[COMMONS] 412
SUBSIDIES TO NORTH-WEST TERRITORIES.
Copies of all memorials, resolutions or other
documents from the legislative assembly of the
North-west Territories for an increase of subsidy, and all correspondence in connection
with
the same.
He said: Mr. Speaker. I would ask the
House to listen for a short time to an explanation of the object for which this motion
is made. The motion is moved in order
to afford information to the House on a
subject of considerable interest to the House
and to the country. It is a subject in regard
to which efforts have been made for the
enlightenment of the House in the past, or
rather for the enlightenment of the late
Government, but the information never
reached the House, and it seems to me it
would be well to take up a short time of this
sitting in order to arrive at an understanding
of this question. The motion relates to the
financial condition of the legislature of the
North-west Territories in its connection with
this Government. The position occupied by
the Territories at the present time is very
similar to the position of a province, that
is to say, the territorial government and
legislature have all, or nearly all, the responsibilities of a provincial government
or
legislature. and at the same time they have
much greater responsibilities than the government of any province, owing to the immense
area of country they are expected to
govern and the difficulties of carrying on
that government. While the North-west
government and legislature have almost
equal power and greater responsibility
than the government of a province, the
government and legislature are confronted with the position that they
have not adequate finances. and those
finances have been inadequate for some
years past. The area under the government
of the North-west Territories is, roughly
speaking, something like 600 miles square:
it is very much larger than the settled area
of all the eastern provinces of the Dominion,
and settlement being scattered more or less
over this great area, the expense and difficulty of carrying on the government are
proportionately increased. It is not only
that there is a great area over which settlement is scattered, but there is also diversity
of interest. There is the wheat raising
interest in the east. the cattle raising
interest in the west, the coal mining
in the mountains, and the trading interest
in the far north—a diversity of interests
that renders legislation and government in
that country more difficult probably than in
any province, or, at all events in any province having a similar population. The population
of the Territories in 1891 was stated
as 66,799. and the subsidies at that time derived from the Dominion Parliament amounted
in 1892 to $211,200. Since that time the
413 [AUGUST 31, 1896] 414
population has increased, so that in 1894.
according to the census then taken by the police, the population was 86,000 and taking
the same rate of increase down to the end of the current fiscal year, it may be placed
in the neighbourhood of 112,000. While the population has increased from 66,000 to
112,000, the subsidy on which the government of the Territories is based, has increased
only from $211,000 to $242,000 : that is to say, that while the population has nearly
doubled. the subsidy on which the government of the Territories is conducted. has
only increased by 15 per cent : to be more accurate, while the population has increased
70 per cent, the subsidy has increased only 15 per cent. There was difficulty in governing
those Territories in 1891 with the then subsidy, but the difficulty is much greater
now, with not only a larger population, but a population that has gone into new portions
of the country, while at the same time the Territories have receive comparatively
less subsidy. The duties of the government of the Territories are much the the same
as the duties of the governments in the older provinces, and one of the first charges
on the treasury, both in the Territories and in the provinces, is the maintenance
of education. In 1982 there were in the Territories 245 schools in operation ; in
1895 there were 395 schools in operation and in 1896 there are 489 schools organized,
of which nearly all are in operation, so that in connection with that particular charge
on the treasury there has been nearly a doubling of the expense. The cost of education
in the Territories is now nearly double what it was a few years ago, while the grant
out of which that cost has to be paid has only increased to the extend of 15 per cent.
I admit that the grand in aid of education in the Territories is comparatively large.
that is to say, the aid granted by the territorial legislature to the school districts
in the Territories is relatively large. but it has to be large in order that education
shall be carried on there at all. This is on account of the system of land grants
which have prevailed in that country. It is provided that twenty sections out of every
thirty-six, that is twenty square miles out of every thirty-six, shall be reserved
from settlement. Instead of schools being supported by people settled on every quarter
section in a township, they have to be supported by such settlers as may be on sixteen
out of the thirty-six sections. The scattered settlement in that country, is what
makes it more necessary that there shall be a large grant in aid of the schools. Without
that large grant these schools could not be conducted, and without schools you cannot
hope to attract settlement, nor can you even expect to retain the settlement you have.
When a settler is not sufficiently interested in the education of his children to
demand a school as one of his first requirements, the chances are that such a settler
is no good to the country. The school expenditure which in 1893-94 was $97,000, has
increased to such an extent that it will amount to $120,000 this year. These are the
amounts that have been granted to schools out of the subsidies allowed to the Territories.
