnt to it t" - ,Ah, it in nu ltur ► lto ,loit.ac~ the hun. gentleman ! * If you don't r~+trunch he abuses y~,u,an►~ if you do rutrunuh ha ' is worse than over. The next item is une ,

me averÿ large sum, and so I ilroppe& into the Finance, Departmentand asked an explanation uf 'it from one of the c ►Niuer►+ of the Del►art- -ntent, He went at onuo and looked into the tpatter, and I ntn surethe hon. gentleman will be rulievu d and duligh tud w.heu he huars thatin 1E37:3•4 there were only thruu-fuurths of the year's tulugrr► l ►hing in- ,b lùded, ün(1 that in 1 874-5 there were five (jtiarturs charged. (L.oud - .

monta of I tts own friends. The cuntrast now stands as follows : - . .great economy ellûutud,liy, the prusunt Ministry on the luviyh ~liswursu-,

gral ►hic cow ►► laittt, and 1 cwll thu hon. Kuntlutq ►m's attuntio ►i to ► . the

cries of hear, hear,) It no ha )pune~l that the ~luarturly 11i11 of theTelegraph Company was du1+►y~►~ sc► long that the t i+,vurnntunt ►wcuuntsfor thû your worci, clu sud lwf+ ►ru it could be uurtitiuil, and it had, ofcx►urwu, to g„ to thu nuxt yuar's accatllltr. "~1'Itu ufiuct uf,this correctio

n of thehon . K untluuuwn's figures untiruly changes the im l►out of the tolu- . .

. . . ~ . ~, ~ . , , . . . ~ .. .1873.4 . . .. . . . . . . .

.. .'. . . . ., : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : .=32,107

1t174-tS ., . . : . ~. . . . . . .' . ; \ . . . . . . . . ., . ~. . . . . . . • 1i),328187ii~6 . . . . . . .. . . .. •. . .• . . . .1• 19,431187tf•7 . . . . . . . . . . .. . . ., . . . . . . . . . , , . . . . . . 16,2aa

There is another charge that the hai, gentleman preferred against the

t*naq4t.lun lttiuwp qA the 14te;qnloiµal tâusl ►ensg 'Ao9ount---at1a 4 very 'Administration, aetl it in thé lwt loft for oonsideration . I tefer to the •

4

dn

Page 20: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

simple mRttor'it aepms to. be vt•hen clearly explained. The 50,000 tonsof ►+t ►-el rails bmtghtt for the Pacific• It ►tilw ►►y, as we all know, were notall wanted for that road at onco, ► tn ► I it w ► ta put to capital ncc ► unt. The •monoy wr<y paid, and ot' conrso went nt•onee intt► -the Public AccountA .So far as the cash is ci►nccrticci, no wrong is ullegoti .' The st'atotnunt Of'the hot) . Sonator clcicrsot uëi~ct the mcinoy in the lc~ ► tst, or the accuracy

.• of the Public Accututtn: ► ; oi ► ly, .liu rilluKus, it affects tho balance of laht

portions of it were applied toat ►y porvicu ; the value w ► ts do ► iuctecl from the cttillitwl nccc►unt ► tnd charged to the sl ►caiul sorvicu tt,'which the iror t

and theru iwcut ~1ct of t1tiK Lugislaturu duol,trin;{ that this s1u►1) be sw . •

year of Revenue aüM I~.xI ►oitditttro . ; An accoqttt was c►Ilunoa in the. t©clgcr for tltis„ i`tY ►n, ancl it was stored at certain places . ~1 s fast as

wôut. In ' rogarc) to the Ititercol ► mial Ra ilway it was cluteruiine,ci-y-and1y we will all ailii ► it wisuly ► lottirniitictl - ns eoon as possible to'takVtil u iron ri66 and put steel r i tilH,ci own . . . We all, know tho srivin geH'►~cta+i by i ubetitttting steel rails for ircin nnos----nn ►I it was ctoter ►ninu► 1

- by tlto l,rosc-nt Administration from thcvcry nonentthuy cane in, thattlte 1 11 turcolonial Railway shc ►uid bu ro•stee letl, not all at once, but thatin the 1 ► l ► icu 8 most worn the tritck 0 tu ► tld be ronewcid to the extent of