It therefore will be plain to the House, that the grater proportion of the total subsidy
voted to the territorial legislature by this Parliament, has been expended on education.
Although at first sight the grant would appear to be large it will be found upon the
inquiry that it is not larger than the case requires.
Public works are the second great charge
on the revenues of the Territories. As we all know, in the case of the organized provinces,
the greater part of the expenditure upon public works is borne by the municipalities,
and the provincial legislatures bear only a small proportion of the cost of such works.
In the Territories, owing to the scattered settlement of the country, and owing to
the nature of the country, it is simply impossible to have such an organization as
you have in the older provinces. and as a consequence the territorial legislature
has to bear a larger proportion of the cost of works which is usually borne by the
municipal organizations in the provinces. There is therefore a special charge upon
the territorial treasury, which does not bear upon the treasuries of the provinces,
and that charge exists because of the peculiar condition of the Territories. This
peculiar condition in its turn is a result of the administration of this Parliament
in holding in reservation from settlement such a large proportion of the lands. parliament
having taken upon itself a certain responsibility in regard to that matter and having
laid down a certain policy must certainly be held responsible for the results of that
policy. When Parliament has absolutely. as may be said, prohibited settlement in the
greater part of that country, it seems to me that Parliament must be prepared to make
good the deficiency in the revenue necessary to carry on the proper business of the
country. As in the case of schools it is in the case of public works, especially roads
and bridges. These roads and bridges which would be kept up if there was settlement
on every section, simply cannot be kept up when settlement is on less than half the
sections. If we are to have public improvements in that country, the burden must be
borne to a very great extent by the treasury of the Territories, which again must
be supported by a subsidy from the Parliament. There are not only roads and bridges
to construct and maintain, but there is also the question of the water supply throughout
a great portion of that country. Without an improved water supply, which can only
be secured by the expenditure of money, settlement cannot increase as it ought to
or as it otherwise would. There are other special expenditures which have to be made,
expenditures which
415
[COMMONS] 416
are not needed in any of the older provinces.
For instance, during one year, $8,000 was
paid for wolf bounty, in order to protect the
cattle in the ranching country against
wolves. This is an expenditure peculiar
to the Territories, and it is one which has
to be incurred in the interests of the cattle
industry. There are also special expenditures in the wheat growing country, such as
the money which has to be paid to try to
keep down the gopher pest. This gopher
pest exists chiefly by reason of the fact that
there is so much vacant land. The gophers
do not propagate on the cultivated land but
on the land that is unoccupied, and the protection of the cultivated land from the
gophers has cost $4,000 in one year. There is
also the question of the relief of distress
which has to be provided for by the Territories. There has to be provision made
sometimes for the relief of distress, and to
compensate for losses of crop by hail storms
and otherwise. In the older provinces the
municipalities take care of distressed persons, but in our country, on account of
there
being no municipal organizations, that must
be done at the expense of the territorial
government. The cause of humanity must
prevail in the Territories as well as in the provinces, and people cannot be allowed
to suffer or to die for lack of pecuniary assistance. We have also a number of hospitals
which have to receive governmental assistance. These hospitals receive $4,000 a year.
When that grant was made the idea was
that each hospital should receive 40 cents
per day for each non-paying patient treated.
However, owing to the increase of patients
and the increase of hospitals, the grant now
only amounts to 27 cents per day for nonpaying patients. This is a charge that has
increased from year to year and it is a
charge that must be provided for. There
has also been $3,000 paid out for the encouragement of the creamery industry, and
this, I may say, is a most desirable policy
and a wise expenditure. I allude to all
these matters for the purpose of showing in
the first place, the necessity for them, and
in the second place, the advantage of
the money being expended in the manner in which it is expended. The expenditure is
not only of advantage to the Territories, but it is of advantage to the whole
of Canada, for I need not remind hon.
gentlemen that whatever assists the improvement and development of that country
is also of advantage to the entire Dominion.
While large sums have been used for education and public works, and these sums
have been on the increase from year to year,
those charges which are for what you
may call the running of the machine, have
not increased in proportion to the increase
of population. The grant for clerical assistance in 1892 was $16,701. and in 1895
it
was $12,460 ; so that that expenditure has
been decreased very materially under the
present North-west administration. The
cost of the executive, or cabinet, has stood
at $5,500 a year for the last five years ; the
expenditure on printing account, which was
$6,000 in 1892, was reduced to $4,000 in 1895.
So that, if a question is asked as to how the
assembly expends the money which is
granted by Parliament, I think it can be
shown that the money is expended judiciously, both in matters of improvement and in
matters of routine.
There are two grounds upon which the
territorial government or legislature are entitled to an increased grant. One is that
the territorial government is a creation of
this Parliament. It was at one time merely
a branch of the Department of the Interior,
and money was provided through that department for the purpose of carrying on the
business of the Territories. Now, Parliament, having created a certain institution
in the North-west Territories, is in duty
bound to provide the funds necessary to
carry on that institution. On the other
hand, the people of the Territories are entitled to stand in exactly the same position
as the citizens of any province. They are
citizens of this Dominion as much as are
the people of the provinces. They contribute their share to the revenues of the country,
as do the people of the provinces : and,
having been granted control of their local
government, they are entitled to fully as
much subsidy for their local purposes in return for the amounts they have paid into
the general treasury as are the people of the
provinces. Calculating on that basis, I will
give you a few figures to show that in asking for an increase on the moderate amount
that has been granted during past years,
they are not asking for more than they are
entitled to. Taking the increase of population that occurred from 1891 to 1894, and
assuming the same percentage of increase
until the end of the present fiscal year, we
would have a population of 113,000. In the
case of Manitoba, the amount payable per
head is based, not on the actual population
at the time, but on the supposed or expected
population, two and a half years in advance.
that is to say, the subsidy per head is readjusted every five years, and the amount
is fixed at what it would be on the basis of
population when half the term of five years
is up. Applying the same calculation to the
North-west Territories, it would give us a
supposed population of 141,000, which, at
80 cents per head, would entitle us to $112,000 a year. On debt account, the present
actual population would entitle us to $156,000 a year. Taking the amount allowed to
Manitoba for the cost of government, that
is to say $50,000 a year, and an allowance
on account of the land, such as given in
Manitoba, say $125,000 a year, the Territories would be in a position at the present
time to claim, in a readjustment of the subsidy, in the neighbourhood of $440,000
a
year. Thev are not asking for that amount
at the present moment ; but they are asking
for a substantial increase in the amount
417 [AUGUST 31, 1896] 418
which has been granted in past years, so
as to catch up to some extent with the present requirements. Let me say that the
manner in which the subsidy has been calculated in the past has been this. The territorial
government made up an estimate of
what was required. The Department of the
Interior granted either that amount or as
much less as it saw fit. The territorial government was compelled to keep within the
amount voted. When the territorial government, next year, sent down an estimate for
an increased amount, the department here,
I suppose, argued: " Well. you got along
with so much last year; you can certainly
get on with the same amount this year."
So the amount has been kept at about the
same figure for the last five years. This, it
appears to me. is putting the matter on a
false basis, which is neither in the interest
of the North-west, in the interest of this
Dominion, nor in accord with the dignity of
this Parliament in its dealings with the institution which itself has created.
In regard to the grant on account of the
land, I would say a word or two. The province of Manitoba has been granted $100,000
a year in consideration of its public
lands having been administered by Parliament. In the Territories there is, I suppose,
four or five times as much land as
there is in the province of Manitoba : and,
while it may be argued that the land is not
profitable to the government, that the administration of it has not returned a financial
profit to the Government, let me put
the matter to you in this way. Parliament
has seen fit in the past to grant off these
lands to the Canadian Pacific Railway,
which is a national work and not a Northwestern work simply, to the extent of 25,000,000
acres. I understand that that land
has been bonded to the amount of $1.25 an
acre ; so that its value stands. under these
bonds. at something like $31,000,000, which,
at 4 per cent, is equivalent to a million and
a quarter dollars a year. This is not
any fancy calculation, but a calculation on
the basis of actual cash. So that when we
say that the Territories are entitled to consideration on account of the amount of
Government land there, we are not going beyond
the mark when we say that we should be
dealt with at least as favourably as the
province of Manitoba, particularly when we
call your attention to the fact that the province of Prince Edward Island has received
a specieal grant of something like $40,000 a
year, in consideration of the fact that at the
time of entering confederation it had not
any public land at all; and that the province of British Columbia has been granted
$100,000 a year, in consideration of what is
known as the railway belt, in which belt
the province still holds the precious metals.
which. I suppose, are really the most valuable part of the land. Now. a statement
has been made by the local government,
asking for a certain increase in the annual
subsidy, based actual requirements. Not
that they do not want a readjustment of
grant on the basis of the provincial subsidies.