•$200 ,01 111 uvory year. That wui► t on, In tito year ending 31tth Juüe,1873, thù re-I ► tyit ►g was v âfriu ld out to the vi ►luu of $80,522-=and this "ai ►►oni ►t wits duly uro d itu ► I to the l'acilio Ituilw►►y iro ►► accotint and' .ehntKc ► 1, to the 1t ► tcrw ► luniul Railway. In _Iti7~ >~t',~,1t1,G1K of etool .rrtils,woru thug c ►1► t ► yi uuti a ffi 1 ro-laid - titi the itltorculunial trauk ; in 1 876 ,*241 2 , :381 ; and in 1876 , $21 5,289 . In 18 77, its [ u ►tilerat►utd it, it wassul ►l ► opud desirable that there sh6itld be it larger quantity uNtitt thanhad l ►ucàn - dr ►ite befc, ► ru. It".w►►s thought very cluhiraRr~u that sotnépartaof tho .rqaci ehc► uld be rolaidat once ; and the 'clueation , cunio up ,;•houlcl they adhere to tire syixtern of charging the I nturcolonial at therate of W11,000 a year, or uhargc.+ the whole $543,000 of iron that wasw ►tntod in one year nqainet the road . '1`~e former ►uourse wius dacicledttlwn. N ow, this decisroit , of the Dt+pa rtatent may have been -right, cv

r it,may Iinve boon wrong ; thl►t is eortuinly a tuatter of olrinictn ;'for my own►art I think it was the ri►usonablo course to take . . When the ln-

turcc,~onial • Itailway ncouurtts ►rre Irïtblishod ;al ► rund jt is not dciKirt► l ► l®'that the 6ost of rtt,aintairtit tg it ehoadd appear any•tuciru itnfavo~rablethan the facts jnntly iiutuanci . . It iq well known that the C►lreat WesternRailway Co . charge three };Itinouy per Con to capital„ aoùcntnt for every .stue l rail they put upon' the trctit► k: 1Vo ku'ow, tai, thu Grand TrankCompany charge the whc~► le , of the, atool rû-layiug t~► capital , 1wvi,un .t ; .

That Act was 1 ►as 4 wl by the Homo of Cotwuons ►uul by th'►H, Huusu -au"l thu •ht ► tt . gentleman hinmulf v.otud for it,` : .

• ~ hlit. MAutrtttwidoN ' -f)uus that Act apply t~► the Inttircolonial ltail- .wAy t

Mit . I3ttOwx •--No--yc ►f course nc ► t--htlt 1 am hhowing that whkt•wabdoue aa to the [nterûulunial was a ri►aéutntl ► lu Zhing tu dc ►, 'l'hie sideof the Iloueu, in discussions that have tuken place oit this iltio®tion,ciiff rud froin the Into (Jovertuuont, who agreud with the Grand TruttkIttii~N•ay ► Kitcl hold that the ro-laying of steel mile on (lc ►vornmentroi►cla Ahc ►ulcl Lai ohargdd to onpital accxfunt. ThiA side of the Housedid not hold tlti ►t ; and what bas been done on the Interoulnnial was amere compromise ' between the two plane. Had • tlie eyistein beenoarried out' on the Interaolonial Ae contended for by hon . gentlemen. . • . . . . as . . . . . .

Page 21: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

hpposito, then the C3overnment wôul~l not hnt►o fotind it rieeebeat`y ~charge thia .at all ;`it would have gonn tq capital account . But vyhat

rafla were transferred from one locality to tinc;thor. Will anyuno any that ;

capital aec(tunt as it waA, anti have orotlitwl it inerely with the usual

they, , ditl was thia : thôy took $i~4,3 ► 01 ►0( worth of , rails front chj► italnccount, charged $200,000 of it-the rùytAonal ► lo l)rpp~ ►rtion which theyhad been in the habit of charging . yénrly-tlirect, to the IntercolonialItailway, and ntt the balance honestly',and sciitaroly in the Public Ac- •comnte as an Intorci,lnnial Railway suspense ►ipcûunt--rti ► be wiped outthis year and next year.

' MR. . MACPHN;R:fnN-.-nid they nnt No . the whola qtiantity last ,year 7 ,MR,. BROWN-I d.id not ask that question.' I do not know.MR. MAUPHIERNQN-la it dorio in accorclance with the resolution of

the Government to charge everything as ezpuntlituro on rovenuo ?Mit. BRowv---Tho hon. -gentletnan is fighting it shadow . , What

difference (loci that mako '1Mi. MAr.,PHw:RSpN--It is evident that $► P)43,()00 wt►rth of

.rails have

been used in renewals, which aceortiing to the reat ►lntiûn of the Ot ►v•ernment really should have been charged to ro`vonue . . Instead of thnt ,only,$20Q,t ► Ot ► is charged, and the balance in put an a hlind in a Aueponaeaccount.