The papers I asked for are for the purpose
of showing what is absolutely required for
the carrying on of the government of the
North-west Territories during the current
fiscal year and not for the purpose of making a permanent arrangement. The government
of the Territories, however, as will be
shown by the papers, are prepared at any
time to enter into an arrangement for a
permanent subsidy on a provincial basis
suitable to the special position and circumstances of the Territories.
Mr. DAVIN. I am glad my hon. friend
has made this motion and brought the
claims of the Territories before the House.
I do not know whether I understood him to
say that he was bringing these matters before the House for the first time.
Mr. OLIVER. I said that I understood
that these papers have never been laid on
the Table.
Mr. DAVIN. Well, I am exceedingly glad
that my hon. friend has brought this matter before the House. As the House is well
aware, I have annually brought before it
the claims of the Territories, and made an
argument in favour of an increased subsidy,
somewhat in the line of that which my hon.
friend has made. There cannot be any doubt
that not merely now but, as I pointed out,
either last session or the session before last,
the North-west Territories were long ago
entitled to far more money than was given
them year after year, and in fact I think
it was either last session or the session before last that I argued that there was
something like a million dollars or more of arrears due the North-west Territories,
bearing in mind what should have been paid, on
the basis of the calculation made by my
hon. friend in his able speech this afternoon
and comparing that with the amount which
has been given. In 1889, the legislative assembly of the North-west Territories submitted
a memorandum to the then Minister
of the Interior in which they submitted the
argument that, with an estimated population of 150,000 as a basis to go on—and that
was not too much even then, taking what
had been done for Manitoba—the subsidy
at the rate of 80 cents per head, which was
allowed the provinces. would amount to
$120,000. They further submitted that on
debt account the Territories are entitled to
5 per cent interest on $27.77 per head on an
actual population of 100,000, which would
amount to $138,850, and that the specific
grant for governmental purposes should be
at least as liberal as that made to Manitoba, that is to say. $50,000. And they, further
submitted that:
Owing to the vast area of the Territories and
the widely scattered nature of the settlement,
all the local business of the government is ren
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dered mere expensive proportionately to population than in any of the provinces.
For these reasons they asked a specific
annual grant for the five years term of
$100,000, and claimed an aggregate sum of
over $400,000. Any man who has listened
attentively to my hon. friend this afternoon will agree that with the population
they then had, and proceeding on the ratio
that had been dealt out to Manitoba in 1870,
the North-west Territories in 1889—that is
several years ago—were entitled to a grant
of $400,000. On the 27th February of that
year, I made a motion in this House somewhat similar to that made by my hon. friend
this afternoon. I moved for copies of all
memorials addressed to the Government by
the legislative assembly of the North-west
Territories which had then sat recently at
Regina, and I presented, as best I could, the
claims of the North-west Territories, as set
forth by the legislative assembly of which
my hon. friend was then a member and had
been for some time. As will be seen by reference to page 355 of the "Hansard" of 1889.
I pointed out that the old council of 1887
petitioned for responsible government, and
I stated what the memorial set forth, and
I pressed for a subsidy very much larger
than what had been given up to that time
or than what has been given since. And
I pointed out that we might take a leaf out
of the book of the United States and follow
the example set by that country in dealing
with its territories. I pointed out that Minnesota, Wyoming, Dakota and Montana each
got in lands, a large extent of territory for
subsidizing branch lines. That is something which this Government has never contemplated
doing for the government of the
Territories, but I contend that the sooner
we give the giant in the North-west its
limbs the better. The sooner we give that
North-west people, now far in excess of
numbers of what Manitoba was in 1870,
what it is entitled to, the better ; and as
anybody will see who visits the giant, as
the hon. Prime Minister did, at the time
when the legislative assembly was sitting,
the representatives in that assembly will
compare well with the representatives of
any assembly in the provinces. What is the
reason this Government should keep that
giant in leading strings all these years ? I
appeal to the hon. Minister to cut those
strings. He is fond of regarding himself as
a breaker of manacles, let him break those
manacles that are on the limbs of the
North-west Territories, let him give the Territories provincial autonomy and the annual
subsidy to which it is entitled by reason of
its population, according to the calculation
so ably set forth by my hon. friend this
afternoon. I would go further than was
done in the case of' Manitoba, and would
give the young man, so to speak, when I set
him up in life, all the implements of manhood. I would give him the means of building
his own railways. Here is what hap
pened in these Territories which have been
very successful, as I need not say, below the
line. Minnesota with 83,000 square miles
(Assiniboia has 93,000 square miles) received land for subsidizing 1,800 miles of
railway, and with the swamps, started in
possession of one-third of the territory.
What does that policy enable these Territories to do. I read from my speech seven
years ago :
It gives them, while young, that nutriment and
vital force, without which anything young cannot thrive. As the Right Hon. the Prime
Minister is now acting Minister of Railways, I should
like to call his attention to this fact. At this
hour the government of Minnesota receives an
income of $600,000 a year, 3 per cent on the
gross earnings of the lines of railway that it
chartered and subsidized since 1849, when it was
organized. But it may be said : " Ah, but those
territories were very populous." Not at all.
In 1849, when Minnesota was organized, it had
only a population of 6,000—
I think my hon. friend said our population
in 1894 was 84,000, and it is more to-day.
—and the aggregate population of all the four
territories at the respective dates of their organization did not equal by five or
six thousand the
population of the North-west to-day. That is
the point which I submit as well worthy of the
consideration of the Government, because I
think we may err on the side of keeping the
strings too much in our hands here in Ottawa,
and not giving sufficient scope for the young
giant, for which I plead here to-day, to develop
his limbs. Now, it will be said to us, no doubt,
you have got the mounted police. So we have,
and we are very glad to have them ; but elsewhere you have batteries, militia, and
military
schools, and we pay for those just as well as you
pay for the mounted police ; and before you knew
where you are, I believe in the next five years,
you will find we shall have a population in those
Territories which will be subscribing to your
military schools, and batteries, and militia just
as much as you are subscribing to the Northwest mounted police. And remember that
in any
case the cost of defence would fall on the Federal
Government ; so that you cannot fairly make
anything of our having the mounted police.
Now what I point out there is of great importance—that the United States government,
in dealing with territories is more
generous than the Government of Canada.
And as I repeat the argument, I repeat to
the hon. gentleman opposite the appeal I
made to the Government of Sir John Macdonald, and I say to him that not only will
these facts justify him in complying with
the demand made by my hon. friend (Mr.
Oliver) this afternoon, but they will justify
him in going further. They will justify him
in giving to the Territories responsible government. They will justify him in giving
the Territories not $260,000 as a grant, but
$400,000 a year as a subsidy, and they will
justify him in going still further—in giving
them lands by which they will be able to
build small local railways, so that in ten
years from now, they may be in the position that Minnesota is found to be in to-day
—drawing a large income from investments
in these railways. My hon. friend very
421 [AUGUST 31, 1896] 422
properly pointed out that the government of
the North-west Territories really has a more
difficult problem before it than any provincial government. As he told you they
have a great area—a far greater area than
any province—they have scattered settlements and diverse interests. I was very
glad to see that he is a supporter of a
policy that, before I came to this House at
all, I pressed upon the attention of the Government and which, since I have been in
this
House, I have on several occasions, pressed upon the attention of Parliament. I refer
to what the hon. gentleman said concerning the odd sections which, as now
dealt with, work a very great evil. They
cause a scattered settlement; they enable,
as my hon. friend pointed out, the gopher.
'to have a great hunting ground: and not
only that. but to-day, half. a township minus
four sections has to do the work of a whole
township. For supporting schools, for making roads and bridges, for all the work of
a
township, you have not half a township, but
only the settled even-numbered sections,
minus the four sections, two for the Hudson's Bay Company and two school sections,
I have advocated a radical change, and I am
glad now to note that I shall have my hon.