- Mit. littowN-Tl ►e lion . gontleman sht ►ultt not use that wnrt lIt was perfectly straightforward, and-was f ►► lly oxlrlninutl in the Publi cAceounte Cornmittee. I, atin ► it the hon . gontlou ►an - nutiy holtl thot, pinittüthat the rails having boon handutl over to the Inter(SU1JUlial officers,the full atnount should have boon enteretl ang,iinet that Ctm ► 1 ► :tn-y. ,Bntthe Intetoolonir► l Railway bolunge to the peop le of Canada--the railsare thern ' the transfer doua not affect the 'soonrity:---the rails are asmuch at capital account an they o'ver woro-• anti thore in not one singleshilling lets ta-daÿ to tndt the public doyt . than thore was befuro the

it makes the slightest difference to the country whuther those rails Noin a heap at capital account or He in the tr ►►ck of a(Ioverntnont rail-way at an Intorooloniul suspense tioeount.I . Had any " blind " Wonfntentled, wh.y open a snal ►enso acot ►urit at all I Why not have left the

annual- proportion of $2011,0001 . , 1 •

ic,nt►urable gentleme ►.i, I have now gt ►nn through the entire chargesand ~ oeti~ ►nd of t .he .l►on . Senator (Mr. 1,b[aepheraiom) ; and I'put it t

o every hc t. tnomhor of thiaellt ► uHo wliothor thura i4 one single item in th ewhole tho hon, gwitl6man'!3 intiiutinunt for which th6 xlighteAt .rnora lrep h can be caet . upon the gontloruen on thii 'I'rwteury benchHa .W' atry hon . gentleman s ay tltnt one instance hall been ahown of 0111-p le neglect on the part of the (Iuvi+rnn ►ent ?Oan any hon. gentle-

an .aÿ that the slightest proof has been given of even thoughtles swaete,on thé part of the Glovurnmenti Nothing of the kind has beenshown. Honourable géntlernen, the men vrhn govern this Con,federa-tiùti--be of what politics they may-have no light burd@n on theiiehoqldern . ' We an eight separate Cnloniea, brought audâ®nly topth*r ;

Page 22: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

we have a vast oitont of country,,strotching from oc®nn to ocean - ; weare of difiôry►nt racoA, we shcak d'rfforônt langiiagea, we have differ-ont fnrma t►f roligiuna faith ; Hntl .wo are rill in the éarll' stages of materialand social devololmibtit . Our r©iwospntativ©n in Parliamont coi 1 te 111►

Who have the ûrntnesa ah ►i tho aliility and the tact to prornote right,

the fleuri in 187:3 of the coining fin ►inei~il stor►u, you scorned thoir'ativicq

froui all sections of crtir wide d01naitï eal ;or .to do well for their sneciK lconstituencies; and too apt tci forget the interests of the -whole,Tl ►o urgent policitati!ons for ctinco9slona-r9aâonablo concessions if thepublic chost were oxhaustloes--that ara constantly conting uli (rom all "► liroctions to the Miniatry of th© day, are without end ; and thù %nen '

reaibt wrc ►ttg, and seek to ntoitldtho discordant e1etnônte into % hàr-p.►c~niouA whole,'(loHUrvo arid „ught to receive the cordit ,►1 sympathy bnd~sui)purt of every ~tnuutbor of this' Ch► itnl►er. • It is utt,erly i ►upossiblrAthat the wit of tnan coul ► 1 avolcl urrorA in the administration of affairssu vast and tnultifari►aue, but I confess I have rison from an'earties

t and thor►iu{fh examination of the publio affairs and accounts of thQ1)ontini ►►n with high g ra titic ►itiun at tho ability, the uprightness , theoo►►nou ► y, a1141 the ntarkClli flUcc usN with which uty lion . friend and hisc ►►Ileguop nuw gr►vernint{ the c► iw ► t.ry havo ,fultill6 ► 1 their dittioült tas