friend's support, or—which is the same thing
to me, if he proposes the reform—he shall
have my support. It is a matter of perfect
indifference to me who proposes or who
carries out anything for the North-west Territories, whoever proposes anything for
the
good of the Territory will have my strenuous support in this House ; and, if a proposition
to deal with the odd sections should
come from my hon. friend. he may be perfectly certain that he shall have my strong
support. Now, Mr. Speaker, when the idea
occurred to me of dealing with these odd
sections. I went and saw Sir William Van
Horne. then Mr. VanHorne. I told him
what the conditions of the North-west Territories was and what I believed would be
the advantage to the Territories and to
Canada if these odd sections were thrown
open to settlement. For I apprehend that
nothing could be done so far as the land
that has been granted to the Canadian
Pacific Railway without the co-operation of
that company. I pointed out to Mr. Van
Horne that if he was ready to agree to reconvey these lands to the Government—or
what would probably be the literal truth, if
he were ready to forego selecting this land
—it would pay his railway to do so even on
a very small, or what might-seem a small,
consideration. For it is palpable that if
these odd sections are thrown open for settlement and if they are taken up by settlers
the result' must be the Canadian Pacific
Railway will get double the quantity of
freight and double the number of passengers. And not merely that. Sir, but, as we
know very well. if you had a whole township instead of half a township the increase
in business would not be measured by the
mere multiplication by two, as the business
would become certainly much more
than double what it has been. Sir William
Van Horne, who, as we know here,
is an enlightened and far-seeing man,
and knows well what is for the benefit of
his railway, said to me that the proposal
seemed to him a good one, but he said I
am, of course, in the hands of my directors.
I ventured then to say what I think is probably the case, that if Sir William Van
Horne advised his directors in a course
that, in his opinion, would be for the good
of the railway, the chances are that his
directors and himself would see eye to eye.
My idea was this, that the Government
might buy back the lands for $1.25 an acre.
and, if they did so, the money paid would
be well spent by the Government, it would
be a proper use of publiemoney. and it
would be a profitable transaction to the
Canadian Pacific Railway. Well, what happened during the late election ? One of the
planks in my platform was the settlement of
the odd sections, and the gentleman who
was running against me, held me up to opprobrium. held me up to popular condemnation,
because, as he said. I wanted to get
the Government to give vast sums to the
Canadian Pacific Railway for these odd
sections. To my surprise, I found in many
parts of my constituency, settlers who took
the view that they did not want the odd
sections thus disposed of. It is only fair
that 1 should tell Parliament this. It would
not be just to Parliament if I stated an argument in favour of the Government reassuming
those odd sections, it would not be
jusr to the hon. gentleman—and I could not
be unjust to him—it would not be just either
to the Government or to Parliament, if I
stated an argument in favour of the Government assuming control of those odd sections
once more, if I did not also mention
the fact that I found, in going through my
constituency that a number of settlers took
a strong view against that proposal. Not
only so, but a very prominent and active
gentleman in the neighbouring constituency,
Mr. Hawkes. has written, I think, to the Regina " Leader " a long letter, taking my
hon.
friend from Alberta (Mr. Oliver) and myself
to task because of the views we are known
to hold on this subject of the settlement of
the odd sections. So my hon. friend who
is at the head of the Government will be
aware that a prominent supporter of his
considers that it will be a dreadful course
to take to expend vast sums to get hold of
these odd Sections. However. that supporter
is not in this House, and is not likely to be ;
but the other supporter, who urges him
here to-day to do something with these odd
sections, is in the House. and his vote has
to be considered, and I hope he will have
more influence with the hon. gentleman at
the head of the Government than any person who denounced the proposal when made
by myself. It is desirable, as the House
knows is my own opinion, that we should
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[COMMONS]
have a great deal more help than we have
had in the Territories for creameries, and I
think it is desirable that all that should be
done by the local government. But how in
the past, or how in the present, could the
local government do it, when the grant to
them is so contemptibly small and so utterly
inadequate to the needs of the situation ?
But if an adequate sum is given them, the
local government, being on the spot, could
attend to all needs. For instance, we know
that in a vast area like the North-west Territories we may have good crops in one
part extending over hundreds of thousands
of square miles ; and in another part we
may have a failure of crops. Now, the proper government to deal with that question
is the government of the North-west Territories; but how could the government of
the North-west Territories deal with it,
when, up to the present, the amount doled
out to them has been weighed, as it were,
in an apothecary's scales with the utmost
nicety, so as to measure it out as regards
the admitted needs of these Territories ?
Mr. Speaker, it was a great pleasure to me
to hear my hon. friend's voice once again,
and I hope that in this House he and I,
while we are colleagues, whether for a long
or a short time, will use our united efforts
for the good of the Territories. and for the
support of any proposal, come from whatever side it may, that will be for the good
of the Territories, and let us not turn our
efforts against each other at the bidding of
either party or faction.
Motion agreed to.