k eincvthey aseuntnd ► .► flicu, ._" Ah, 1 ►,ut," exclaims the, hun . gentleman ' . ." there is atteticit Yes, thero is a ilofioit-ünfortunatelÿ there is adeficit. But it is because the right nion are in the rig-t ►t place,that thatdeficit is not inîtnitcrly grôater. It is because mou of ability and saga-city are at the helm that, iri epite c ►f two coneocutive doficite, pvpri Ob-ligation of the country has1 ►qcntttot° to the hour,--tho ereditof th

e country was never before an high in the money markets of the world,-and the Cana(lian people have unshaken ar►hfidenco that the revenue

and exl)entlituru will be slwetiily equalixô ►1 without undue pressure ont1Se industry ti►n~l uoiuutoroo of the country . - When the leaders of theI.ibotal .i ► artÿ wr ►rnuci you Lturning to the ConsOrvative leaders across

and wuut on cu ►ntnitting the country •to' otiorrhous obligations . . Whenyou were ►lrivun frutû' power for your corruption anÙ' incal ►aoitY . andthey asked in 1874 for inorot►ao& biii~l ► liùs to u ►out thiA cotuing stornt-•- ,you troato ► i their tloniand with t lerinion, you denied its nocessïty an dctpjwped it at every turn . Wheii Mr.: Cartwright negotiRted his firstfanM ►us loan in Li► r► ilun-,thrit stands unequalled as a finanoial st>,cceesin the hiat~ ►ry of this ur any other colony, that raised the credit of Can.ada higher than ever it stood before, and . thut carried the oountry ~safely throtigh the enorroous difficulties you had oreat~il-yuu decriedthe groat publie service he achieved, and ùtnlignea the n egutistor. Andwheit the Tinanoe Minister struok the happy time-not one momenttoo soou--achievod his second succossful loan, and càrriwi the ship of

Page 23: ÉNZI CüNTRÂSTED....our mots as iegislatiri to our own consciences only. I ask the Senate the n, if this Chamber in a fitting thelstr@ for such wholeisle railing ' .' discussions

'--Ng»!in you Pneligned the zW and vilifled his!W, whqq the atotm bas well-n#gh p Med •- wheu

the when the commercial barometer begihA io~

lave , beon nz powe r the total expenditure amounted to--

ed 9=9= t11st;there ia a ;deSoxw I Well, w#at, after all, doee this fee ►r-ful t1duBAnrnmt td 9 W1►ÿ, in the three yeari+ .the presenl Mitûstiy

w3atei-4o -edd tp the ernbsrtassment ; you, in the feoe of 'all, pretend1054, W~ra4 Oat tbety in a deficit I You cannot oloAk,y~oûr, irmother-

oi au -#tqFa rtys, r~ and persqnsl ; two bad m+ops withii>~ the tl►ree7e~ a I~nr► .aeenuioy Ioroec~!-~n the mannes of eveiy land~ ; an open

"114"W, *0100o*• ho w , the Glooeftutent mesti to equilixe the balance- :eheet T. VMth' oodam 'ba~ôeisl and induistrial deprOesion all over the worl

d AUSRMW};Mbarra.ament everjrwliere ; immense shrinkage in the valûe

t1►Mw~~6oif," .OXd el1L 9 a my hom.'friend to'rise on the instant and ~

MoM~ ~,~~l~glo~y that the xevenue is lbduoed glory that

NuN►~!~1l~1 . 1M~ +ys~a~ ,dA~►A e re' neai àt hi►ud-youi 1~--' yon *ho'-,, . .

And the revenues to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ., ., . . ; : ,• . .

&? 17OA ? AA

; ~tüt let it not be forqotten that in these saine years there 'wasIpaid.

frôimi~e ireve►ïques of the country* • itito the Sinking Fund for the ez-tin~ of the National Debt, no Yens a auui 'thsn $2 ,.2ü7,089-~~oir withintwo i6dred thousand dollars of the entire deûoit. ` fihe 'de8oit, in fact,wa~ï►4ripd,bq~areduotion of the Public Debt. I. that a balanc~e-nhheetild"

.~neA , ►n ths ~tbée>~t to alarni any one 4 Far faro>~n it . . One step :4Wdor4 rptur,ui,4 fprosperity would put a totally. netr i~uipeot. ~ . , . ~o~ ~iot~rré-i~n8 8'~ cause have the' people ôf_G~►nada to rejoice

men they ~uive!now priWding over their•aftito; oome N torin ori~a m, will 4)e found equal to the ooawion .- r . . _ . . . . . . . .

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